Notice of Clarity to Precinct Delegates: the Michigan Republican Party is a Public Entity and Various Republican Party Members are Voluntary Agents of Government
Notice to Agent is Notice to Principal and Notice to Principal is Notice to Agent
I, , one of the People of Michigan as seen in the Michigan Constitution Declaration of Rights, republican in form, Sui Juris, do serve this notice that you may provide due care;
Michigan Constitution Declaration of Rights Section I: Political Power
“All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for their equal benefit, security and protection.”
Please take notice there has been confusion as to whether the Michigan Republican Party (MRP) operates in the private or public jurisdiction. The Michigan Republican Party is a public entity.
At a January 13th 2024 committee meeting, MIGOP General Counsel Dan Hartman stated that the MRP is an “unincorporated association”. Take notice that the Michigan Constitution Article II, Elections includes “unincorporated organization” within its full listing of public entities. Take notice the term “person” is a legal definition which includes all state public entities. (See evidence below) (emphasis in highlight added)
Michigan Constitution Article II Elections: Section 4 paragraph four: Place and Manner of Elections
“For purposes of this part (a) of subsection (4)(1), "person" means an individual, association, corporation, joint stock company, labor organization, legal representative, mutual company, partnership, unincorporated organization, the state or a political subdivision of the state or an agency of the state, or any other legal entity, and includes an agent of a person.”
Please take notice the following express words in the Michigan Constitution, mandating that no state, political subdivision, or unincorporated organization shall use its civil power to interfere with elections; which is a violation of the People’s fundamental right to vote. Notice that limiting the selection of any local candidates by law, rule, regulation, practice, or procedure by a public entity not in pursuance of express constitutional provision is a violation of the People’s fundamental right to vote. Notice that in the current government-run election system, statutes, public acts, rules, and practices are routinely used blocking qualified People to advance as candidates. Any public entity interfering with the People’s fundamental right to vote is directly abrogating the People’s rights, a violation of the entity’s expressly-granted limited authority. (See evidence below) (emphasis in highlight added):
Michigan Constitution Article II Elections Section 4: [excerpt]
(1) Every citizen of the United States who is an elector qualified to vote in Michigan shall have the following rights:
(a) The fundamental right to vote, including but not limited to the right, once registered, to vote a secret ballot in all elections. No person shall: (1) enact or use any law, rule, regulation, qualification, prerequisite, standard, practice, or procedure; (2) engage in any harassing, threatening, or intimidating conduct; or (3) use any means whatsoever, any of which has the intent or effect of denying, abridging, interfering with, or unreasonably burdening the fundamental right to vote.
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966) p.491: "Where rights secured by the Constitution(s) are involved, there can be no rule-making or legislation which would abrogate them."
Michigan Constitution Article III Section 7: Common Law and Statutes, Continuance
“The common law and the statute laws now in force, not repugnant to this constitution, shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitations, or are changed, amended or repealed.”
Please take notice that the members of your county-level Republican Party association are operating in the private jurisdiction with full constitutional liberties, rights, and protections. But while the RNC has no control over the county party associations, it owns and controls the MRP Executive Committee, which is an ‘unincorporated association’. The connection by the county party to a public entity occurs in the Executive
Committee when the Chairman of the county party Executive Committee registers a Statement of Organization with the state Bureau of Elections in order to represent the private county party to the MIGOP. Please notice the People hold all political power and this association can be voided. (see evidence below)
Maxim of Law 7k. Whose it is to institute, his it is also to abrogate. Broom, Max. 785.
Please take notice another scenario regarding the public jurisdiction: the current primary system requires the Michigan Republican Party to contract with the Federal Election Commission (FEC), thus using its civil power to influence and interfere with free elections, thereby violating the People’s fundamental right to vote (seen in MI Constitution Article II Sec. 4 above). To satisfy the FEC requirement the PD files a sworn affidafvit with the county clerk’s office to participate in the FEC process. The township boards then vote to have the township Election Commission participate in the FEC process. (See evidence below)
Maxim of Law 96h. One is a servant who is employed by a master to perform service in his affairs and whose physical conduct in performance of the service is controlled by the master. Evans v. Board of Ed. of Hays, 284 P. 2d 1068, 1071.
Dear Precinct Delegate:
Please take Notice as a PD bound by contract into agency of government, your power to advance political candidates in your internal government is highly regulated. Contracturally the government is a principal over you. For a conservative grassroots political association to exist in true republican form, you as a delegate will be elected, operating in the private as one of the People, where you hold all constitutional rights, protections, and liberties: to freely assemble, to freely associate, to consult for the common good, to travel, contract, speak, etc., and to become the true, free voice of the People of Michigan. The People are guaranteed by right to instruct trustee/servants in government, and hold the sole authority to regulate their internal government for the common good. Ask yourself: is the MIGOP Executive Committee using the political power of the PDs against the better interests of their counties?
Dear County Chairman:
Due to the above evidence, Please immediately copy this notice to all your Precinct Delegates and show them in the Michigan Constitution that the MRP and MIGOP are operating in the public jurisdiction as agents of the Federal, State, and related political subdivisions. To hold true autonomy in the private, the county party chairman must rescind the Statement of Organization with the Board of Elections, and the PDs must rescind their affidavit from the County Clerks office, which disassociates them from the County Board of Commissioners’ contract with the FEC.