Feb. 4, 2019: New emails show Michigan GOP used maps to consolidate Republican power
Jan. 17, 2019: Michigan secretary of state wants to settle gerrymandering lawsuit
Nov. 8 update: Gerrymandered districts help Republicans keep control of Legislature
Update: Emails: Michigan Republicans brag that redistricting āprotects incumbentsā
The Michigan Chamber of Commerce is trying to distance itself from some ā but not all ā of the incendiary emails about a controversial 2011 state redistricting effort that were made public this week.
Richard Studley, president and CEO of the powerful business group, this week tweeted his disgust over 2011 emailed remarks by Jack W. Daly, then chief of staff to former U.S. Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, R-Livonia. Daly wrote that he wanted to cram āDem garbageā in southeast Michigan in āonly four districtsā to help Republican candidates in Michigan.
Related Michigan gerrymandering stories:
- How a shadow Republican group gerrymandered Michigan ā sparking a backlash
- Maps show how gerrymandering benefitted Michigan Republicans
- These Republican insiders split $1 million to design and defend Michigan 2011 map
- Emails suggest Republicans gerrymandered Michigan to weaken āDem garbageā
- Gerrymandering in Michigan is among the nationās worst, new test claims
āAll Michiganders should be treated with courtesy & respect,ā Studley tweeted Thursday. āIn 2011 Jack Daly was a Congressional aide with no relationship to the MI Chamber. We were not aware of his negative remarks about Democratic voters then and categorically reject them now!ā
But Studley isnāt condemning other emails, including those sent between Daly and then-chamber executive Robert LaBrant about tweaking district lines in metro Detroit to āincrease the black population in the black districts.ā
āThe obvious objective ā putting dems in a dem district and reps in a gop district,ā Daly wrote to LaBrant and others in one 2011 email, which were cited in court papers that are part of an ongoing federal lawsuit challenging the stateās redistricting system.
Related: Hereās how Michiganās redistricting commission would work
Related: Michigan redistricting ballot language rejects partisan phrasings
Brandon Dillon, chairman of the Michigan Democratic Party, told Bridge on Friday that Studleyās condemnation falls well short ā since the new emails reported by Bridge show a top chamber executive participating in many of the discussions.
āThey are learning well from their friend in the White House how to lie with a straight face,ā Dillon said.
āThey lied back then when they said they werenāt gerrymandering districts and they are lying now when they say they didnāt know about these emails.ā

LaBrant, who retired from the chamber in 2012, hasnāt returned phone messages this week.
Studley told Bridge on Friday the emails that have emerged are ājust snippets,ā āseven years oldā and may not reflect the āentire thread of emails.ā During the conversation, he repeatedly called LaBrant a āformer employee.ā
āItās a fairly common occurrence to receive emails that people donāt agree with,ā Studley said.
āI was not aware of (Dalyās) comments at the time and if I had been I would have condemned them.ā
In the email Studley said he was criticizing, written to GOP consultant Jeff Timmer, Daly suggests stuffing āALL of the Dem garbage in Wayne, Washtenaw, Oakland and Macomb counties into only four districts. Is there anyone on our side who doesnāt recognize that dynamic?ā Itās unclear from the lawsuit if LaBrant of the chamber also received that particular email.
Studleyās tweet denouncing Dalyās remarks did not mention other emails introduced this month as evidence in a lawsuit by the League of Women Voters of Michigan and 11 Democratic voters.
The suit against Michigan Secretary of State Ruth Johnson alleges the 2011 state legislative and congressional maps are so gerrymandered that they violate the U.S. Constitution.
The Michigan Chamber is not a party in the suit, but some of its emails involving LaBrant and Republican consultants have been unearthed in the court case.
Among the emails:
- LaBrant, then with the chamber, wrote that the stateās 4th Congressional District was redrawn to the wishes of then U.S. Rep. Dave Camp, R-Midland. āWe will accommodate whatever Dave wants in his district,ā LaBran wrote on May 18, 2011, to two Republican consultants and a Camp staffer. āWeāve spent a lot of time providing options to ensure we have a solid 9-5 delegation in 2012 and beyond.ā
- LaBrant rejected an early map that gave Republicans a 10-4 advantage, writing in an email āwe needed for legal and PR purposes a good looking map that did not look like an obvious gerrymander.ā
- An unnamed GOP aide wrote the proposed 9th Congressional District in southeast Michigan jutted up ābetween Mound and Vandyke (sic) down to 15 mile ⦠perfect. itās giving the finger to (Democratic congressman) sandy levin. I love it.ā

Dalyās former boss, McCotter, briefly ran for president in 2012 and resigned from Congress when his petitions for re-election were invalidated and several staffers were charged with crimes related to falsifying nominating petitions.
McCotter did not return a phone call seeking comment Friday
Nor did Daly, whose LinkedIn profile features a photo of him and conservative radio commentator Rush Limbaugh holding a cigar to a babyās mouth and indicates he is an attorney in North Carolina and chairman of Right Reach LLC.
His wife, Kay Daly, was an unsuccessful candidate for Congress in 2016 in North Carolina.
Earlier this year, Roll Call reported that Daly in 2000 āattempted to recruit a homeless man to run against the incumbent North Carolina state auditor who had the same last name to spark confusion on the Democratic primary ballot.ā
The chamber ā and LaBrant ā have been involved in redrawing political districts every 10 years. In Michigan, the political party in power generally controls how legislative districts are drawn in the state, a practice that has been criticized because it is vulnerable to partisan practices.
The Michigan Supreme Court is weighing whether a citizen initiative by the group Voters Not Politicians that would create an independent commission to draw districts can appear on the November state ballot.
The chamberās political arm is helping fund a separate group, Citizens Protecting Michiganās Constitution that sued to block the redistricting initiative from appearing on the November ballot.
The chamber has also been heavily involved in helping to finance the campaigns of Republican-backed justices to the Supreme Court, including two Republican incumbents running this year. Republicans hold a 5-2 advantage on the high court, the same court that will deciding the redistricting ballot fight.
All Michiganders should be treated with courtesy & respect. In 2011 Jack Daly was a Congressional aide with no relationship to the MI Chamber. We were not aware of his negative remarks about Democratic voters then and categorically reject them now! https://t.co/4KZyTub4Ez
ā Rich Studley (@rstudley) July 26, 2018
Studley has repeatedly told Bridge and other media outlets his group doesnāt support gerrymandering.
āWe arenāt in favor of gerrymandering, thatās silly,ā Studley told The Detroit News. āWhat we want is a fair and open process.ā

Dillon countered that the emails show the depth of the involvement of the chamber in gerrymandering to favor Republican candidates.
āIt was enlightening to see them in print and how much they were cheating,ā Dillon said of the 2011 emails.
āThis is what you get ⦠when one party is in power too long.ā
