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Republicans win most open seats on Michigan education, university boards

Collage of University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State
Michigan voters are selecting who will sit on the boards of the University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University. (Photos by University of College / Shutterstock.com , iStock photo by :wellesenterprises, Shutterstock photo by Susan Montgomery)
  • Michigan voters chose mostly Republicans for statewide education races 
  • Voters send two Republicans back to the State Board of Education 
  • All four boards have Democratic majorities

Michigan voters mostly selected Republicans to fill open seats on the State Board of Education and the boards of three universities.

Republicans will gain some influence on the boards of Michigan State University and Wayne State University, according to unofficial results from the Secretary of State’s website. But the boards will continue to have Democratic majorities. 

Denise Ilitch, a Democrat on the University of Michigan board, is the only Democrat to have succeeded in these races. Voters selected Republican Carl Meyers for the other open seat on the U-M Board of Regents. In selecting Meyers and Ilitch, voters chose to keep the U-M board with a six Democrat- two Republican makeup. 

See below for specific vote counts. 

K-12 issues 

The State Board of Education hires and fires the state superintendent, who oversees the Michigan Department of Education. The board also passes non-binding resolutions about education policy.

The makeup of six Democrats and two Republicans will stay the same, as two Republican incumbents, Tom McMillin and Nikki Snyder kept their seats and beat Democrats Theodore Jones and Adam Zemke.

The state faces several challenges. The rate of students chronically absent is still higher than before the pandemic. Third and fourth grade students, who were just beginning their schooling during the pandemic, are scoring lower in reading and writing than previous third grade classes. Superintendents and students report student mental health remains a concern

Public universities’ challenges 

The Michigan Constitution mandates statewide elections for the university boards, a system some in education have called to change because voters often don't know much about the candidates. 

At Wayne State, Republican incumbent Michael Busuito and Republican Sunny Reddy won, beating out Democrat Rasha Demashkieh and incumbent Democrat Mark Gaffney. The board make-up will be five Democrats and three Republicans. 

At Michigan State, Republicans Mike Balow and Julie Maday will join the board, beating out Democrats Rebecca Bahar-Cook and Thomas Stallworth. Current trustees Democrat Dianne Byrum and Republican Dan Kelly did not run for re-election. Democrats will have a 6-2 majority, compared to their current 7-1 majority.

 

Each board faces challenges, and members will work with new presidents at all three universities. U-M President Santa Ono started October 2022, WSU President Kimberly Espy took the helm August 2023, MSU President Kevin Guskiewicz started March 2024. 

First-year student enrollment is up from the previous year at MSU, Wayne State and University of Michigan - Flint, but down at the other two University of Michigan campuses, according to the Michigan Association of State Universities 2024 fall enrollment report

Several candidates for the university board positions included college affordability in their campaign platforms

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