The COVID-19 pandemic led to a record number of missed votes by members of the Michigan Legislature in 2020. | Stock photo
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a record number of missed votes by members of the Michigan Legislature in 2020. | Stock photo
Besides the rising numbers of COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations, Michigan recently experienced another spike. This spike came as lawmakers missed more roll call votes in the most recent term than in the previous three.
Approximately 75% of the 3,840 votes that legislators missed took place in 2020, according to coverage by Michigan Capitol Confidential.
Sen. Adam Hollier (D-Detroit) missed the most votes of all state senators with 102, but said exactly half of those absences votes were due to his fulfilling obligations with the U.S. Army Reserve, according to Capitol Confidential. His 102 missed votes were out of 1,002 total roll call votes.
Yet, state senators still fell far behind the number of missed votes in the Michigan House of Representatives.
State Rep. Steve Marino (R-Harrison Twp.) had the highest number of missed roll call votes in the state House, missing 303 of 1,027, according to Capitol Confidential. Marino said he experienced health problems during the session, which contributed to his absences.
Marino was followed in the Michigan House by state Rep. Kristy Pagan (D-Canton Twp.), who missed 301 votes, according to Capitol Confidential.
Hollier had nearly twice as many missed votes as state Sen. Peter Lucido (R-Shelby Twp.), who had the second-most missed votes in the state Senate with 57.
Overall, the number of missed votes for the Legislature, as a total, was higher than it had been during the entire two-year term of each of the previous three Legislatures, according to Capitol Confidential. The previous Legislatures missed 3,641, 2,283 and 2,789 votes during the previous two-year terms, while the current Legislature had 3,840 votes missed during its current two-year term.
Out of those missed roll call votes, 3,072 occurred just during 2020. Some of the state’s lawmakers spent time in quarantine related to the coronavirus pandemic, according to Capitol Confidential. Only 768 of the missed roll call votes, by contrast, came during 2019.