WILX Home ·  Station Info
     
News  ·   Sports  ·   Weather  ·   Downloads  ·   Apartment Guide  ·   Job Search  ·   Breakroom  ·   Blogs  ·   Contests  ·   Car Soup
What's Going Around · Medical Breakthroughs · Recalls · Polls · Schools · Seen on Ten · Money · News Tips · Money Talks · Going Green · Crime
Guv to Miss Part of DNC; Babysitting Kwame Save Email Print
Posted: 10:21 PM Aug 20, 2008
Last Updated: 2:29 PM Aug 21, 2008
Reporter: KATHY BARKS HOFFMAN - Associated Press

A | A | A

LANSING, Mich. (AP) -- Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick's legal issues will cause Gov. Jennifer Granholm to miss some of the Democratic National Convention.
Granholm spokeswoman Liz Boyd said Wednesday that the governor will remain in Michigan to weigh final motions from Kilpatrick and the Detroit City Council lawyers.
Granholm has scheduled a hearing for Sept. 3 on the council's request that Kilpatrick be removed from office. Final motions before the hearing are due by the close of business on Monday.
Boyd says Granholm intends to issue an order on those motions "very soon after the final motions are submitted."
The governor will then leave for Denver. The convention begins Monday and runs through Thursday, when Barack Obama will speak after formally winning the nomination.
Invitations already have gone out for Granholm to be the special guest Tuesday night during a party with the Michigan delegates in downtown Denver. Boyd wouldn't say whether Granholm will be able to attend that event.
Granholm spoke during the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston but is playing a less visible role this year.
Also Wednesday, one of Kilpatrick's attorneys made another plea to Granholm to put the brakes on the Sept. 3 hearing.
Sharon McPhail said Granholm should be persuaded by a decision from a Wayne County judge, who found the Detroit City Council had no authority to oust Kilpatrick.
McPhail is urging Granholm to wait until Kilpatrick's criminal cases have been resolved. The mayor faces 10 felony counts in separate perjury and assault cases.
But council attorney Bill Goodman filed motions in response saying there's no doubt the governor has the power to remove an elected official for misconduct.
The letters are posted at www.michigan.gov.

More Stories
Some Say a GM Bankruptcy Is Not an Option

Graduation Requirements May Change

Big 3 Lay out Viability Plans & Bailout Requests

Expanding Graduation Requirements

Dental Student Gets Millions

Locally Made Cars Not Among Top Sellers

Local UAW Union Leaders Head to Detroit

Schools Trim, Worry About Economy

Post Your Comments
First Name:
Location:
Enter Comments: characters left
Email (optional):
Email will not be displayed on site. For station contact purpose only.
wilxTV Tweets...
Here's the latest update from WILX!
    WILX Poll
    Should Lawmakers Cut Education Spending To Balance The Budget?

    Yes
    No


    AP Videos
    Stay Connected With News Ten

       10 to Go
       News Weather & Video

       Breaking News & Weather
       Download Free to Your Computer

       My 10
       Submit Your Pictures and Videos Here

       Blogs
       News Sports Weather Life

       Espanol
       Clic Aqui Para Leer En Espanol

       Tell Us More
       Tell Us More

       RSS
       Get Your RSS Feeds Here RSS Readers    and Codes

       Weather Source
       24 Hour Local  Weather Channel

       Lansing Regional Chamber of Commerce
       Latest Developments in Mid-Michigan