- United States
- Mich.
- Letter
No Place Like Home: Why Representatives Must Actually Be Neighbors
A representative republic relies on a simple, foundational truth: those who write the laws must live under them alongside the people they serve. They should share the same muddy spring roads, pay the same local millages, and understand the distinct heartbeat of their community. Unfortunately, this bond is increasingly threatened by political opportunism.
The practice of purchasing a vacant lot, a small secondary property, or renting a nominal apartment just to clear a residency requirement is unacceptable. It is trust-breaking behavior that reduces a community to a mere stepping stone for ambition. When a candidate manipulates loopholes to run in a district they do not truly call home, they besmirch the integrity of our legislative process and treat voters like political capital rather than neighbors.
We need leaders who are genuinely rooted in the communities they claim to represent, not carpetbaggers with a fresh deed and a temporary address. I urge this body to close these loopholes and strengthen residency verification. Let us ensure that public service remains tied to real community investment, preserving the trust that holds our state together.