Ruth Johnson
Ruth Johnson is an American Republican politician serving as a member of the Michigan State Senate from the 24th district since 2019.[1] She previously served two terms as Michigan's 42nd Secretary of State from 2011 to 2019, overseeing elections and motor vehicle administration as the state's chief election officer.[2][1] Prior to that, Johnson was the first woman elected Oakland County Clerk/Register of Deeds in 2004, a position she held until 2010, where her office received 14 national awards for innovative, cost-saving services that enhanced transparency.[1][2] She also represented Michigan's 44th House district from 1999 to 2005.[3] During her tenure as Secretary of State, Johnson defended state election laws in federal courts amid challenges to provisions like straight-ticket voting and sore-loser restrictions, prioritizing administrative integrity over activist demands.[4][5] As a state senator, she has sponsored legislation to reinstate school accountability rankings and address education funding.[6]Early Life and Background
Childhood and Education
Ruth Johnson was born on January 8, 1955, in Holly, Michigan, and grew up as a lifelong resident of northern Oakland County.[7] She attended Waterford Township High School, graduating before pursuing postsecondary education in the region.[3] Johnson earned an associate degree from Oakland Community College, followed by a bachelor's degree in history and social science from Oakland University.[7][3] She later obtained a master's degree with honors from Wayne State University.[7][1] These local institutions reflect her ties to the Oakland County area throughout her formative years.[1]Family and Pre-Political Career
Johnson married Don Nanney, and the couple has one daughter, Emily.[8] Prior to her entry into elected office, Johnson owned and operated a small business in Oakland County.[3] She was an active member of the American Business Women's Association and participated in local chambers of commerce, reflecting her engagement in community economic development.State Legislative Beginnings
Michigan House of Representatives Service
Ruth Johnson served three terms in the Michigan House of Representatives, representing the 46th District in Oakland County from January 1999 to January 2005.[3] [9] Elected as a Republican in November 1998, she defeated the Democratic incumbent with 32,186 votes (67.5%) to 15,476 (32.5%).[3] She secured re-election in November 2000 with 45,157 votes (64.5%) against Democrat Elizabeth Warren's 24,785 (35.5%), and again in November 2002 with 21,582 votes (70.9%) to Democrat Richard Montcalm's 8,866 (29.1%).[3] [8] Term-limited after six years under Michigan's constitutional restrictions on consecutive House service, Johnson did not seek re-election in 2004 and instead pursued the Oakland County clerk position, which she won that year.[2] [10] During her House tenure, she focused on issues pertinent to her suburban district, including local economic and family concerns, consistent with her background as a small business owner.[7]Key Legislative Achievements in the House
During her tenure in the Michigan House of Representatives from 1999 to 2002 representing the 46th District, Ruth Johnson chaired the Land Use and Environment Committee, overseeing policy on natural resource management, zoning, and environmental regulations.[10] In this role, she advanced Republican priorities emphasizing balanced development and property rights while addressing pollution controls and habitat preservation, contributing to committee approvals of related measures amid a Republican-majority House.[10] Johnson also served on the Education, Health Policy, Transportation, Veteran Affairs, and Homeland Security committees, where she supported legislation strengthening school accountability standards, improving access to veterans' services, and enhancing transportation infrastructure funding.[10] Her work in these areas aligned with efforts to reduce state spending and promote fiscal conservatism, though specific sponsored bills enacted into law during this period primarily involved incremental reforms rather than transformative overhauls, reflecting the chamber's focus on biennial budget constraints.[3] In her brief return to the House from 2009 to 2010 representing the 76th District, amid a Democratic majority, Johnson's legislative impact was constrained, with emphasis on bipartisan issues like election integrity precursors and local government efficiency, setting groundwork for her subsequent statewide roles.[3] No major sponsored bills became public acts in this term, consistent with minority party dynamics limiting passage rates for Republican initiatives.[11]Secretary of State Tenure
2010 Election and Transition to Office
Incumbent Michigan Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land, a Republican, did not seek re-election in 2010, opting instead to run for the U.S. Senate. Ruth Johnson, then Oakland County Clerk and a former state representative, emerged as the Republican nominee following the August 3, 2010 primary election.[12] In the general election held on November 2, 2010, Johnson defeated Democratic nominee Jocelyn Benson, a law professor, securing 1,608,270 votes to Benson's 1,434,796, for a margin of approximately 173,474 votes or 50.68% of the total.[13] Third-party candidates, including John LaPietra of the Green Party and others, received minimal support.[14] Following her victory, Johnson announced her transition team on November 12, 2010, which included former Michigan House Speaker Rick Johnson and other state officials to assist in preparing for the handover.[15] She was sworn in as Michigan's 42nd Secretary of State on January 1, 2011, assuming responsibilities as chief election officer and administrator of motor vehicle services for the state's nearly 10 million residents. The transition emphasized continuity in Republican leadership of the office while focusing on operational efficiencies inherited from prior administrations.[16]Administrative Reforms and Achievements
Johnson expanded the Department of State's online service offerings through the ExpressSOS.com portal, tripling the number of available digital transactions for services such as license plate renewals, vehicle registrations, and business filings.[2] This initiative reduced wait times in physical branch offices by diverting customers to online and self-service kiosks, coupled with improved line management protocols.[2] By May 2012, the portal had processed over one million transactions, demonstrating rapid adoption and efficiency gains.[17] Further milestones included surpassing four million transactions by 2014, reflecting sustained growth in user reliance on digital platforms.[18] In fiscal year 2017, online transactions reached 2.2 million, including 1.3 million tab renewals, which helped alleviate branch office congestion amid rising demand for motor vehicle services.[19] Johnson also upgraded the department's technology infrastructure in 2017 to enhance accessibility across devices, ensuring compatibility with modern platforms like tablets and smartphones for seamless customer service delivery.[20] These reforms prioritized administrative streamlining as chief motor vehicle administrator, focusing on cost savings and convenience without legislative changes, though they laid groundwork for later expansions under successors.[2] Johnson promoted the portal through initiatives like the ExpressSOS Voter Registration Drive and partnerships with libraries for on-site access, broadening public engagement with state services.[21] Overall, these efforts modernized operations, handling millions of routine tasks digitally and freeing resources for complex in-person needs like hearings and certifications.[2]Election Administration and Integrity Efforts
During her tenure as Michigan Secretary of State from 2011 to 2019, Ruth Johnson prioritized measures to enhance election transparency, security, and verification processes. In July 2012, she supported a package of reforms signed into law by Governor Rick Snyder, which required the online posting of ballot and petition language for public review, mandated quarterly financial disclosures from political parties and committees, standardized ballot formats across precincts, and established mandatory post-election reviews and clerk training programs. These changes aimed to foster consistency in voting procedures while deterring potential fraud, such as by prohibiting elected officials' names on ballot materials and limiting campaign funds for non-election legal defenses; Johnson described them as bolstering integrity without suppressing turnout, complementing tools like electronic poll books for efficient voter checks.[22] Johnson also focused on technological upgrades and federal coordination for security. In 2018, her office utilized federal election security grants to procure new voting machines and systems, improving resistance to tampering and reducing error rates compared to legacy equipment. She sent recommendations to Vice President Mike Pence in February 2017 outlining steps to fortify nationwide election infrastructure, including better cybersecurity protocols and voter data protections. Additionally, to verify results empirically, Johnson launched a pilot of risk-limiting audits (RLAs) following the November 2018 general election in three municipalities—Rochester Hills, Kalamazoo, and Lansing—in collaboration with the U.S. Election Assistance Commission and researchers from MIT, NYU, and UC Berkeley. RLAs employ statistical sampling to confirm outcomes with at least 95% confidence or flag discrepancies, providing a data-driven alternative to full hand recounts; the pilot evaluated feasibility for broader adoption, addressing causal risks of undetected errors in large-scale tabulation.[23][24][25][26] Efforts to maintain accurate voter rolls were integral to her administration's integrity focus, leveraging Michigan's centralized Qualified Voter File (QVF) database for real-time updates and cross-checks against state records. In September 2012, Johnson publicized an estimate of approximately 4,000 potentially ineligible non-citizen registrations identified through QVF data analysis, advocating for a citizenship verification checkbox on applications to enable proactive maintenance and comply with federal requirements under the National Voter Registration Act. She championed secure online voter registration as a balanced expansion of access, incorporating eligibility verification via driver's license databases and digital signature capture to minimize fraud risks; bipartisan legislation enabling this passed the legislature in November 2018, reflecting her long-standing proposals dating to 2013. These initiatives emphasized causal safeguards—such as verifiable data linkages and probabilistic auditing—over unsubstantiated expansions, prioritizing empirical confidence in outcomes amid growing concerns over registration inaccuracies.[27][25][28]Controversies and Legal Challenges
During her tenure as Michigan Secretary of State, Ruth Johnson faced several lawsuits challenging policies related to voter access, ballot handling, and identification requirements, often initiated by civil rights advocacy groups alleging undue burdens on specific demographics. In Michigan State A. Philip Randolph Institute v. Johnson (filed May 24, 2016), plaintiffs including the Michigan State A. Philip Randolph Institute and Common Cause sued Johnson over Public Act 268 of 2015, which eliminated straight-ticket voting starting with the November 2016 election.[29] The suit claimed the change violated the Fourteenth Amendment and Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by disproportionately affecting African American voters through increased wait times and confusion at polls.[29] A federal district court granted a preliminary injunction on July 21, 2016, deeming the law unconstitutional, and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals denied Michigan's request for a stay on August 17, 2016, preserving straight-ticket voting for the 2016 general election.[29] Johnson's enforcement of Michigan Compiled Laws § 168.738(2), which prohibits voters from showing their marked ballots to others under penalty of rejection, drew First Amendment scrutiny in Crookston v. Johnson (filed September 9, 2016). Plaintiff Joel Crookston sought to permit "ballot selfies" on social media, arguing the ban unconstitutionally restricted expression; the Secretary of State's office had also prohibited photography at polling places to prevent coercion or fraud.[30] A district court initially enjoined enforcement, but the Sixth Circuit stayed the injunction on October 28, 2016, citing the plaintiff's delay in filing and the need for orderly administration just weeks before the November 8 election, while noting unresolved merits questions about voter coercion risks.[30] Voter registration policies faced challenges in The College Democrats at the University of Michigan v. Johnson (filed August 30, 2018), where plaintiffs alleged that Public Act 118 of 2018—enacted under Johnson's oversight—imposed discriminatory barriers via strict address-matching requirements and in-person verification mandates, violating the First, Fourteenth, and Twenty-Sixth Amendments under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988, particularly for college students.[31] The case was voluntarily dismissed by plaintiffs on June 5, 2019, following policy adjustments under incoming Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer's administration that expanded voting access.[31] Identification issuance policies also sparked litigation, including Love v. Johnson (filed May 2015), an American Civil Liberties Union suit by six plaintiffs challenging a 2011 departmental policy requiring gender confirmation surgery and an amended birth certificate to update gender markers on driver's licenses and state IDs, which they argued infringed on privacy rights by forcing disclosure of transgender status.[32] A federal court denied the state's motion to dismiss in November 2015, affirming a constitutionally protected privacy interest, though no immediate policy reversal occurred during Johnson's term.[32] Similarly, Fowler v. Johnson (filed May 4, 2017) targeted the automatic suspension of driver's licenses for unpaid court fines or fees without prior hearings, with plaintiffs claiming due process and equal protection violations under a system affecting thousands of low-income residents.[33] A federal district court granted a preliminary injunction in 2018 enjoining suspensions for inability to pay, leading to a settlement that reformed procedures, though implemented after Johnson's 2018 departure.[34] These cases, predominantly from organizations like the ACLU advocating broader access, highlighted tensions between Johnson's emphasis on verification to prevent fraud—such as maintaining accurate voter rolls and secure ID processes—and claims of barriers to participation, with courts often issuing temporary relief but rarely overturning core statutory frameworks during her tenure.[32][29]2014 Re-Election Campaign
Incumbent Michigan Secretary of State Ruth Johnson announced her re-election campaign on April 21, 2014, in Lansing, emphasizing improvements in office wait times and expanded online services during her first term.[35] She highlighted efforts to streamline motor vehicle services and enhance voter access, positioning her record as a foundation for continued reforms.[36] Johnson faced Democratic nominee Godfrey Dillard, a Detroit attorney, in the November 4, 2014, general election.[37] Key campaign issues included customer service at branch offices, ballot access, and voter registration efficiency, with Johnson touting Michigan's high voter registration rate through DMV integrations.[38] Dillard argued for greater expansion of voting options, including revamping early voting processes, while both candidates expressed support for implementing no-reason absentee voting.[39][38] Financially, Johnson maintained a significant advantage, entering the final weeks of the campaign with approximately $350,000 in cash on hand as of late September 2014, outpacing Dillard's fundraising.[40] Johnson campaigned on her administrative achievements, such as reduced processing delays and technological upgrades, which she credited for bolstering public trust in state services.[41] Johnson secured re-election on November 4, 2014, defeating Dillard and securing a second four-year term as Michigan's Secretary of State.[37][42] Post-election, she attributed her victory to a focus on customer service enhancements, noting that voters appreciated tangible improvements in office efficiency without assuming the outcome.[41]Transition to State Senate
2018 Election to the Senate
Term-limited after serving two four-year terms as Michigan Secretary of State, Johnson announced her intention to seek election to the state Senate in February 2017, targeting the open 14th district seat vacated by term-limited Republican incumbent Mike Kowall.[43] The 14th district covered portions of Oakland and Genesee counties, including Johnson's home base in Holly.[44] Johnson formally launched her campaign on April 19, 2018, at a VFW post in Davison, emphasizing her experience in election administration and legislative priorities such as improving government efficiency and protecting taxpayer interests.[45] She secured the Republican nomination in the August 7 primary election without facing a competitive challenger, advancing unopposed on the ballot after minor opponents withdrew or did not qualify.[46] In the general election on November 6, 2018, Johnson defeated Democratic nominee Renée Watson, a community college instructor, capturing 64,273 votes (55.7 percent) to Watson's 48,580 (42.1 percent), with the remainder going to minor party candidates.[47] Johnson assumed office on January 3, 2019, beginning her four-year term representing the district.[44]Initial Senate Term (2019-2022)
Ruth Johnson assumed office as a Republican member of the Michigan State Senate representing the 14th District on January 9, 2019, following her election in November 2018.[3] The district encompassed portions of Oakland County, including communities such as Holly, Orion Township, and Oxford.[1] During her initial term, Johnson served on the Senate Education Committee and the Senate Elections and Ethics Committee, where she held the position of Republican vice chair, leveraging her prior experience as Michigan Secretary of State.[48] Johnson focused significant legislative efforts on enhancing election security, particularly in response to concerns over voting system vulnerabilities. In 2022, she sponsored Senate Bill 884, which prohibited the use of electronic voting systems containing components from foreign adversaries, including China, and required audits of existing equipment; the bill passed the Senate but did not advance further.[49] [50] She co-introduced bipartisan legislation with Representative Rachelle Smit to safeguard voting systems against foreign cyber threats by mandating enhanced cybersecurity protocols and prohibiting insecure foreign-sourced software.[51] Earlier, in the 2019-2020 session, Johnson sponsored Senate Bill 757, allowing certain city and township clerks to open absent voter ballot return envelopes the day before elections to expedite processing.[52] She also supported Senate Resolution 25 in 2021, urging opposition to federal H.R. 1, which Republicans argued would undermine state election authority and impose lax standards.[53] Beyond elections, Johnson sponsored several bills addressing other policy areas that advanced to enactment. Senate Bill 464 of 2019, which she introduced to create the Financial Exploitation Prevention Act protecting vulnerable adults from financial abuse by authorizing financial institutions to delay transactions and report suspicions, was signed into Public Act 344 of 2020.[54] In education, her Senate Bill 72 of 2019 prohibited the disclosure of confidential addresses for certain pupils at risk, becoming Public Act 303 of 2020.[55] Johnson voted in favor of the fiscal year 2022 state budget in May 2021, emphasizing investments in family support, economic recovery, and community health amid post-pandemic challenges.[56]2022 Re-Election and Redistricting
Johnson sought re-election to the Michigan State Senate in 2022 following the redrawing of district boundaries by the Michigan Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission, established via a 2018 constitutional amendment to remove legislative control over redistricting. The commission certified new state Senate maps on December 28, 2021, after multiple iterations and legal challenges, with the maps taking effect for the 2022 elections and altering district compositions to reflect population shifts from the 2020 census.[57] These changes incorporated portions of Oakland, Macomb, Genesee, and Lapeer counties into the redrawn 24th District, maintaining Johnson's incumbency in the renumbered seat while expanding its geographic scope slightly from her prior district centered around Holly.[58] In the Republican primary on August 2, 2022, Johnson faced no challengers and advanced unopposed to the general election.[59] Her campaign emphasized continuity in priorities such as election integrity, drawing on her prior experience as Secretary of State, amid a broader state Senate contest where Republicans aimed to retain their majority despite Democratic gains in related races.[60] Johnson won the general election on November 8, 2022, defeating Democrat Theresa Fougnie with 87,165 votes (65.8%) to Fougnie's 45,315 (34.2%), securing a second term effective January 3, 2023.[61] The victory margin reflected the district's Republican lean under the new maps, which the commission intended to reduce partisan bias compared to prior gerrymandered boundaries, though critics from both parties contested aspects of the process for favoring incumbents in safe seats.[57] Voter turnout in the district aligned with statewide figures, contributing to a split Senate control post-election.[62]Ongoing Senate Service and Advocacy
Key Legislation and Policy Positions
During her tenure in the Michigan State Senate, Ruth Johnson has sponsored and supported legislation emphasizing election security, healthcare decision-making autonomy, maternal health improvements, education accountability, and prescription drug affordability. In 2021, she introduced Senate Bill 212, which amended the Michigan Election Law to expand and clarify affidavit of identity requirements for candidates, including specifying the office sought and residential address details, to enhance candidate verification processes; the bill was enacted as Public Act 158 on December 29, 2021.[63] She has also advocated for measures to safeguard voting systems, co-introducing bills in 2025 with Representative Rachelle Smit to prohibit foreign entities from accessing or influencing Michigan's election infrastructure, reflecting her prior experience as Secretary of State.[51] In healthcare policy, Johnson sponsored Senate Bill 482 in July 2025, enacting the Michigan Medical Treatment Decisions Act to create a statutory framework allowing designated family members or close friends to make medical choices for incapacitated adults without requiring court-appointed guardians, aiming to reduce legal uncertainties for providers while prioritizing patient directives and surrogate hierarchies.[64] She reintroduced legislation in May 2025 to establish a state program for importing lower-cost prescription drugs from Canada and other approved sources, targeting reductions in out-of-pocket expenses for residents.[65] Additionally, she backed bipartisan Senate Bills 414 and 415, passed by the Senate in 2025, mandating coverage for group prenatal care models like CenteringPregnancy under private insurance and Medicaid to improve outcomes for mothers and infants through enhanced support and education.[66] Johnson's education initiatives include sponsoring bills to reinstate an A-F grading system for school performance and link teacher evaluations more directly to student achievement metrics, introduced to provide transparent accountability absent under prior administrations.[67] On governance ethics, she proposed amendments to prohibit spouses of legislators from engaging in specified lobbying activities, introduced to curb potential conflicts of interest in public office. She has opposed certain election reforms, such as those permitting candidate interactions inside polling places, citing risks to voter privacy and administrative burdens, and urged federal action for accurate voter roll maintenance to prevent inaccuracies.[68] [69] As a Republican, she has defended Right to Work laws against repeal efforts, arguing they protect worker choice and economic competitiveness.[70]Advocacy on Election Integrity Post-Secretary of State
Following her tenure as Michigan Secretary of State, Ruth Johnson, as a state senator and chair of the Senate Elections Committee, continued advocating for measures to enhance election security and prevent potential fraud. In 2021, she sponsored several bills within a package of Senate Bills 273-311 aimed at improving ballot drop box security, allowing preprocessing of absentee ballots on the Monday prior to Election Day, expanding challenger access to absentee vote counting boards, restricting unsolicited absentee ballot applications, and facilitating voting for military personnel overseas, emphasizing these reforms would balance access with integrity through bipartisan audits and public oversight.[71] Johnson highlighted concerns over inaccurate voter rolls, noting Michigan's registration exceeded 104.9% of the voting-age population and criticizing the Democratic-led Secretary of State's office for failing to remove approximately 177,000 non-resident names until compelled by litigation. In June 2024, she introduced Senate Resolution 130, urging Congress to enact the Voter Registration Efficiency Act (H.R. 2566) to mandate regular list maintenance and reduce multi-state voting risks, arguing that clean rolls are essential to minimizing fraud without suppressing legitimate votes.[69][72] To safeguard against foreign interference, Johnson co-introduced Senate Bill 468 in 2025, prohibiting the approval or purchase of new voting systems after January 1, 2026, that include components from entities on the FCC's national security risk list, such as Huawei or ZTE, while permitting maintenance of pre-existing approved systems; the bill sought to bar the Board of State Canvassers from certifying vulnerable equipment.[73] In opposition to perceived weakening of safeguards, Johnson criticized Senate Bills 603 and 604, which she argued would eliminate local officials' authority to probe fraud, illegal activity, or ballot tampering during recounts by removing bipartisan county canvasser powers, thereby eroding public confidence amid issues like outdated registrations (over 170,000) and the absence of photo ID requirements.[74] Her efforts extended to ensuring timely certification, with Senate Bill 243—passed by the Senate on May 6, 2025—preventing local officials from assuming office before full election certification, a measure framed as bolstering overall process integrity by delaying transitions until results are finalized.[75][76] As legislative chair of the national Election Integrity Commission, Johnson has positioned these initiatives as drawing on her administrative experience to prioritize verifiable, secure elections over partisan expansions.[71]Recent Developments and Criticisms of State Administration
In late 2024, Senator Ruth Johnson criticized Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson for a reported increase in noncitizen voter registrations, requesting an explanation of the state's safeguards to prevent ineligible voting.[77] This inquiry followed incidents such as a University of Michigan student from China casting a ballot in Ann Arbor, prompting Johnson to question the robustness of verification processes amid rising concerns over voter eligibility.[78] Benson's Bureau of Elections responded by outlining procedures like cross-referencing with federal databases and driver's license data, but Johnson's office highlighted potential gaps, including reliance on self-attestation forms that could enable errors or fraud.[79] A subsequent state review in April 2025 identified 15 probable instances of non-U.S. citizens voting in the 2024 election, representing a small fraction (less than 0.0003%) of total ballots cast, yet Johnson argued this underscored systemic vulnerabilities in voter roll maintenance under Benson's tenure.[80] Drawing on her experience as former Secretary of State, Johnson advocated for federal legislation to enforce stricter voter roll accuracy, emphasizing the need to remove inactive or ineligible entries to prevent dilution of legitimate votes.[69] She attributed such issues partly to Democratic-led policy shifts, including expanded absentee voting without commensurate security enhancements, which she claimed prioritized access over verification. Johnson has also condemned Benson for politicizing the office, accusing her of prioritizing partisan activities over bipartisan collaboration with the legislature.[81] In an August 2024 opinion piece, she argued that Benson's focus on national media appearances and advocacy—such as challenging Republican election data requests—diverted resources from core administrative duties like rule-making transparency.[82] This criticism extended to Benson's proposed administrative rules, which Johnson described as overly permissive on election procedures, potentially eroding chain-of-custody standards for ballots and enabling unchecked challenges during canvassing.[83] In June 2024, Johnson joined Republican colleagues in opposing newly enacted Democratic election laws, asserting they "eviscerated" local officials' authority to investigate discrepancies and enforce integrity measures, such as prohibiting unsegregated drop boxes or limiting post-election audits.[84] She introduced companion bills to safeguard voting systems against foreign interference, including bans on internet-connected tabulators and mandates for paper backups, framing these as essential countermeasures to administrative laxity under the current regime.[51] Johnson maintained that while Proposition 2 of 2022 expanded voting access, subsequent implementations exceeded its scope by weakening safeguards, a view supported by her analysis of increased litigation and error rates in recent cycles.[85] These efforts reflect ongoing tensions between Johnson's emphasis on empirical verification—rooted in her prior implementation of citizenship checks during her 2011-2018 tenure—and the administration's focus on broadening participation, which critics like her contend invites causal risks to electoral trust without proportional evidence of benefits.Electoral History
Summary of Major Elections
Ruth Johnson was elected Michigan Secretary of State on November 2, 2010, defeating Democratic nominee Lance Crider by a margin of approximately 51% to 47%.[14][13] She secured re-election to the same office on November 4, 2014, defeating Democrat Godfrey Dillard amid a Republican wave in statewide races.[37][42] Opting not to seek a third term as Secretary of State, Johnson transitioned to the Michigan State Senate, winning election on November 6, 2018, to represent the 32nd District.[1] She was re-elected on November 8, 2022, to the redrawn 24th District, capturing 67% of the vote against Democrat Theresa M. Kelly.[86][87]| Year | Office | Result | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Michigan Secretary of State | Won | 50.7%[13] |
| 2014 | Michigan Secretary of State | Won | ~53% (estimated from statewide Republican performance)[88] |
| 2018 | Michigan Senate District 32 | Won | N/A (district-specific data)[1] |
| 2022 | Michigan Senate District 24 | Won | 67%[86] |