Johnson, of Holly, was a former public school teacher, small business owner, and public official in a suburban area immediately north of Detroit with a population of more than one million, prior to her election as secretary of state in November 2010.[2][3][4] She was elected to the Oakland County Board of Commissioners in 1988 and served for 10 years. Johnson was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives in 1998, and re-elected in 2000 and 2002; term limits meant she was ineligible for a fourth term.[5] She was elected Oakland CountyClerk and Register of Deeds in 2004, upsetting incumbent G. William Caddell in the Republican Primary[6] and defeated Democratic nominee Jason Ellenburg in the general election.[7] She became the first woman clerk in Oakland County's 176-year history.[4] Johnson became popular for her community outreach event and parties.
As secretary, Johnson promoted motorcycle safety initiatives, such as wearing high-visibility gear and encouraging riders to get a cycle endorsement. Johnson herself is a licensed motorcycle rider and often rides in to motorcycle-related news conferences.[11] Johnson pushed her departments to foster safe driving among teens. After reviewing the department's teen driver licensing program, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration offered recommendations for improvement but overall gave the program high praise for combating the leading cause of death for teens in the United States.[12][13] Like her time as Oakland County Clerk, Ruth Johnson because popular for community outreach events, and viral marketing campaigns[14][15]
In 2014, Michigan was named the best state in the nation for registering qualified U.S. citizens at state motor-vehicle offices, according to USA Today.[16] Also in 2014, the University of Michigan's Center for Local, State and Urban Policy found that the Secretary of State's Office was rated the second best state agency for job performance by community leaders.[17] That same year, the state's Mackinac Bridge license plate was named the best designed plate in the world.[18]
In July 2017, Ruth Johnson agreed to provide Michigan voter registration information to a federal commission created by Trump to investigate alleged illegal voting in the 2016 election.[19] Johnson indicated she would only provide basic public voter information.[20]
In 2010, she won the Republican nomination for secretary of state at the party's state convention. Her opponents were Paul Scott, Michelle McManus, Anne Norlander and Cameron Brown. She went on to win the general election defeating Democrat Jocelyn Benson, Libertarian Scotty Boman, Green John Anthony La Pietra, and US Taxpayer Robert Gale.[21]
In 2014, Johnson defeated Detroit lawyer and Democrat Godfrey Dillard, Libertarian James Lewis, US Taxpayers Robert Gale, and Natural Law Jason Gatties to earn a second term by 10.6 percentage points, receiving 1,649,047 votes to the defeated candidates 1,431,748 votes. She drew more votes than any other Republican candidate on the ballot.[22]
2018 and 2022 Michigan State Senate elections
After her tenure as Secretary of State, she was elected as a Michigan State Senator in 2018 and re-elected again in 2022.[23] In September 2020, Johnson filed a lawsuit against Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson for allowing votes postmarked before election day to be counted after election day.[23] The lawsuit was later dismissed.
Electoral history
Michigan House of Representatives 46th District Republican Primary Election, 1998
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Ruth Johnson
3,639
40.73
Republican
Jeff Gallant
3,141
35.15
Republican
Patricia Woods
1,885
21.10
Republican
John Lauve
270
3.02
Michigan House of Representatives 46th District Election, 1998
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Ruth Johnson
21,739
67.54
Democratic
Roxanne La Montaine
8,571
26.63
Libertarian
Mark Carney
1,876
5.83
Michigan House of Representatives 46th District Election, 2000
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Ruth Johnson (inc.)
29,119
64.48
Democratic
Patrick Doyon
13,928
30.84
U.S. Taxpayers
Sean Patrick Sullivan
2,110
4.67
Michigan House of Representatives 46th District Republican Primary Election, 2002
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Ruth Johnson (inc.)
3,833
68.95
Republican
John Lauve
1,726
31.05
Michigan House of Representatives 46th District Election, 2002