AG Power Plan

What a Constitutional Attorney General Can Do

The Attorney General is the people’s lawyer — the most powerful legal office in Michigan. Used correctly, it is a constitutional enforcement engine. Here is exactly how Jason Dye intends to use it.

01

Constitutional AG Opinions

Issue Attorney General opinions grounded in the Constitution, restoring legal guidance that limits government instead of excusing it.

02

Investigate Public Corruption

Use the office's investigative authority to pursue public corruption at every level of Michigan government, regardless of party.

03

Civil Enforcement

Bring or support civil enforcement actions against fraud, abuse of office, and unlawful conduct that harms Michiganders.

04

Challenge Unconstitutional Acts

Challenge unconstitutional government practices in court instead of defending them by default.

05

Defend Against Overreach

Stand between the people and unlawful government overreach — state or federal.

06

Review Misconduct Patterns

Review systemic patterns of government misconduct that individual cases hide, and publish what the review finds.

07

Pressure for Reform

Create public, evidence-driven pressure for legislative reform where the law itself protects corruption.

08

Expose Hidden Records

Expose hidden records, undisclosed conflicts, and corrupt systems — and put the receipts in front of the people.

The Standard

One Set of Rules

Every investigation, opinion, and enforcement action under a Dye administration follows the same test: What does the Constitution require, and what do the receipts prove? Not which party benefits. Not which donor calls. Not what the machine prefers.

The Attorney General’s office was never supposed to be the machine’s law firm. It was supposed to be yours.

— Jason Dye