A former Michigan Democratic Party chair is challenging qualifying petitions for independent presidential candidate Cornel West, the latest attempt by Democrats to limit voters in November.

Rosa Holliday, a former party chair turned activist for Clear Choice Action, a PAC aimed at pushing third-party candidates off the ballot, filed a complaint with the Board of State Canvassers alleging West’s qualifying petitions are “rife with forged signatures,” Michigan Advance reports.

The complaint requests the state board compare each signature to Michigan’s Qualified Voter File, arguing many of the nearly 30,000 signatures submitted showed signs of fraud, citing a lack of wear on petition sheets, and distinctive handwriting on some.

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Clear Choice Action also contends West campaign circulators have forged other petitions in the past, and used tactics similar to circulators involved in rejected petitions that sank Republican gubernatorial candidates and ballot measures in 2022, WDET reports.

West, a philosopher and socialist who’s wildly popular with the far-left, is considered a threat to Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign, with many concerned he could siphon off the party’s more progressive voters.

“I believe in fairness and holding accountable those who don’t want to play by the rules —  regardless of their party or the office they’re seeking. Too many Michiganders have been deceived in recent years by candidates attempting to qualify for the ballot by submitting petitions that are rife with fraud and forgery, and this is yet another example,” Holliday said in a statement from Clear Choice Action.

“The Board owes the voters of Michigan a speedy and thorough investigation — what they’ll find is an organized effort by the West campaign to submit massive numbers of clearly fraudulent signatures.”

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Clear Choice founder Pete Kavanaugh told WDET “when you look through these petition pages, and there are thousands of them, again, it’s close to 30,000 individual signatures, what you see are clear patterns of fraud.”

The West campaign wrote in a state it “sees these accusations as part of a broader attempt to undermine the democratic process rather than legitimate legal objections.”

“The allegations focus on procedural issues such as incomplete voter information and errors by petition circulators, disproportionately emphasizing technicalities over substantial compliance,” the statement read.

Michigan Democrats have tried to use the similar tactics in attempts to block former President Donald Trump and Natural Law Party candidate Robert F. Kennedy from appearing on the ballot this election.

In April, Clear Choice partnered with former Michigan Democratic Party chairman Mark Brewer to challenge Kennedy’s access just days after he was approved for the ballot.

That challenge followed another failed effort to block former President Donald Trump last year.

The Michigan Supreme Court in December rejected Democrats’ argument Trump should be disqualified from appearing on the state’s primary ballot under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibits anyone who has “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” from holding public office.

In March, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously restored Trump to 2024 presidential primary ballots, ending efforts in Colorado, Illinois, Maine, and elsewhere to remove him.

Assuming a similar fate with Kennedy and West, their names on the ballot in Michigan could change the dynamic of the presidential contest in a state Biden won by about 154,000 votes over Trump in 2020.

The 2016 presidential contest three independent candidates gained more votes than Trump’s margin of victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

West’s campaign submitted more than double the required signatures to appear on the ballot, and could survive the challenge that entails a random review of about 750 signatures, with fewer than half required to be valid, WDET reports.

West’s challenge in Michigan comes after the Democratic majority on North Carolina’s elections board voted to block him from the ballot there over alleged concerns about how signatures were gathered.

The latest Michigan presidential poll that included West, which involved 1,012 registered voters surveyed July 22-24, showed Trump leading Vice President Kamala Harris 45%-43%, with Kennedy at 7%, West at 1%, and Green Party nominee Jill Stein at 1%.