LANSING, Mich.—The Michigan State Board of Canvassers on July 13 certified that an anti-lockdown group had gathered enough signatures for a petition to repeal the 1945 Emergency Powers Act that gave Gov. Gretchen Whitmer sweeping executive authority to lock down the state at the height of the CCP virus pandemic. With the board’s certification, the state’s Republican-controlled legislature can now vote on the petition and is all but certain to repeal the law before the end of the month, according to a GOP state senate spokesperson. By law, the lawmakers have 40 days to act, and this special legislative action isn’t subject to a governor’s veto. If the legislature fails to repeal the law, the Michigan Constitution mandates the measure go before the voters in the next general election. Though the 1945 law was found unconstitutional (as an undue ceding of legislative authority to the executive) by the Michigan Supreme Court …