Police say the heroic actions of church members and staff at the CrossPointe Community Church in Wayne stopped a mass shooting on the property Sunday.
A livestream during services captured gunfire and panic when a man armed with a handgun and rifle and wearing a tactical vest hopped out of his truck and started shooting outside the church.
Wayne Police Chief Ryan Strong says a security guard was shot in the leg by the attacker before a churchgoer and security staff were able to intervene.
“A parishioner struck the gunman with his vehicle as the gunman shot the vehicle repeatedly,” he said. “At least two staff members shot the gunman, causing fatal wounds.”
The suspect — identified as 31-year-old Brian Anthony Browning — never made it inside the church, police say. The guard who was shot was treated for non-life-threatening injuries and is expected to be fine. Nobody else was hurt.
The shooting occurred around 11 a.m. in Wayne, a city of about 17,000 people located about 25 miles west of Detroit.
Strong put to rest racist social media speculation about the shooter.
“His motivations are unknown, but at this point, it appears he was suffering from a mental health crisis,” he said. “We are grateful for the heroic actions of the church’s staff members, who undoubtedly saved many lives and prevented a large-scale mass shooting.”
About 150 people were inside the church at the time.
Police executing a search warrant at Browning’s home in Romulus — about 5 miles south of Wayne — found additional rifles, several more handguns and a large amount of ammunition, according to The Associated Press.
Police say Browning had no prior criminal history, but he had attended services at the church a few times in the last year and his mother is a member.
Associated Press writers Paul Sancya and Holly Ramer contributed to this report.
We’re past Memorial Day and kids are out of school. The summer tourism season is here.
But this year, Canadians are upset with President Donald Trump’s tariffs — and his talk of annexation. For that reason, many of our travel-happy neighbors to the north are staying out of the U.S.
Speaking with WDET, new U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra called Trump’s 51st state rhetoric “a sign of affection.”
“That may be the first time that America has extended an offer to someone else to become part of the country,” he said. “…why they’re offended by such a generous offer, I’m not sure.”
According to Statistics Canada, car trips by Canadians into the U.S. dropped by 35% in April; flights by Canadians into the U.S. are down by 20%; and border crossings between the two countries are now at their lowest levels since the 2020 pandemic.
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer says that’s not good for Michigan.
“We know that Canadians are our friends, they’re our extended relatives in many cases, in many families,” she said. “Michigan loves Canada. Our economies are intertwined.”
Whitmer says the president is killing the good vibes between the countries.
“The chaos on the Trump tariff talk is palpable,” Whitmer said. “You can you can feel it just talking to people here. You can feel it at home. We can feel it in our tourism.”
Canadians spend more than $360 million every year in Michigan on average — about 10% of the state’s total tourism revenue.
Michigan is consistently in the top six for Canadian tourist destinations, after bigger ones like Florida, California and Las Vegas.
“We have year-round tourism, but summer is the time in Michigan where a lot of businesses make their opportunity,” Calley said.
The bigger challenge for resort towns is finding enough workers, he said, downplaying concerns about drops in Canadian tourism.
“Early indications are that that bookings are solid, that people are still booking hotels,” Calley said.
A sign on Interstate 75 points to a U.S.-Canada border crossing near Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.
Though he acknowledged that a dip in tourism could possibly be felt more in communities near the border.
“[Places] where Canadians live right across the border and experience, in very short periods, shopping and things,” he said. “I think that’s probably more vulnerable than, say, the week-long family vacation.”
Michel Soucisse manages El Moore, a lodge offering overnight stays in Midtown Detroit. He says he agrees with Calley…to a point.
“We’re a border town, and unfortunately, border towns feel this first, and our businesses are the ones who are absorbing the impact first,” Soucisse said. “None of these small businesses asked for this. You know, we’re just sort of rolling with the punches. Everyone’s seeing a slow down. Everyone’s getting the emails saying ‘we’re sorry, but we’re not spending our money here right now.'”
Emails like those mean a hit to the bottom line.
“I would say it looks right now compared to last year and year over year that we’ve experienced something around a 15% drop in their travel,” he said, adding that he doesn’t think it’s going to change anytime soon.
“We already had so many regular guests, that it was really kind of heart wrenching for some folks to cancel plans that they had already made — sometimes a year in advance. But I don’t necessarily blame them,” Soucisse said. “This is a way that they can show us their displeasure with the current situation, and ‘this is the way we can protest.’”
The same is happening in Detroit’s emerging foodie scene.
Sandy Levine is a James Beard semi-finalist and the owner of two of Detroit’s most-heralded restaurants: Freya and Chartreuse. He says lots of Canadians used to make the trek over the border.
“A large amount of people have come to Detroit because they they heard really good things about it, and they just wanted to see for themselves. And you know, for the first time, that steady increase has kind of stopped,” Levine said. “We certainly still see people from Canada and from other countries, but it’s not nearly to the degree that it was maybe like six months ago or a year ago.”
Levine’s theory for the change? Again, bad vibes.
“There’s definitely a sense of just, kind of tension in this country, and I think a lot of the people are looking to just avoid that,” he said.
So if a city like Detroit is seeing an immediate impact, how about places not quite as close to the border?
Robert Chambers helps manage the Windermere Hotel, a bed and breakfast on Mackinac Island.
“We’ve definitely had some regulars who’ve had to cancel their reservation, and they’re from Northern Ontario. They stay with us every year,” Chambers said. “Unfortunately, about two months prior to our opening, though, they contacted us and said they wouldn’t be able to make it to the States this year.”
Chambers told WDET in late May that they didn’t have a single booking from a Canadian. It’s significant, even if Canadians don’t make up a large portion of their guests.
“So not a huge dip as far as numbers go, but we still really look forward to seeing friends and loyal customers at the hotel every year. It’s unfortunate that they can’t make it now,” he said.
And being over an hour away from Sault Ste. Marie, Canada, he figures short term stays to the island will be limited too.
There’s a feeling — from some — that the bad vibes aren’t permanent. Or as Ambassador Hoekstra puts it: “The Canadians are, you know, they’re acting on emotion.”
Back in Detroit at the El Moore, Soucisse says that’s true. He became an American citizen a decade ago, but he’s originally from Montreal.
“I know for a fact that my French Canadian family — or as we call ourselves, Quebecois — do not want to be a 51st state, and will not be a 51st state,” Soucisse said. “I hear the steady drumbeat from my friends and family over there.”
He says Canadian guests have been pretty honest about their motivations for canceling upcoming reservations or choosing not to spend their money in the U.S. right now.
“I thought it was great that they were letting us know,” he said. “Oftentimes they would include messages like, you know, we’ll be back. You know, someday.”
With Trump’s trade war far from settled, a crackdown on immigrants and people from other countries, and ongoing threats to send federal troops into American cities, it’s unclear when that “someday” will be. That could pose a serious risk to a tourism industry that’s still recovering from the pandemic.
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Not on stage and not taking any of those shots was Detroit Councilman and mayoral candidateFred Durhal III.However,hedidtakethetimetoreleaseacomprehensiveeconomicstrategy —somethingthatnoothercandidatehasdone.
Durhal joined WDET’s All Things Considered – Detroiton Wednesday to talk about the motivation behind his economic platform and his reaction to Monday’s debate.
Listen: Detroit mayoral candidate Fred Durhal on his economic strategy
The following interview has been edited for clarity and length.
Russ McNamara, WDET News: Firstoff,youweren’tat the debate;Iwantyourthoughtsontheshotsfiredthereby SaunteelJenkins.
Fred Durhal, Detroit City Councilmember and mayoral candidate: Well, you know, sometimes shots get fired.If they hit you, they hit you. My grandmother had an old saying that “if you throw a rock in a pack of wolves, the first one that cries is the first one that got hit,’ So, you know, the base tend to get a little bit punchy, but, I think folks want to hear comprehensive plans when it comes to debates.
RM: Moving on to your plan — big bold letters, right at the top: “An equitable tax strategy.” Where is the inequity right now?
FD: Well, the inequity is really what homeowners pay as opposed to folks who speculate on land or folks who are contributors to blight here in the city of Detroit. I’ll give you an example — we have a lot of underdeveloped land here in the city of Detroit; a lot of the land that may be just flat surface parking lots that during the Tigers game or the Lions game, and — per year — generate over $2-$3 million per year, but pay just a little over $10,000 in property taxes, while the average homeowner is paying that or more in property taxes. So the equity is not there.
We want to make sure that we are charging folks more who are not paying their fair share, and put more money back into the pockets of the residents who are paying their property taxes.
RM: Now, what about those properties that exist, but the homes are still a bit run down?
FD: So if there are properties that exist and the homes are run down — if they’re not owner occupied — we are going to focus on creating a blight tax here in the city of Detroit. And again, this is not for owner occupied homes or structures. We’re targeting folks who are speculators, who come into neighborhoods and buy 10 to 15 properties, sit on those properties, don’t provide any upgrades to those properties; They’re contributors to blight here in the city of Detroit, and then neighbors are stuck with blight in their neighborhood. So we’re going to be aggressive. We’re going to introduce a blight tax and charge 25 times with the property tax millage is.
RM: Now the current mayor, Mike Duggan, tried to institute some taxes and kind of raise the property taxes on speculators — people who are leaving the land vacant — by going through the state Legislature. How close does your plan come to the one that Duggan tried and failed to get done?
FD: I think what’s important to realize is, when you talk about property tax reform in any manner, it’s going to take passage from the state Legislature — anything that is of substance. So when we compare our plan to his plan, there are similarities, but again, we’re going to be very aggressive on lowering the operating mills about 19.5 mills. Additionally, you heard about the implementation of that blight tax, which is going to charge 25 times what the property millage rate is, for folks who are contributors to blight. And we’re very confident, due to the relationships that we’ve had in the state Legislature — being a former member of the Michigan Legislature and in leadership — that we’ll be able to get our plan across the finish line.
RM: What makes you think that you can get it done when a completely democratically-controlled state Legislature, with a Democratic governor, weren’t able to get it done?
FD: They didn’t even take a vote on it. And I think for me, having those relationships are going to be important. And I think at the time from the conversation with some legislators, they did not feel it was aggressive enough, and some folks needed to see the benefit that it would bring to their community — not just the city of Detroit. So we’ve already started to have those discussions with legislators now about how this would affect their communities. But again, the components that we’re adding, such as a blight tax, is something that’ll be beneficial across the entire state when we talk about getting aggressive.
RM: The people who own the parking lots, the people who own the buildings in downtown Detroit, those are some rich folks who wield a considerable amount of power. I’m just wondering how you expected to get that done and have it go over well?
FD: Again, that’s relationships, and that’s coalition building. You have to be able to get into the door to talk to some of the heads of industry, as well as have a great pulse in the community. And I think we have that, and we have the ability to bridge that gap. And what we’re saying is we’re not trying to penalize folks, but we’re trying to incentivize development here in the city of Detroit. We’re trying to incentivize folks not to be contributors to blight here in the city. And as we look at some of that underdeveloped land, and we start to see that land become developed, we solve a couple problems. One, we have the ability to create new streams of revenue that we can generate so we can put back into the neighborhoods and continue to grow our city. But the second thing that you’ll see is creating walkable areas and neighborhoods.
Let’s say we take a flat lot surface and it gets developed into a huge parking structure. We know parking is starting to become a big issue here in the city of Detroit — and I’m just using that as an example of how we can solve some of these problems and find productive uses for the land that we have.
“I’ve said it throughout this entire campaign, I want to cut more red tape so we can cut more red ribbons, and that is going to be my focus.”
–Detroit City Councilmember and mayoral candidate Fred Durhal III
RM: There’s been a push both at the state level and local level to start cutting some red tape. How do you do that effectively in the city?
FD: I’ve said it throughout this entire campaign, I want to cut more red tape so we can cut more red ribbons, and that is going to be my focus. And we’ll do that by focusing on and streamlining processes here in the city of Detroit. We want a one-stop permitting process that develops a level of predictability that when you want to come do business here in the city of Detroit, you don’t have to go through over 80 steps to get your business started here, no matter if it’s a restaurant, whether it’s retail or whatever the case may be. And then after that, even as we talk about development, we want to create a one-stop inspection process so you don’t have to wait two, three months at a time per inspector, which slows down your process, and slows down the progress of your development, making it more expensive.
We want to make it easier to do business here, we want to be more efficient, and we want to foster an environment where everyone wants to come here and do business and develop in the city.
RM: What’s the one thing you want Detroiters to know about you?
FD: The one thing I want Detroiters to know about us, even if they didn’t get an opportunity to see us in this past debate, is that we are a very serious candidate, and the most experienced candidate in this race. We’re the only candidate that can say that we served on the state level as well as the city level; we have delivered time and time again, and as the mayor of the city of Detroit, we will continue to develop because we’ll utilize that experience to get comprehensive property tax relief across Lansing and bring home the dollars here for residents in the city of Detroit.
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Protesters across Michigan and the nation rally against Trump’s policies
Tens of thousands of protesters rallied in Michigan against what they see as acts of authoritarianism by President Donald Trump and his administration.
Last week, the president ordered National Guard troops into Los Angeles, California, against the wishes of the governor. He also deployed several hundred Marines. While the protests in L.A. have been largely peaceful, local police have repeatedly used tear gas and rubber bullets on demonstrators.
Protesters in Michigan were part of a nationwide outpouring of opposition to President Donald Trump. As reported by the Associated Press, “Masses of demonstrators packed into streets, parks and plazas across the United States on Saturday to protest President Donald Trump, marching through downtowns and small towns, blaring anti-authoritarian chants mixed with support for protecting democracy and immigrant rights.”
Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) speaks to the crowd at the No Kings rally in Detroit's Clark Park on Saturday, June 14 2025. Photo credit: Russ McNamara, WDET
Detroit officials and residents speak out
At a rally Saturday at Clark Park in Southwest Detroit, Michigan Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) said protests are effective.
“We did not get the Civil Rights Act because somebody in Congress woke up one day and said, ‘Geez, that’s a really good idea.'”
Tlaib said the city has a long history of fighting for civil rights.
“I mean, we’ve birthed movements. If there’s any city that’s going to end fascism, it’s Detroit.”
Detroiter Roger Paz was brought to the U.S. from Peru by his parents in the late 1960s. He said he’s baffled by the hate directed toward immigrants.
“I have always been proud of the immigrant tradition of this country. And to be anti-immigrant, I think it is like the most anti-American thing you can be.”
With a smile, Paz said targeting Latinos in the U.S. is pretty silly given this country’s history.
“I wish these Spanish speaking people would get out of our country, like, get out of California, Florida, Nevada, San Francisco, San Diego, Los Alamos, San Antonio, Las Vegas, Florida,” Paz said. “What are these Spanish speaking people doing in Sacramento?”
Calls for community solidarity
Immigration and Customs Enforcement have been conducting raids in Southwest Detroit. The area is home to a large immigrant community.
Detroit City Councilwoman Gabriela Santiago-Romero said now is the time to take care of the community.
“Get to know your neighbors, jot down their numbers, call to see how they’re doing. Do you have an undocumented family on your block with young children? Offer to take them to school. Do you have elders that are scared to pick up their medication and go to the doctors? Give them a ride. Find translation services. Be of help.”
Warren resident Leigh Benigni protested in Roseville. She criticized what she called Trump’s hypocrisy for supporting law and order while ignoring the courts.
“We also happen to have a queer daughter and the thought of someone wanting to jail her or prosecute her just for who she loves… it’s just mind-blowing,” Benigni said. “I just feel stirred within my being to fight for what I know is good about this country.”
Christian Pierce of Harsens Island said he hopes to change the minds of conservatives backing Trump.
“If that’s my countrymen, I don’t really identify with them. And you know when you’re old you’re looking at limited time,” Pierce said. “So if you believe in it, you’ve gotta try.”
Protesters line the streets in Ferndale on June 14, 2025. Photo credit: Russ McNamara, WDET
Emphasis on mutual care and long-term activism
In the crowd in Ferndale, Tiffany Perkins of Royal Oak said now is the best time to take care of others.
“Look out for your neighbors, look out for your friends, look out for your family, and if we come together, we’ll be stronger,” Perkins said. “Don’t let fear keep you from doing the right thing and having empathy.”
Perkins also worries that unexpected, swift deportations will leave pets and other dependent animals behind without needed food and shelter.
In immigration court in Detroit last week, several immigrants seeking asylum had their cases dismissed and were arrested by ICE agents — fast-tracking them for forcible removal.
In Lansing, Michigan State medical student Elizabeth Shokoya protested in 2020 during Black Lives Matter demonstrations. But she said this moment feels different.
“This one feels more impending doom. Like it’s not only impacting people who are minorities. It’s impacting women. It’s impacting disabled people. It’s impacting everyone. And it feels like you need to be out here to say something because if you don’t say something, then they’re just going to take everything away from us and we’ll regret it,” Shokoya said.
Liz Kelley demonstrated in Elk Rapids, in northern Michigan’s Antrim County. She’s a substitute teacher and a single mother of three. Her family relies on food assistance and Medicaid. Kelley worries that Trump’s so-called “Big Beautiful Bill” will continue to slash safety nets for low-income families.
“Great societies shouldn’t be judged by the top tier of their wealth but by how they care for their most vulnerable,” Kelley said. “So how are we seeking the needs of those who aren’t meeting them on their own? I think that’s a virtuous thing. And we shouldn’t have the stigma that we’ve failed — but that we’re looking out for each other.”
Also at the rally in Lansing, organizer Megan Ropeta said more major rallies will come if President Trump doesn’t change his policies.
“This is not a sprint. This is a long game so we’re in it, we’re buckling in and we’re going to be planning stuff like this for as long as it takes,” Ropeta said.
In a statement shared with the Associated Press, the No Kings Coalition said, “Today, across red states and blue, rural towns and major cities, Americans stood in peaceful unity and made it clear: we don’t do kings.”
Protesters hold homemade signs in Ferndale on June 14, 2025. Photo credit: Russ McNamara, WDET
Demonstrations widespread and largely peaceful
Large protests also took place in Grand Rapids, Petoskey, Marquette, Troy and Wyandotte.
John DeSpelder leads Traverse Indivisible, the left-leaning civics group that organized the No Kings protest in Traverse City. He says thousands attended, making it the group’s largest demonstration to date.
“I think a lot of people are watching the news and feeling real anguish,” DeSpelder said. “Especially in more conservative areas, folks sometimes feel like they’re the only ones who think this way. But when people show up in large numbers, it opens the door to conversation and reminds them they’re not alone.”
The demonstrations were peaceful. In Clark Park, members of the notorious Highwaymen Motorcycle Club showed up to instigate fights with protesters. There was a brief scuffle, but Detroit Police quickly broke it up.
AP journalists also reported, “Confrontations were isolated. But police in Los Angeles, where protests over federal immigration enforcement raids erupted a week earlier and sparked demonstrations across the country, used tear gas and crowd-control munitions to clear out protesters after the formal event ended.”
Associated Press material contributed to this report.
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Unhappy with the Trump Administration’s arrests of undocumented immigrants, about 50 protesters demonstrated near an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Detroit on Sunday.
Over the weekend, law enforcement in Los Angeles, CA attacked protesters and journalists with tear gas and projectiles injuring dozens.
The crowd was small but vocal, chanting “Summer’s here, melt the ICE, immigrants deserve their rights,” along with chants in Spanish that included expletives aimed at ICE.
Protesters in Detroit – near an ICE facility and in front of Detroit Public Safety – expressed their opposition to Trump Administration immigration policies. Photo credit: Russ McNamara, WDET
Mike Barber, a special education teacher from White Lake, was among them. He says he’s troubled by the administration’s actions.
“This is against what America stands for,” Barber says. “America is a nation of immigrants and now they want to kick them out without even looking at their papers.”
“It could be us next if we’re disliked.”
“I mean, here at Wayne State, we had people that got their F1 visas canceled,” Pico says. “These aren’t criminals, and the fact that Trump wants to portray them like that, I mean, he’s just racist.”
Jo Pico was drawn to protest after seeing the police-initiated violence in LA.
Protesters in Detroit – near an ICE facility and in front of Detroit Public Safety show their displeasure with Trump Administration immigration policies. Photo credit: Russ McNamara, WDET
Leah Checchini of Hazel Park says her father immigrated from Argentina and that she believes everyone should have the same opportunity that he did.
“I have a lot of friends that are in the process of getting their papers taken care of and everything,” Checchini says. “So just seeing what’s happening to people is enraging, to say the least.”
Nationwide protests are planned for Saturday. It coincides with a planned show of military might by President Trump.
The President is celebrating his birthday with a military parade in Washington D.C.
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A number of universities are worried about funding cuts that are coming from the Trump administration. That includes those in Michigan.
Wayne State University, the University of Michigan, and Michigan State University collaborate — sharing research and attracting businesses to their campuses. Late last month, Michigan Tech joined the re-branded group that’s now called Research Universities for Michigan.
At the 2025 Mackinac Policy Conference, presidents from three of the four schools spoke with WDET’s Russ McNamara: MSU President Kevin Guskiewicz, Michigan Tech President Rick Koubec and Wayne State President Kimberly Andrews Espy.
This isn’t the only way schools are collaborating. Although it’s not yet supported by administrative leadership, faculty at many Big Ten universities are advocating for their respective leadership to sign a NATO-like agreement. It would allow the universities to share attorneys and pool financial resources in case President Donald Trump’s administration targets one of them.
Use the media player above to hear the full conversation.
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At the Mackinac Policy Conference on Mackinac Island last week, Michigan Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist announced new incentive programs aimed at promoting entrepreneurship and retaining talent in the state.
The $107 million in grants from the state Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity (LEO) are meant to lay out “a roadmap to train 5,000 new infrastructure workers by 2030 to meet Michigan’s critical infrastructure needs,” according to the governor’s office.
Gilchrist also announced the launch of Make MI Home, a statewide grant program supporting talent retention and attraction efforts across the state.
“I think this is all about making it easier for people to say yes to living in the state of Michigan, yes to growing in the state of Michigan, yes to succeeding in the state of Michigan,” Gilchrist told WDET. “That’s what I want to do.”
The Make MI Home funding includes $210,000 for housing for new grads looking to start businesses in Detroit; $100,000 for attracting and retaining college students in Flint; and nearly $60,000 for housing and childcare programs in the Traverse City area, among other programs. The grants will also help support building out broadband internet, and making solar energy more accessible to people in Michigan’s urban areas.
“Peopleneedtoseeafutureforthemselveseverywhere — acommunitytheycanafford,ahomethattheycanafford,andwehaveworkedtodothatandbuildsolutionsforthatallacrossthestateofMichigan,” Gilchrist said. “But I know that one of the anxieties that parents have all across Michigan, whether you are on the eastern Peninsula or the east side of Detroit where I’m from, parents are worried about their kids growing up, leaving and never coming home.”
Gilchrist says the bottom line of these programs is to ensure Michigan remains competitive.
“We want them to say yes in Michigan, so we can build the things that matter. And so that means one: they have to be confident that our workforce is prepared. They have to be confident that our infrastructure is solid,” he said. “That’s why we’ve made these historic investments.”
Gilchrist has taken a larger role in announcing statewide programs more recently — likely tied to his run for governor.
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In an interview with WDET during the 2025 Mackinac Policy Conference, Hoekstra said the economy is strong, and that worries about tariffs and a trade war with Canada are overblown.
“They’re not going to have a dramatic impact, OK?” Hoekstra said. “They will have an impact, but it’s not fundamentally going to change this relationship.”
Hoekstra said he thinks there will be a full re-working of the trade agreement between the U.S. and Canada within the next couple years.
He also dismissed concerns about President Donald Trump’s desire to make Canada the 51st state, calling the threat a “sign of affection” — something that has been outright rejected by Canadian leadership and its populace.
“Why they’re offended by such a generous offer, I’m not sure, but they are,” he said. “We have to deal with it, and we will.”
Still, Michigan is consistently a top destination for Canadians for business and leisure travel, and with the newly constructed Gordie Howe International Bridge set to open by the end of the year, Hoekstra says he expects the relationship between the two countries to improve.
“Canadaisoursecondlargesttradingpartner,70-80%ofwhattheyexportcomessouth.That’snotgoingtogoaway,” he said. “Ifanything,we’vegotapresidentthatisenergizingtheAmericaneconomy.WehaveaprimeministerinCanadathatwantstotrytodothesamethinginCanada.Andwhenthey’rebothsuccessful,we’regoingtohaveanenergizedNorthAmerica.”
–WDET’s Jenny Sherman contributed to this report.
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The U.S. Department of Justice and the White House are looking at pardoning the two men convicted in the 2020 plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
President Donald Trump told reporters on Wednesday that the men convicted in the kidnapping plot were victims of “a railroad job.”
Whitmer shared her reaction to the news with WDET’s Russ McNamara at the Mackinac Policy Conference on Thursday, saying she’s not happy that the justice department — and the president — are even considering pardons.
“When the man took a shot at Donald Trump when he was on the campaign trail in Pennsylvania, I was one of the first office holders on either side of the aisle to condemn it,” Whitmer said. “Anything short of condemning political violence does a disservice to every American.”
Listen: Whitmer responds to possible Trump pardons for men involved in kidnapping plot
She said she would be “incredibly disappointed” to see the administration take that action, and that she “certainly will be conveying that to the White House.”
The two men seeking pardons — Barry Croft Jr., 49, and Adam Fox, 42 — were convicted in 2022 of conspiracy for their roles in the alleged kidnapping plot, and are serving a 20-year and 16-year prison sentence, respectively.
On securing a semiconductor ‘fab’ in Michigan
Whitmer also spoke about her stated goal of landing a massive microchip factory for Michigan before the end of her term at the start of 2027. She shared that while federal support would be needed to get the project “overthefinishline,” she remains optimisticabout getting it done before she leaves office.
Use the media player above to hear the full conversation.
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Michigan U.S. Senator Elissa Slotkin spent three terms in the U.S. House before running to replace outgoing Democratic U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow. She bucked the pro-GOP trend to beat Mike Rogers last November for the seat.
WDET’s Russ McNamara caught up with the junior senator at the 2025 Mackinac Policy Conference ahead of All Things Considered – Detroit on Wednesday to talk about proposed cuts to Medicaid, supporting EV manufacturing and more.
On planned cuts to Medicaid
Michigan U.S. Senator Elissa Slotkin says she is against planned cuts to Medicaid passed by House Republicans.
The legislation — part of a massive spending bill deemed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” — is on its way to the Senate next week.
Slotkin says 300,000 Michiganders are at risk of losing their primary insurance if the bill passed as is, adding that work requirements are just another way to keep people off Medicaid.
“They’re making them sign up every six months so that people forget, people get busy and they lapse, and they get off of Medicaid,” she said. “For Michigan, it would have a dramatic impact.”
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s administration issued a report earlier this month warning of the potential impact of Medicaid cuts by the federal government.
During the 2024 campaign, now-President Donald Trump promised many times to never make cuts to Medicaid and Medicare.
On giving consumers a choice about EVs
The U.S. Senate recently voted to remove California’s ability to set EV and emission standards, thwarting the state’s goal of phasing out gas-powered vehicles by 2035.
Slotkin was the only Democrat who voted with Republicans on pushing back against California’s EV mandate, saying she believes in giving consumers a choice.
“I made a very important pledge to voters here that I don’t support a mandate,” she said. “I want to build the next generation of EVs, but I don’t want to mandate. I don’t believe in that.”
Michigan’s other U.S. Senator, Gary Peters, voted against the measure.
Slotkin says she is upset Congressional Republicans are rolling back incentives for people to purchase EVs, but that doesn’t mean we should be creating a mandate that is “above and beyond anything like consumer demand” without the infrastructure to support it.
WDET’s Jenny Sherman contributed to this report.
Use the media player above to hear the full conversation.
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The Black Church – and their leaders – are woven deep into Detroit politics. Pastors were instrumental in unifying congregations and public support during the civil rights movement.
Senator Raphael Warnock (D-GA) and Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO) are among those who have made the jump from the pulpit to Congress. So political aspirations for spiritual leaders is not uncommon.
In Detroit, the city is looking for a new mayor. There are a dozen people in the running. Among those vying for the job is Reverend Solomon Kinloch Jr. of Triumph Church – which boasts 40-thousand members across Detroit, Flint and Southfield.
1:1 with Rev. Solomon Kinloch Jr.
In an interview with Detroit Public Radio’s Russ McNamara, Kinloch lays out what he thinks the city needs out of its next mayor.
Rev. Solomon Kinloch: We are at a point right now where we don’t just need an executive and an administrator. We need a unifier, but more importantly, we need a builder. And that’s what I’ve been doing for 27 years as a community leader.
Russ McNamara: Do you see the job of mayor as similar to your current job?
SK: Dr Frederick Sampson, who was a pastor of another generation right here in the city of Detroit, used to say that the church’s address is a compilation of multiple addresses. And so it’s not that people are beaming out of another place to come to this place. They comprise and they populate this place. So it gives me a unique capacity every weekend and every day during the week, when we meet to hear the intimate concerns of people. And one of the concerns Russ that people have, they have a distrust of institutional politicians. They want government to just work good. And we got to get back to making sure that government is working good for the people it’s supposed to work good for
RM: So, what is the best way to kind of build these coalitions and build Detroit up?
SK: I believe we got tremendous stakeholders and resources, but also relationships in the city of Detroit, I believe, bringing together our residents, bringing together our Black presidents, bringing together our union leaders, bringing together for lot philanthropical leaders, bringing together also our corporate leaders, coming together (with) activists and advocates, coming together in a round table, and not having people Lord their will or their agenda on us, but convening a table where people can collectively be a part of their own destiny and their design.
RM: Attendance has been dropping fairly steadily over the past several decades, especially among younger folks. Politicians, of which you now are, dream of courting the younger vote. What have you done in your own congregation about reaching out to youth?
“Church is not just interested in worshiping on the weekend, but doing the work for the betterment of people every day during the week.” – Rev. Solomon Kinlock
SK: People want to be a part of something that’s doing something because you can do good. And so one of the things that we have sought to do is partner, not just our worship on the weekend, but also giving people an opportunity where they can participate in the building of their community. The fabric of my whole life is woven together by that thread of commonality. I came from the New Bethel Baptist Church where my pastor was the Reverend Robert Smith, Jr, who currently serves there. Aretha Franklin’s father, C.L. Franklin was his predecessor, and all we know how to do is not to use the pulpit as a pedestal to promote a person, but we were taught that the pulpit is a platform to lift an entire community of people. And I believe that when people see that, particularly young people, see that. Church is not just interested in worshiping on the weekend, but doing the work for the betterment of people every day during the week. They want to be a part of that.
RM: You don’t have any plans to step down from your current position.
SK: I will, as mayor, continue to preach on the weekend, but the day to day operations are already being managed by a tremendous executive team.
RM: Your announcement was well attended at the Fox Theater. How do you plan to walk that tightrope so your congregation is uplifting the Lord and not the person who happens to be running for mayor?
SK: Triumph church is 105 years of age. They understand that is bigger than me, is bigger than all of us. We have a responsibility in our present age in order to live in a way where we leave a better world when we leave it than the way we walked into it. And the church was there long before I showed up. It was more than 70 years long before I showed up. We want to make sure with this moment that it is there long after we’re gone.
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has abruptly dropped all charges against seven pro-Palestinian protesters arrested during an on-campus demonstration last year.
The felony charges alleged that the protesters were obstructing and resisting arrest as police were breaking up a pro-Palestinian encampment on the University of Michigan Diag.
Nessel was reportedly asked by members of the University of Michigan Board of Regents to investigate the protesters after local prosecutors decided not to press charges.
Civil rights attorney Amir Makled says it never made sense for the AG to get involved in the first place. Citing concerns of potential bias, Makled asked the judge in the case to urge the state end the prosecution.
“It is a little surprising that on the eve of a motion to disqualify the attorney general’s office that the defense filed, the AG decides to just drop the case entirely,” he said.
In a statement, Nessel denied allegations of bias and criticized the pace of the judge handling the case – calling the matter a “circus-like atmosphere.”
Nevertheless, Makled says dismissing the case was the right move.
“We hope this sends a clear message to institutions across the state and the nation that protest is not a crime and dissent is not disorder,” he said.
Nessel — who is Jewish — says her involvement in the case was not evidence of bias and called the accusation “baseless and absurd.”
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