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The Metro: Michigan’s Senate primary has become a proxy war for the Democratic Party’s soul

The Metro is closely watching the race for Michigan’s open U.S. Senate seat.

The Republican side is settled. Former Congressman Mike Rogers, who lost to Elissa Slotkin by less than half a point in 2024, is running again. This time, he wants the seat Gary Peters is leaving behind.

The Democratic side is more complicated. Three serious candidates are competing for the nomination, and the distance between them tells you something about where the party is right now.

Congresswoman Haley Stevens has Chuck Schumer’s endorsement and millions in support from AIPAC. She is running on expanding the Affordable Care Act and working within existing institutions. State Senator Mallory McMorrow wants generational change inside the party — new leadership, new tactics — but within the current system. Physician Abdul El-Sayed is running to the left of both. He wants Medicare for All, the abolition of ICE, and says Democratic leadership has lost touch with its own voters.

They disagree on healthcare. They disagree on immigration enforcement. They disagree on Israel and Gaza, on whether billionaires should exist, and on who should be leading their own party.

WDET’s Russ McNamara sat down with all three — same questions, same mic — and the answers lay out a party in the middle of an argument with itself. The Metro listened back to that story, then Russ joined Robyn Vincent for some analysis about this moment.

Hear the full conversation using the media player above.

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The post The Metro: Michigan’s Senate primary has become a proxy war for the Democratic Party’s soul appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Michigan Democrats launch ad tying Mike Rogers to Moroun family, opposition to Gordie Howe Bridge

Michigan Democrats are launching their first digital ad of the 2026 U.S. Senate race, targeting Republican candidate Mike Rogers for supporting efforts to block the Gordie Howe International Bridge

The post Michigan Democrats launch ad tying Mike Rogers to Moroun family, opposition to Gordie Howe Bridge appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Michigan Senate candidate Mike Rogers campaigns from Florida as carpetbagger questions return

Mike Rogers, the Michigan Republican running for U.S. Senate, is again facing accusations that he’s more of a Florida resident than a Michigan one, after resuming campaign activity from his Cape Coral home for more than a week in November and recently joking on a right-wing radio show that he would rather be “on the beach in Florida” as Michigan braced for a winter storm.

The post Michigan Senate candidate Mike Rogers campaigns from Florida as carpetbagger questions return appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

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