LANSING, Mich. — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is releasing a new memoir at a particularly fraught moment, both for herself and for the Democratic Party.
Set for release Tuesday amid the frenzy over President Joe Biden's recent debate performance, ''True Gretch'' won't do much to dispel questions about her national ambitions. But in a pre-launch interview with The Associated Press, Whitmer did what she could to shut down such speculation. When asked if she would consider becoming a candidate this year if Biden were to step down, she responded with a definitive, ''No.''
''It's a distraction more than anything,'' said Whitmer. ''I don't like seeing my name in articles like that because I'm totally focused on governing and campaigning for the ticket.''
In the book, Whitmer recounts events that unfolded on the national stage throughout her career, including a clash with Donald Trump and a kidnapping plot targeting her and her family.
Her swift ascent over two decades — from law school graduate to Michigan's governor — has established her as a prominent figure within the Democratic Party.
Her status was solidified in 2022 with a decisive reelection and her party's success in flipping both chambers of the state legislature, granting Democrats full control for the first time in nearly four decades.
''I've spent the first quarter of this century watching as the arc of our politics has bent uncomfortably toward incivility and strife,'' Whitmer says in the first pages of her book. Then she adds, ''That's why I decided to write this book: to put a little light out there in a damn dark time.''
Whitmer first caught national attention as the Michigan Senate minority leader in 2013. Before a floor vote on an anti-abortion bill, Whitmer abandoned her prepared remarks and shared that she had been raped while in college.