SAGINAW, Mich. — When Donald Trump fought his way back to the White House in 2024, he capitalized on simmering economic discontent in political battlegrounds such as Michigan. Now Democrats are trying to harness those same concerns, which have lingered as people across the country lose confidence in the Republican president's ability to ease the cost of living.
The only question is how to do it. That nationwide challenge is especially urgent in Michigan, where three Democrats are running in the U.S. Senate primary in August.
The candidates — U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens, state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and physician Abdul El-Sayed — are making different pitches to voters, and their success or failure will help determine the party's fortunes in the November midterm elections, when control of Congress is at stake.
The party's chances of winning back control of the Senate will become much harder without retaining the seat held by retiring Democratic Sen. Gary Peters.
The likely Republican nominee is Mike Rogers, a former congressman seeking a Senate seat for the second time. In 2024, he lost by 19,000 votes to Democrat Elissa Slotkin, who moved from the House to the Senate.
Stevens leans into Michigan manufacturing
Wearing a welding helmet and gloves, Stevens moved in close toward flying sparks as a plumbing apprentice showed off his welding technique at a union training workshop in Saginaw.
Her suburban Detroit district is part of the automobile hub central to Michigan's economy and workforce. She is building off her relationships with organized labor and campaigning against Trump's tariff strategy, saying the president is hurting the state's manufacturing sector and driving up prices across the board.