Credit...Associated Press
Democratic Hopefuls in Michigan’s Senate Race Jostle for Union Support
Can Democrats win back working-class voters? These candidates are trying.
by https://www.nytimes.com/by/katie-glueck · NY TimesDemocrats were devastated by their 2024 presidential defeat for many reasons: They were horrified by the return of President Trump and Republican control of Washington, and alarmed to learn that much of the country saw their party as out of touch.
But for some Democrats, one of the most painful developments was watching Republicans make inroads with working-class voters who, until fairly recently, had called the Democratic Party home.
One of the biggest open questions of the 2026 midterms — and ultimately the next presidential election — is whether Democrats can figure out how to win some of those voters back.
Today, some of them showed how they will try.
At a gathering in Washington of the powerful United Automobile Workers union, Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia — the senior pastor of Atlanta’s famed Ebenezer Baptist Church and a potential presidential candidate — sought to connect with workers who feel increasingly left behind, something Trump did effectively throughout his presidential campaigns.
“Workers are seeing that they’re creating wealth for others, but it’s not showing up in their paychecks,” he said. “There is a growing sense in our country that our best days are behind us.”
But beyond acknowledging the problem, the questions of what to do about those issues and how to talk about them are matters of debate. Democrats are already fighting over their approach in a series of high-profile and increasingly contentious primary races around the country.
The gathering today also offered a snapshot of the different ideological and stylistic bets Democratic Senate candidates in Michigan are making as they compete to represent the birthplace of the modern labor movement — a state that Trump flipped in both 2016 and 2024.
Representative Haley Stevens, speaking in her thick Michigan accent, sounded like a traditional pro-labor Democrat. She repeatedly invoked her work for the Obama administration’s auto task force, cast herself as an experienced lawmaker with close ties to unions, and praised the 2023 auto workers’ strike as “a thing of beauty.”
Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, a progressive former public health official endorsed by Senator Bernie Sanders, pushed left-leaning ideas like “Medicare for all” and abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement. He slammed the influence of corporate money and insisted that this was a time for bold proposals.
“I am done with politicians telling us what we cannot have and should not fight for,” he said. “That we just got to wait a couple more years until the time is right. When is the time going to be right?”
And State Senator Mallory McMorrow both emphasized her experience on labor issues and urged attendees not to “settle” — while working in barely veiled jabs at both El-Sayed and Stevens.
Trump Administration: Live Updates
- The Minnesota surge led to thousands of arrests, tense protests and three shootings.
- Immigration officials are set to testify before a Senate panel.
- Trump says he will now invite Democrats to the governors’ association meeting.
“We do not have to settle for somebody who prioritizes rhetoric over results, who’s never held office,” she said. “We don’t have to settle for somebody who’s too beholden to corporate interests to actually work alongside you.”
Keep an eye on this race — it’s already interesting and unpredictable, and is only going to get spicier.
number of the day
40 percent
That’s the share of white evangelical Protestants who said they believed that President Trump acted ethically in office, according to new polling from the Pew Research Center. Ruth Igielnik, The Times’s polling editor, explains.
That is down from 55 percent right after Trump began his second term — a drop of 15 percentage points in white evangelical Protestants’ trust in the president to act ethically.
Trump’s approval with the group, a core constituency for him, has dropped to 69 percent, down from 78 percent in February 2025.
White evangelical Protestants are still among Trump’s strongest supporters, but the dip is a sign that he is encountering some newfound resistance.
In One Graphic
Republicans are growing hopeful of swamping Democrats in the 2026 money wars.
The Republican National Committee and other main party accounts have far more cash than their Democratic counterparts. The Supreme Court is expected to shake up the campaign-finance landscape in a way that could help the G.O.P. And President Trump is sitting on more than $300 million in his super PAC.
Democrats, my colleagues Shane Goldmacher and Theodore Schleifer reported, are starting to sweat.
Texas Republicans find a new political target
Now that the Texas border has gone relatively quiet, state Republicans are recalibrating their rhetorical attack lines, my colleague J. David Goodman writes, shifting from stoking fears about immigrants to focusing on the state’s growing Muslim population.
Ruth Igielnik, Taylor Robinson and Ama Sarpomaa contributed reporting.