A competitive three-way Democratic primary for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat is raising concerns among party leaders about ideological divisions and the race's impact on Senate control. Candidates Mallory McMorrow, Rep. Haley Stevens, and Abdul El-Sayed are vying to replace retiring Sen. Gary Peters, with polls showing a tight contest. The August 2026 primary is seen as crucial for Democrats' path to reclaiming the Senate majority.
The Michigan Senate race has emerged as a pivotal battleground for Democrats, pitting three candidates against each other in a contest that highlights generational and ideological tensions within the party. Mallory McMorrow, a former state senator known for her viral speeches, is navigating a middle path between Rep. Haley Stevens, a centrist with strong establishment ties, and Abdul El-Sayed, a physician advocating bold progressive policies. The seat, held by retiring Sen. Gary Peters, is essential for Democrats' slim hopes of regaining Senate control, as noted by strategist David Axelrod, who described it as the "most fascinating and consequential primary" in the country.
Polls indicate a neck-and-neck race, with Stevens or McMorrow holding slight leads depending on the survey, while Stevens edges out Republican Mike Rogers in general election matchups. Fundraising figures from recent Federal Election Commission reports show Stevens leading with $2.1 million raised in the last quarter and $3 million cash on hand, compared to about $1.75 million raised each by McMorrow and El-Sayed, with under $2 million in reserves for both.
Divisions are stark on key issues. El-Sayed, backed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, champions Medicare for All and has led efforts to abolish ICE, recently traveling to Minneapolis after immigration-related killings to highlight federal overreach. He stated his support for Medicare for All as a baseline, allowing additional private coverage. Stevens focuses on practical reforms, co-sponsoring a bill to redirect ICE's funds and calling for DHS Secretary Kristi Noem's impeachment. McMorrow supports ICE overhauls and has acknowledged the Gaza conflict as genocide based on a UN report.
On Israel and Gaza, El-Sayed's criticism resonates in Michigan's large Arab-American community, where over 100,000 voted "uncommitted" in the 2024 presidential primary. Stevens receives support from AIPAC, while McMorrow aims for broader appeal. Campaign styles differ: Stevens emphasizes traditional union outreach, El-Sayed leverages online virality, and McMorrow blends both, including a video on corporate greed that garnered nearly 2 million views.
Party insiders worry the prolonged primary could weaken the nominee against Rogers. Sen. Elissa Slotkin noted, "We’re used to having long primaries... And I don’t think it’s insurmountable." Pressure mounts on Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, with 60% approval, to endorse early and consolidate the field, amid lingering tensions from her 2018 primary win over El-Sayed. McMorrow has distanced herself from D.C. leadership, vowing not to back Sen. Chuck Schumer as leader, while El-Sayed positions his campaign against the establishment.