The progressive wing of the Michigan Democratic Party made its voice heard over the weekend during the party’s endorsement convention.
Democrats gathered in Huntington Place in Detroit Sunday to endorse party candidates for some statewide offices, like attorney general and secretary of state. Party leadership said the convention hit record numbers, and nearly every candidate backed by the party's progressive wing won their endorsement races.
Campaigns brought drums, photo backdrops, and people in orange jumpsuits and sunglasses to carry billboards, all to stand out from the field.
But the delegates seemed to care most about substance and the issues. Often, those issues involved progressive themes like limiting corporate and outside political spending, providing universal healthcare, and ending U.S. involvement in foreign wars.
Many delegates, like Dearborn Public Schools Board member Adel Mozip, wanted candidates who inspire them.
“We’re looking forward to electing people who are going to be working for the people and not paid for by corporations and interests groups,” Mozip said outside a meeting of the Michigan Democratic Party’s Yemeni Caucus Sunday.
Around the convention, canvassers gathered petition signatures for a ban on some corporate political spending. Candidates bragged about not taking money from corporate political action committees while speaking to the main crowd and in smaller meetings.
Still, attendees worried party leadership hadn’t gotten the message.
Jessie Hishon and Susan Sylvester, first-time delegates from metro Detroit who attended the party’s Progressive Caucus meeting -- which spilled out of a crowded room -- said they felt the party didn’t trust progressive candidates enough to win against Republicans.
“I think there are too many people who don’t believe that it can happen,” Hishon said.
Sylvester said her top issue was the influence of outside spending on Michigan campaigns.
“All of the issues are important to me but we have to take the money out of politics so we can have representation in our so-called democracy,” Sylvester said.
Democrats lost in 2024 because of splits within their traditional coalition of moderates, progressives, and racial and ethnic minorities. With Michigan possibly deciding control of Congress this November, party leaders want to change that story.
A few 2028 presidential maybes spoke at a pre-convention event on Saturday, including former Vice President Kamala Harris, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, and New Jersey Senator Cory Booker. He warned Democrats that not voting is what let President Donald Trump retake the White House.
“You let somebody get in office who is locking up our children. You let somebody in office who is taking away our healthcare. You let somebody in office who’s taking away workers’ rights. You let somebody in office who got rid of the Department of Education,” Booker said to a cheering crowd at the Women’s Caucus luncheon.
At the convention, some delegates echoed calls for unity and engagement, even though that often requires listening to dissenters.
Detroiter Michelle Broughton said she’s been coming to Democratic Party conventions for over four decades.
“Our message needs to come across to all of us, whether we’re a young Dem or an old Dem,” Broughton said. “They need to talk about tabletop issues: food, gas, education, affordability, housing.”
But old battle lines remained visible on the convention floor.
Progressive Senate candidate Dr. Abdul El-Sayed received massive applause during his speech that criticized outside spending in Michigan races from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Congresswoman Haley Stevens (D-MI 11) who is running against El-Sayed on a more traditional Democratic platform of affordability and re-shoring American manufacturing, followed and received boos.
In the University of Michigan regents race, incumbent Jordan Acker lost his reelection bid. Acker had faced criticism for his handling of pro-Palestine student protests. Amir Makled, a lawyer who represented one of those protestors, beat him.
During parts of the program, some attendees said they noticed some fellow delegates causing a disruption when a proposed resolution in support of Palestinians wasn’t taken up. Videos of the crowd appear to show a handful of convention members yelling at presenters.
Kalamazoo delegates Michelle Zukowski-Serlin, and her husband Troy, said they felt the jeering and booing of candidates crossed a line.
Both attended the party's Jewish Caucus meeting. They said delegates at that meeting showed more respect to candidates that opposed support for Israel than supporters of those opponents showed pro-Israel candidates on stage.
“This is a bigger issue and that is mutual respect and acting with diplomacy, I would never boo one of their candidates,” Michelle Zukowski-Serlin said.
While many agreed the Democrats should learn from 2024, not everyone agreed on the lesson.
For some, the lesson was to support the Democratic nominees that they mostly agree with, even if the nominee is not their top choice. For others, it was that party leadership needs to get behind candidates who inspire, so voters want to support their nominee.
University of Michigan graduate student Nathan Kim said it’s not enough for the party to choose a “status quo” candidate.
“I think the Michigan Democratic Party and the party in general needs to face consequences. They need to know that they can’t get away with failing over, and over, and over again,” Kim said.
Likewise, Katarina Keating, another Michigan graduate student, said some candidates just aren’t worth supporting, even against Republicans.
“You need to draw the line somewhere. Right? If you’re going to vote for anybody if they’re in the right party, no matter what they’ve done or what they’ve said, what are you doing, what are you really voting for, what are you really trying to change?” Keating said.
At the end of the day, nearly every progressive-backed candidate won a party endorsement.
Both the upcoming August primary election, in which the U.S. Senate race remains close, and the November general election could show whether that support extends broadly outside of the convention walls—or if it's a sign of progressive strength, just within the party’s base.
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