Trump, Mike Rogers and Michigan
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Republicans are starting to zero in on candidates for pivotal 2026 Senate races in Michigan, North Carolina, and Georgia.
U.S. Rep. Bill Huizenga (MI-4) announced Wednesday he will not run for U.S. Senate, despite widespread speculation he’d enter the race. Huizenga made the announcement via social media post, hinting at plans to come later this year: After careful consideration with Natalie and my family,
Democratic Rep. Haley Stevens backed a feminist diplomacy resolution, despite campaigning as a moderate Democrat for Michigan's open Senate seat.
Rogers lost a close race for the Senate last year as Trump carried the battleground state in the presidential contest.
The 35-year-old Saginaw County Democratic Party chairman joins Pamela Pugh and Chadwick E. Twillman in seeking the position left open when Kristen McDonald Rivet went to Congress in January.
Huizenga said he wouldn't run for Michigan's open Senate seat, seemingly clearing the field for former Rep. Mike Rogers to be the GOP pick.
Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-MI) will not mount a campaign for Michigan’s open battleground Senate seat in 2026, allowing the GOP to avoid what would have been a bitter primary fight with the national party’s preferred candidate,
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Motherly on MSNMichigan moms could soon have easier access to group prenatal care that’s changing livesOn July 1, the Michigan Senate passed Senate Bills 414 and 415, which would require both private insurers and Medicaid to cover group-based prenatal care programs.