Michigan Democrat Senate candidate Mallory McMorrow defended elites, suggested 'divorce' between US coasts and middle America

By 
 April 5, 2025

The Democrat Party continues to put up the same type of radical candidates year after year; the latest is Mallory McMorrow for a Michigan Senate seat after Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI) announced he would retire in 2026.

McMorrow is a primary candidate and might not become the Democratic candidate, but she is considered a top contender and a “rising Democratic star,”

But McMorrow has trumpeted the narrative that supporters of President Donald Trump are "poorly educated" and advocated an "amicable divorce" between coastal areas of the U.S. and "middle America."

She actually wrote a memoir titled "Hate Won't Win" while hating on Trump and his supporters.

State hate

Ironically, she frequently hated on her own state, especially in regard to its cold winter weather.

In April 2014, she wrote on X, then Twitter, "Screw you Michigan" over a snowstorm.

In August 2016, she wrote, “[A]t least ‘ugh, Michigan’ is a sentiment we can all get behind."

In January 2017 she said, “There are days like these that make me miss California even more,”

"Self-deprecating humor"

Her campaign spokesman Andrew Mamo defended the tweets, saying, “Mallory grew up in the social media era and like most normal people she engages in self-deprecating humor.”

“These are normal tweets by a normal person, something Washington needs a lot more of,” he added.

It's normal for Michiganders to complain about the weather, he said.

While there will likely be plenty of Democrats running for Peters' seat, other high-profile Michiganders including former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Governor Gretchen Whitmer (both Democrats) have said they won't be running.

On the Republican side, McMorrow will likely face Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI) if she gets the nomination.

There are 35 Senate seats up for grabs in 2026, and the way Trump's administration has been lateley, if could be a chaotic time in Congress.

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