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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Democrat Everyone Suddenly Can't Stop Talking About
By Aymann Ismail
Not long ago, Abdul El-Sayed was polling third place in the three-way race for the Democratic nomination for Michigans wide-open Senate seat, set to be decided by voters on Aug. 4. The race is critical to both Democrats and Republicans hopes of taking the chamber. If the 41-year-old doctor and former health official had a profile, it was local, not national. Then recently, that all changed.
First, El-Sayed campaigned with Hasan Piker, the leftist streamer and antagonist of many moderate and pro-Israel Democrats. Some Democrats have debated in recent weeks whether the party should associate with Piker at all, given his past comment that America deserved 9/11 (which hes said he regrets) and others about Israel and the war in Gaza that have been labeled antisemitic (which he strongly denies). The pair appeared together at college campuses in Michigan in fairly straightforward rallies aimed at reaching younger voters, who are Pikers audience. It was when El-Sayed refused to condemn past comments from Pikerhe said it wasnt up to him to address all of Pikers statementsthat suddenly everyone wanted a piece of him.
The Mamdani of the Midwest, declared Bari Weiss Free Press, disapprovingly. El-Sayed became worthy of Fox News headlines but also more centrist criticism in the Atlantic. Leaks suggested that Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, would be fine with the nomination of either of El-Sayeds two opponentsthe moderate Democrat Haley Stevens or the more mainstream liberal Mallory McMorrowbut not El-Sayed himself. A boogeyman for both Republicans and establishment Democrats was born.
At the same time, something else happened. Recent polls in Michigan show El-Sayed surging. One showed him with a gain of 8 points since January, tied with McMorrow with 24 percent support. (More than a third of voters remained undecided.) That rise has helped turn him into a proxy for fights that extend well beyond the state: how Democrats talk about Israel and Gaza, how much risk a progressive candidate can take without becoming unelectable, what the partys future actually looks like. Enter that Atlantic article: If successful, he would turn a very likely Democratic win into a jump ball, Jonathan Chait wrote.
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2026/04/michigan-senate-congress-trump-democrats-abdul-el-sayed.html?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=social&utm_content=aymann_429&utm_campaign=&tpcc=reddit-social--aymann_429
RandySF
(85,683 posts)ran a scorched earth campaign against Gretchen Whitmer in 2018.
hlthe2b
(114,429 posts)Hopefully, this and he, are different now
RandySF
(85,683 posts)Some of his supporters complain that Mallory has a Jewish husband.
Raven123
(7,875 posts)hlthe2b
(114,429 posts)I can't believe we have to deal with that jackass until 2028.
BannonsLiver
(20,797 posts)haele
(15,538 posts)The only things I want to hear about a Candidate is:
Will they work for all their Constituents?
Do they understand how Negotiations work? Like, do they understand the Perfect is the Enemy of the Good, and Winner Take All means one person wins and everyone else loses.
Do they understand Governance? That everyone has their own personal needs and opinions; the best representatives will look at what can at least provide something positive for everyone; support programs encouraging growth, while maintaining the safety net for those who aren't in the position or have the capability to just "grow".
The population they are elected to care for are majority average on a bell curve, which means there are two minorities on either side; those privileged few with access to additional opportunities or skills, and those wanting few, who have access to few skills or opportunities.
What I look for is someone who focuses on flattening the bell curve, not focusing on one end or the other of the curve.