On today’s Daily Detroit, we start the week with a conversation with State Senator — and Democratic U.S. Senate hopeful — Mallory McMorrow.

It’s the third in our series of Democratic Senate candidate interviews, and we’re focused squarely on what federal power could actually mean for Detroit, Metro Detroit, and Michigan.

McMorrow talks about why she first Googled “how to run for office” after the 2016 election, and why she frames governing as a design challenge to build policy that improves people’s lives.

She talked about an approach to ieconomic development that feels less like “Lucy and the football” and more like real, ground‑up regional growth — including transit as economic development, and keeping young people from leaving the state.

From there, the conversation moves to the auto industry and EVs, competition from China, and why she wants incentives that grow talent and clusters of jobs instead of focusing on chasing megaprojects.

We also touch on affordability: gas prices, housing, childcare, and McMorrow’s push to scale ideas like universal pre‑K, free school meals, more housing production, paid leave, and cracking down on scammy online ads.

You’ll also hear her vision on healthcare access, expanding Michigan’s red flag law approach to the federal level, and supporting Detroit‑grown community violence intervention.

And because this is Daily Detroit, they close with some city love — from classic Michigan license plates helping fix roads to her favorite spots around town. 

We'll be at the Mackinac Policy Conference all week, so be sure to check your podcast feeds and inboxes for updates. 

Constructive feedback as always: 313-789-3211 or dailydetroit -at- gmail -dot- com.

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