Debbie Stabenow – MI

Debbie Stabenow

Summary

Current Position: US Senator since 2001
Affiliation: Democrat
Former Positions: US Representative from 1997 – 2001; State Senator from 1991 – 1994; State Delegate from 1979 – 1991
Other Positions:   Chair, Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
Upcoming Election: Not running

Stabenow became the state’s first female U.S. senator after winning the 2000 election. tabenow chaired the Senate Agriculture Committee from 2011 to 2015 and again since 2021. She became chair of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee in 2017.

Featured Quote: 
The first @January6thCmte hearing has started and the police who responded that day are testifying. I am grateful for their service and bravery that day.

Debbie Stabenow Praises Biden-Harris Administration’s Record At Six Months

OnAir Post: Debbie Stabenow – MI

News

About

Source: Government page

Debbie Stabenow 2U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow made history in 2000 when she became the first woman from Michigan elected to the United States Senate. She is known for her ability to build coalitions to get things done for Michigan and our nation.

As Chairwoman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, a senior member of the Senate Finance Committee, and Budget Committee, and a member of the Environment and Public Works Committee, she has a powerful and unique role to play in shaping our nation’s health care, manufacturing, infrastructure, environment, and agriculture policies.

Senator Stabenow is laser focused on standing up for Michigan families, expanding affordable health care and lowering the costs of prescription drugs, helping Michigan businesses create good jobs here at home, and protecting our Great Lakes and outdoor heritage. She is a true champion for Michigan.

Early Life & Career

Born in Gladwin and raised in Clare, Debbie Stabenow learned the value of a hard-day’s work from her parents. Her family owned the local Oldsmobile dealership, and her mother was Director of Nursing at the local hospital. She graduated at the top of her class from Clare High School and received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Michigan State University. She worked with youth in the public schools before running for public office.

Senator Stabenow was inspired to run for office after leading a successful effort to stop the closure of a local nursing home. She was elected to the Ingham County Board of Commissioners when she was 24 years old and two years later was elected Chair of the Board. She served for 12 years in the Michigan House of Representatives (1979-90) and four years in the State Senate (1991-94). Two years later, she was elected to represent Michigan’s 8th Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives. She made history in 2000 when she became the first woman from Michigan elected to the United States Senate.

A Michigan Voice in Senate Leadership

Today Senator Stabenow is Michigan’s senior U.S. Senator and a member of Senate leadership. As Chair of the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee, she makes sure there is a Michigan voice at the table and that Congress’ priorities stay in line with the priorities of middle class families.

A Focus on Job Creation

Creating jobs in Michigan is Senator Stabenow’s top priority. As Co-Chair of the bipartisan Senate Manufacturing Caucus, she is a leader in helping Michigan’s businesses create jobs, leveling the playing field in international trade, and ensuring that our workers have the skills they need to excel in the international marketplace. As Senator Stabenow likes to say, “We want to export our products, not our jobs.”

A Champion for Health Care Quality and Access

Senator Stabenow is a national leader of the effort to make sure people have quality, affordable health care, including prescription drugs, mental health care, and addiction treatment. In the wake of the Flint water crisis, she led efforts to pass $170 million in assistance for Flint to repair and replace pipes and to address critical health needs.

Senator Stabenow is committed to bringing veterans the care they need close to home. She led the fight to open new and expanded V.A. clinics in Alpena, Bad Axe, Cadillac, Clare, Cheboygan County, Grayling, Oscoda, Traverse City, and Wyoming.

Debbie Stabenow 2As Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Health Care, Senator Stabenow is a champion for Medicare, Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program and a passionate advocate for Michigan’s community health centers.

An Advocate for Michigan’s Diverse Agricultural Industry

Senator Stabenow knows that we don’t have an economy unless we make things and grow things. She is a national leader on food and agriculture policy and a forceful advocate for Michigan agriculture – the state’s second biggest source of jobs. Serving on Agriculture Committees in the state legislature, U.S. House, and U.S. Senate, she has shaped forward-thinking food and farm policy, expanding the diversity of what we grow and how we grow it.

As Chairwoman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, Senator Stabenow authored the 2014 Farm Bill, which strengthened Michigan agriculture and made historic investments in land and water conservation, clean energy, local food systems, specialty crops, cutting-edge research and biobased manufacturing. She built on that success in coauthoring the 2018 Farm Bill, which passed on a strong bipartisan vote of 87-13 – the most Senate votes ever. Thanks to her leadership, the Farm Bill provides historic levels of support for all types of farmers in Michigan – big and small, urban and rural. It also improves the dairy safety net, strengthens support for fruit and vegetable growers, protects land and water, expands local food economies, and invests in Michigan’s small towns and rural communities. As she likes to say, it has Michigan on every page.

Senator Stabenow has also led successful efforts to protect and expand access to healthy foods for children, families, and seniors.

A Protector of Our Great Lakes

After her election to the U.S. Senate, one of the first bills Senator Stabenow passed into law was a ban on oil and gas drilling in the Great Lakes. Today she is Co-Chair of the U.S. Senate’s bipartisan Great Lakes Task Force and one of our greatest champions for protecting the Great Lakes and our waterways.

Senator Stabenow authored the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which is helping Michigan communities improve the quality of their water and restore wildlife habitats. No one has fought harder to secure federal funding in support of the Great Lakes, from cleaning up our waterways, to fighting invasive species, to modernizing the Soo Locks, a critical link for Michigan businesses to the global economy.

Senator Stabenow is deeply concerned about the number of Michigan families and service members who have been exposed to per- and polyfluoralkyl substances (PFAS). She has fought hard to secure funding to clean up contaminated sites, study the health impacts of PFAS exposure, and connect homes to safe drinking water supplies. She has also called on the Environmental Protection Agency to establish federal drinking water standards for PFAS.

Michigan Through and Through

With six offices around the State, Senator Stabenow is always ready to help Michigan residents who are having issues with federal programs. She fights for resources that local communities need such as new hospital emergency rooms and life-saving equipment for local fire departments.

A musician at heart, Senator Stabenow sings and plays both the piano and the guitar. She is a United Methodist and grew up performing with her family in church and in the community. Her home is in Lansing. She has two grown children, Todd and Michelle; a daughter-in-law, Sara; a son-in-law, Scott; and five beautiful grandchildren.

Personal

Full Name: Deborah ‘Debbie’ Ann Stabenow

Gender: Female

Family: Divorced; 2 Children: Todd, Michelle

Birth Date: 04/29/1950

Birth Place: Gladwin, MI

Home City: Lansing, MI

Religion: United Methodist

Source: Vote Smart

Education

MSW, Social Work, Michigan State University, 1975

BA, Michigan State University, 1972

Political Experience

Chair, Democratic Policy and Communications Committee, United States Senate, 2017-present

Senator, United States Senate, Michigan, 2001-present

Vice-Chair/Trustee, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee

Chair, Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee

Candidate, United States Senate, Michigan, 2000, 2006, 2012, 2018

Vice Chair, Democratic Policy and Communications Committee, United States Senate, 2011-2017

Secretary, Democratic Conference, United States Senate, 2005-2007

Representative, United States House of Representatives, Michigan, District 8, 1997-2000

Candidate, United States House of Representatives, Michigan, District 8, 1996, 1998

Candidate, Governor/Lieutenant Governor, Michigan, 1994

Senator, Michigan State Senate, 1991-1994

Representative, Michigan State House of Representatives, 1979-1990

Chair, Board of Commissioners, Ingham County, 1977-1978

Commissioner, Ingham County, Michigan, 1974-1978

Professional Experience

Co-Founder, Michigan Leadership Institute, 1995-1996

Offices

Source: Government Page

Contact

Email: Government

Web Links

Politics

Source: none

Election Results

To learn more, go to this wikipedia section in this post.

Finances

Source: Open Secrets

Committees

Senator Stabenow is a member of the following Senate Committees:

Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry

Senator Debbie Stabenow is Chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. This Committee has jurisdiction over agriculture programs, nutrition programs, and rural development.

Committee on the Budget

Along with the House Budget Committee, it is responsible for drafting Congress’ annual budget plan and monitoring action on the budget for the Federal Government. In addition, the Budget Committee has jurisdiction over the operation of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). While the budget resolution prepared by the Budget Committee sets out a broad blueprint for the Congress with respect to the total levels of revenues and spending for the government as a whole, the Finance Committee and the Appropriations Committee prepare the legislation that actually enacts specific tax and spending policies. The Budget Committee does not have subcommittees.

Committee on Environment and Public Works

The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee works on issues to protect public health and the environment, conduct oversight of the Environmental Protection Agency and push for smart investments in our nation’s infrastructure.

Committee on Finance

The Senate Finance Committee is one of the most influential committees in the U.S. Senate and has jurisdiction over a wide range of issues important to Michigan. All legislation regarding Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, trade policy, pensions and tax policy is referred to the Finance Committee.

New Legislation

Government Page

Issues

Source: Government page

  • Making Quality Health Care Affordable

    Senator Stabenow believes that quality healthcare is a basic human right. As a senior member of the Senate Finance Committee and Ranking Member of the Health Subcommittee, she has led efforts in Congress to make health care more affordable. More

  • Environment and Great Lakes

    Senator Debbie Stabenow is the Co-Chair of the bipartisan Senate Great Lakes Task Force and is one of our greatest champions for protecting our Great Lakes and environment. As someone who has lived in Michigan her whole life, Stabenow understands that our Great Lakes and waterways are vital to our economy and our way of life—supporting more than 800,000 Michigan jobs. More

  • Standing Up for Our Veterans

    U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow believes our veterans should not stand at the back of any line. Whether it’s health care, education, a chance at a good job, or the military recognitions they earned in service, our nation must keep its promises to our heroes who have served. She learned this respect for service from her own family – her father served in World War II. More

  • New Skills for New Jobs Agenda

    As Sen. Stabenow travels the state, she frequently meets with business owners who express a critical need for more skilled workers. She also meets with labor leaders who offer opportunities for training and apprenticeships for good-paying jobs in the skilled trades. And she hears from parents frustrated with the lack of opportunities for their children who are not college-bound as well as educators who are innovating to meet these needs. Last summer, she brought all of these leaders together in communities across the state to discuss how we can partner to meet the needs of employers and provide job opportunities for all Michigan workers and students. Now she is introducing her New Skills for New Jobs Agenda to help every young person get the skills they need for a good-paying job. More

  • American Jobs Agenda

    Senator Stabenow is laser-focused on creating jobs here in America.  Her American Jobs Agenda will ensure we are making products in America, closing loopholes that send jobs overseas, and holding countries like China accountable for unfair trade practices. More

  • Supporting Michigan’s Agricultural Economy

    Senator Debbie Stabenow is a champion for Michigan agriculture and rural communities. As Chair of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, she wrote the bipartisan 2014 Farm Bill, which streamlined more than 100 programs while making historic investments in land and water conservation, local food systems, and specialty crops. As the current Chairwoman of the Committee, she built on that progress by co-authoring the historic 2018 Farm Bill, which passed on a strong bipartisan Senate vote of 87-13 – the most votes in favor of a Farm Bill in history. The bipartisan 2018 Farm Bill strengthens Michigan’s agricultural economy, which is the state’s second-largest industry, supporting one in four jobs. The bill also has a major impact in protecting Michigan’s Great Lakes, investing in our small towns and rural communities, promoting Michigan forestry, growing local food economies, and providing healthy food for families. More

Economy

Supporting Michigan’s Agricultural Economy

Senator Debbie Stabenow is a champion for Michigan agriculture and rural communities. As Chair of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, she wrote the bipartisan 2014 Farm Bill, which streamlined more than 100 programs while making historic investments in land and water conservation, local food systems, and specialty crops. As the current Ranking Member of the Committee, she built on that progress by co-authoring the historic 2018 Farm Bill, which passed on a strong bipartisan Senate vote of 87-13 – the most votes in favor of a Farm Bill in history.

The bipartisan 2018 Farm Bill strengthens Michigan’s agricultural economy, which is the state’s second-largest industry, supporting one in four jobs. The bill also has a major impact in protecting Michigan’s Great Lakes, investing in our small towns and rural communities, promoting Michigan forestry, growing local food economies, and providing healthy food for families.

Education

New Skills for New Jobs Agenda

As Sen. Stabenow travels the state, she frequently meets with business owners who express a critical need for more skilled workers. She also meets with labor leaders who offer opportunities for training and apprenticeships for good-paying jobs in the skilled trades. And she hears from parents frustrated with the lack of opportunities for their children who are not college-bound as well as educators who are innovating to meet these needs. Last summer, she brought all of these leaders together in communities across the state to discuss how we can partner to meet the needs of employers and provide job opportunities for all Michigan workers and students. Now she is introducing her New Skills for New Jobs Agenda to help every young person get the skills they need for a good-paying job.

Environment

Environment and Great Lakes

Protecting our Great Lakes and Waterways
Senator Debbie Stabenow is the Co-Chair of the bipartisan Senate Great Lakes Task Force and is one of our greatest champions for protecting our Great Lakes and environment. As someone who has lived in Michigan her whole life, Stabenow understands that our Great Lakes and waterways are vital to our economy and our way of life—supporting more than 800,000 Michigan jobs. In fact, the very first piece of legislation Senator Stabenow passed in the Senate banned oil and gas drilling in the Great Lakes.

Stabenow authored the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative in 2010 as a member of the Senate Budget Committee. This initiative has been successful in cleaning up our lakes, waterways, and beaches so Michigan families can enjoy swimming, boating and fishing. When the Trump Administration gutted funding for the Great Lakes, Stabenow led a bipartisan coalition to get every penny restored.

Read more about her new bipartisan legislation to expand funding here.

As Chairwoman and later Ranking Member of the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, Stabenow authored the 2014 Farm Bill and co-authored the 2018 Farm Bill. The Farm Bill continues to be one of the most significant investments in the conservation of our land, water, and Michigan way of life. Through targeted conservation efforts, the Farm Bill protects our Great Lakes and our water quality throughout Michigan, while preserving wildlife habitat to support hunting, fishing, and other outdoor recreation.

Combatting Threats
Senator Stabenow has been a leader in the fight to stop Asian carp, which pose a grave threat to the Great Lakes’ $7 billion fishery and $36 billion recreational boating industry. She authored and passed the Stop Invasive Species Act that required the federal government to take quicker action to stop the spread of Asian carp. Thanks to her leadership, the Army Corps of Engineers released the final comprehensive plan to stop Asian carp at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam — a critical choke point not far from Lake Michigan. Congress can now authorize funding for this critical project and finally advance a long-term solution. Read more about her efforts to combat invasive species here.

Senator Stabenow also wrote and passed legislation that successfully banned personal care products that contain tiny plastic particles that can get through water treatment facilities and harm fish and wildlife. This ban went into effect in 2018.

Taking Real Action on Climate Change
Senator Stabenow knows that climate change is real and is having a serious impact on Michigan. Our lakes are getting warmer, which is bad for our cold-water fish populations but great for invasive species like Asian carp. Our weather is also getting more intense— leading to catastrophic storms and flooding.  Stabenow understands we can and must take real action now to do something about the carbon pollution and other greenhouse gases that are causing climate change.

That’s why as Ranking Member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, and a senior member of Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee and Finance Committee, she has championed polices and initiatives that dramatically reduce carbon emissions, create jobs in renewable energy and clean manufacturing sectors and promote sustainable agriculture. Her bipartisan Farm Bill includes the most ambitious climate-smart agriculture and forestry policies to date.  She has also authored multiple bipartisan bills that will ensure that the United States—not China—is the global leader on advanced transportation technologies like electric and hydrogen vehicles.

Protecting Public Health
Senator Stabenow has been a tireless advocate for public health and the environment in Michigan and across the country. She is making sure every family has access to clean air and clean water and has fought efforts to gut environmental protections.

When the Flint water crisis happened, Senator Stabenow led the passage of a law to provide $170 million for Flint and other communities to repair and replace pipes and provide health care and nutritious food to children and families affected by lead contamination.

Stabenow is deeply concerned about the number of Michigan families and service members who have been exposed to per- and polyfluoralkyl substances (PFAS). She has fought hard to secure funding to clean up contaminated sites, study the health impacts of PFAS exposure, and connect homes to safe drinking water supplies. She has also called on the Environmental Protection Agency to establish federal drinking water standards for PFAS.

Health Care

Making Quality Health Care Affordable

Senator Stabenow believes that quality healthcare is a basic human right. As a senior member of the Senate Finance Committee and Ranking Member of the Health Subcommittee, she has led efforts in Congress to make health care more affordable.

Veterans

Standing Up for Our Veterans

U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow believes our veterans should not stand at the back of any line. Whether it’s health care, education, a chance at a good job, or the military recognitions they earned in service, our nation must keep its promises to our heroes who have served. She learned this respect for service from her own family – her father served in World War II.

Senator Stabenow is dedicated to ensuring that our veterans receive the military honors they have earned defending our country. She authored and passed legislation paving the way for Michigan veteran James C. McCloughan to be awarded the Medal of Honor. She is a champion for our national cemeteries, memorials, and other efforts to honor those who serve.

Health Care for Veterans

One of the biggest ways in which Senator Stabenow has made a difference for Michigan veterans is in the opening of new health clinics. Thanks to her work, Michigan veterans are being served by new and expanded clinics in Alpena, Bad Axe, Cadillac, Cheboygan County, Clare, Gaylord, Grayling, Oscoda, Traverse City, and Wyoming.

Whether it’s championing new and expanded VA health clinics, or improving mental health services, Senator Stabenow is committed to bringing veterans the care they need close to home. After she heard from veterans across the state about problems with the Veterans Choice program, Senator Stabenow authored and passed legislation to improve VA care.

The VA Mission Act, which was signed into law in 2018, included her legislation to require the VA to pay providers within 30 days of receiving an electronic claim or 45 days of receiving a paper claim. This will ensure that rural hospitals and providers are reimbursed for services and can continue to see patients. The VA Mission Act also expands caregiver benefits and establishes one community care program that allows veterans and their doctors to choose where to get health care.

Senator Stabenow is also making sure that veterans and their families harmed by PFAS chemicals will be eligible for treatment and benefits from the VA. Her Veterans Exposed to Toxic PFAS Act (VET PFAS Act) would require the VA to cover treatment for any health condition found to be associated with exposure to PFAS. Under this bill, illnesses connected to PFAS exposure will also be considered a service-connected disability, making veterans exposed to PFAS eligible for disability payments and medical treatment from the VA.

Thanks to Senator Stabenow’s bipartisan work to support Alzheimer’s patients and their families, both Medicare and the veterans’ TRICARE system now cover Alzheimer’s care planning visits to provide patients and caregivers vital information on treatment options and services.

Mental Health Services

Senator Stabenow understands that many people who have served in our military have battle wounds that can’t necessarily be seen, which is why she is leading efforts to improve mental health care. Her Excellence in Mental Health and Addiction Treatment Act closed the gap in funding between physical and behavioral health care in communities around the country and set high-quality standards of care. The law requires certified community behavioral health clinics to provide intensive, community-based mental health care for members of the armed forces and veterans, particularly those who live in rural areas. And it requires care coordination across settings, including VA medical centers and outpatient clinics.

Senator Stabenow sponsored the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention for American Veterans Act and the Female Veterans Suicide Prevention Act, which were both signed into law.

Veterans Transition Assistance

As Senator Stabenow has met with Michigan veterans, commanders, and service providers across our state, one of the top concerns they have raised is the difficulty veterans have in transitioning from a life in the military to civilian life. Community resources are available for transitioning veterans, but many veterans don’t know about them. Meanwhile, many organizations that offer assistance aren’t aware of people in their community who could use help.

In response, Senator Stabenow introduced the bipartisan IMPROVE Transition for Servicemembers Act, which was signed into law as part of the annual National Defense Authorization Act. It would allow servicemembers to opt into a system that will send their contact information to their State Veterans Affairs Agency. This system will ensure that they and their families are connected to local community groups – including veterans service organizations – that provide employment, health care, and other services.

The legislation also directs the Department of Defense to ensure that servicemembers receive regular information about professional development and education opportunities such as Military Tuition Assistance. And it creates greater accountability by requiring the Defense Department to ask veterans about their transition experience on a regular basis.

Education and Job Opportunities

Senator Stabenow sponsored the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill and follow-up legislation to make it work better for veterans pursuing additional education. She has long championed better job opportunities for our veterans.

Senator Stabenow’s Apprenticeship and Jobs Training Act would provide businesses with a tax cut up to $5,000 for each new employee enrolled in a federal- or state-registered apprenticeship program. Apprenticeship program credit could be given for previous military training, meaning that veterans would be able to get into skilled jobs that match their military experience sooner.

Careers in Agriculture

As Chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee, Senator Stabenow championed initiatives in the bipartisan 2014 Farm Bill, which she authored, to help veterans start careers in agriculture, creating a Veteran Liaison at the Agriculture Department and providing veterans more training and financing.

To build on this progress, Senator Stabenow authored provisions that help expand support for farmer veterans in the 2018 Farm Bill. The provisions make risk management tools like crop insurance more affordable, improve access to land and capital, and prioritize training to help veterans succeed in agriculture.

More Information

Services

Source: Government page

Wikipedia

Deborah Ann Stabenow (/ˈstæbən/ STAB-ə-now; née Greer; born April 29, 1950) is an American politician serving as the senior United States senator from Michigan, a seat she has held since 2001. A member of the Democratic Party, she became the state’s first female U.S. senator after winning the 2000 election.

Before her election to the Senate, Stabenow was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, representing Michigan’s 8th congressional district from 1997 to 2001. Previously, she served on the Ingham County Board of Commissioners and in the Michigan State Legislature.

Stabenow was reelected to Senate in 2006, 2012, and 2018. She became the state’s senior U.S. senator upon Carl Levin‘s retirement in 2015. Stabenow chaired the Senate Agriculture Committee from 2011 to 2015 and again since 2021. She became chair of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee in 2017. At the start of the 118th Congress, Stabenow became the dean of the Michigan congressional delegation, upon the retirement of Representative Fred Upton. In January 2023, she announced that she would not seek reelection in 2024.[1][2]

Early life, education, and early career

Stabenow was born in Gladwin, Michigan, the daughter of Anna Merle (née Hallmark) and Robert Lee Greer.[3] She grew up in Clare, Michigan. She graduated from Clare High School, where she was president of her junior class, the first female class president at the school. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Michigan State University in 1972 and a Master of Social Work magna cum laude from Michigan State University in 1975.[4]

Early political career

Ingham County politics

While a graduate student at Michigan State University in 1974, Stabenow ran for public office for the first time, inspired by the threatened closure of a local nursing home. She won her first election in November 1974, becoming just the third woman elected to the Ingham County Board of Commissioners, on which she served from 1975 to 1978. Stabenow was the first woman and youngest person to date to chair the board of commissioners in 1977 and 1978. She was preceded as chair by one of her political mentors, Ken Hope. She was also instrumental in establishing a women’s commission in Ingham County.[5]

State legislature

In 1978, Stabenow challenged Michigan State Representative Tom Holcomb in a primary election. She won the primary and eventually the general election for the 58th House District. Stabenow served in the Michigan House of Representatives from 1979 to 1990. She became a force in state Democratic politics and the first woman in House leadership to preside over the House. In 1990, Stabenow ran for the Michigan Senate seat being vacated by William A. Sederburg. She won the election, taking office in 1991 and serving one term through 1994.[5]

1994 gubernatorial election

In 1994, Stabenow ran in Michigan’s Democratic gubernatorial primary to challenge incumbent Republican John Engler in the general election. U.S. Congressman Howard Wolpe won the primary with a plurality of 35% of the vote to Stabenow’s 30%. After the primary, Wolpe chose Stabenow as his running mate, and she appeared on the general election ballot as the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor.[6] Engler defeated the Wolpe–Stabenow ticket, 61%–38%.[7]

U.S. House of Representatives

In 1996, Stabenow ran for a seat in the United States House of Representatives, challenging incumbent Republican U.S. Congressman Dick Chrysler for the opportunity to represent Michigan’s 8th congressional district. She defeated Chrysler 54%–44%.[8] In 1998, she was reelected with 57% of the vote.[9] In the House, Stabenow served on the Agriculture and Science Committees.[10]

U.S. Senate

Stabenow speaking during the second day of the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado

Elections

2000

Stabenow did not seek reelection to the House in 2000, choosing instead to challenge incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Spencer Abraham. She won the Democratic primary unopposed. In the general election, Stabenow defeated Abraham 49.5%–48% (a difference of 67,259 votes).[11]

2006

Stabenow was challenged by Republican Michael Bouchard, Oakland County sheriff and former State Senate Majority Floor Leader. Stabenow defeated him 57%–41%.[12]

2012

Stabenow was unopposed in the Democratic primary and defeated Republican nominee Pete Hoekstra, former U.S. representative,[13] 59% to 38%.

2018

Stabenow was reelected to a fourth term, defeating Republican nominee John E. James, 52.3%–45.8%.[14] The margin was 275,660 votes (6.50%),[15] making this the closest U.S. Senate election in Michigan since 2000.[16]

Tenure

Stabenow during the 112th Congress

Before her current committee assignments, Stabenow also served on the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee[17] and the Special Committee on Aging.[18]

Stabenow is only the second person from Michigan to have served in both houses of the Michigan State Legislature and both houses of the United States Congress, the other being Thomas W. Ferry.[19] She is also the first person to have served as a Michigan state legislator to be popularly elected to the U.S. Senate[20] (until enactment of the 17th Amendment in 1913, U.S. senators were selected by state legislatures).[21]

Stabenow became the third-ranking Democrat in the Senate on November 16, 2004, when she was elected secretary of the Democratic caucus.[22] As caucus secretary, she assisted Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid in setting the Democratic agenda and priorities.[19] Senator Dick Durbin was elected minority whip, the second-ranking Democratic spot. In November 2006, Reid announced that Stabenow would leave the caucus secretary position to succeed Hillary Clinton as chair of the Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee, charged with “engag[ing] Democratic Senators and community leaders across the country in an active dialogue”.[23]

After Tom Daschle, President Barack Obama‘s nominee for United States Secretary of Health and Human Services, withdrew from consideration, the National Organization for Women urged the president to appoint Stabenow, citing her focus on health care and her background as a social worker.[24]

Stabenow became chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee in 2011, following the defeat of Blanche Lincoln.[25] A controversial item during Stabenow’s tenure was the renewal and reform of the 2012 U.S. Farm Bill. Reid reintroduced 2012’s Senate Farm Bill in the 113th Congress in January 2013, saying that it was on his top priority list, and Stabenow voiced support for Reid’s move, saying, “Majority Leader Reid has demonstrated that the Senate will once again make supporting our nation’s agriculture economy while cutting spending a top priority.”[26]

On October 29, 2014, Stabenow introduced the Gun Lake Trust Land Reaffirmation Act (S. 1603; 113th Congress), a bill that would reaffirm the status of lands taken into trust by the Department of the Interior for the benefit of the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band.[27][28] The bill would clarify that the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band’s land trust could not be challenged in court under the Supreme Court decision Carcieri v. Salazar.[29]

Stabenow was participating in the certification of the 2021 United States Electoral College vote count when Trump supporters attacked the United States Capitol.[30] Along with other senators and staff, she was evacuated from the Senate chamber through a stairwell and taken to a safe location.[31] She called the experience “heartbreaking” and “one of those things out of a movie” and said she had not felt that much fear since her time at the Capitol during the September 11 attacks.[31] After the Capitol was secure, Congress returned to session to certify the election. Stabenow supported the certification.[32] The day after the attack, Stabenow called for Trump’s immediate removal from office through the invocation of the 25th Amendment or impeachment.[33]

Committee assignments

Caucus memberships

Political positions

The American Conservative Union gave Stabenow a 6% lifetime conservative rating in 2020.[37]

Abortion

Stabenow supports keeping abortion legal. She has voted to expand embryonic stem cell research, and against prohibiting minors crossing state lines for abortions, barring HHS grants to institutions that perform abortions, and criminal penalties for harm or death to a fetus in a violent crime.[38]

Cannabis legalization

Stabenow supported Michigan Proposal 1 in 2018 to legalize cannabis for recreational use, though she would like to ensure law enforcement is involved so that the law is implemented correctly.[39]

Food assistance

In 2013, Greg Kaufmann of The Nation wrote an article stating that Stabenow was prepared to cut $8 to $9 billion from the food stamp (SNAP) program. In a lengthy statement, Stabenow’s office rejected these accusations, maintaining that she “strongly opposes any changes to food assistance that make cuts in benefits for people who need help putting food on the table” and that she “has been the number one defender against the House Republican proposal to cut food assistance by $40 billion.” Kaufmann doubled down on his charges and challenged Stabenow’s office’s claims in detail.[40]

In 2017, Stabenow fought to prevent the creation of additional work-requirement rules on SNAP recipients who were older or had smaller children and led a bipartisan effort to get the legislation passed.[41][42]

Foreign policy

In October 2002, Stabenow was one of 23 senators who voted against authorization of the use of military force in Iraq.[43]

In April 2019, Stabenow was one of 34 senators to sign a letter to President Donald Trump encouraging him “to listen to members of your own Administration and reverse a decision that will damage our national security and aggravate conditions inside Central America“, asserting that Trump had “consistently expressed a flawed understanding of U.S. foreign assistance” since becoming president and that he was “personally undermining efforts to promote U.S. national security and economic prosperity” by preventing the use of Fiscal Year 2018 national security funding. The senators argued that foreign assistance to Central American countries created less migration to the U.S. by helping to improve conditions in those countries.[44]

Flint water

Stabenow secured $100 million to repair and replace the water lines in Flint, Michigan, which were contaminating the drinking water with lead.[45] She also pushed to include a program that would provide fresh fruits and vegetables to Flint children as part of the Farm Bill.[46]

Economic issues

Senator Stabenow kicks off her Jobs of the Future Tour at Ford’s biobased manufacturing lab in Dearborn.

Stabenow has received low scores from free-market groups (Competitive Enterprise Institute, 2013, 0%; American Conservative Union, 2016, 0%; Americans for Prosperity, 2015–16, 0%) and high scores from fiscally liberal groups (Progressive Punch, 2015, 92%; NETWORK, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby, 2012, 91%).[47]

In 2007, Senator Stabenow joined the bipartisan (70-23) support of NOPEC in order to combat conspiratorial policies by foreign oil producers, extending Sherman Anti-Trust Act protection to include foreign cartels such as OPEC, and bring down US oil and gas costs for US consumers.[48][49][50][51][52] In 2008, she voted against the Troubled Asset Relief Program proposed by President George W. Bush.[53]

In 2009, Stabenow voted for President Barack Obama‘s $787 billion stimulus plan.[53]

In 2010, she introduced the China Fair Trade Act, saying it would “prevent federal taxpayer dollars from being used to purchase Chinese products and services until they sign on to and abide by the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement.” The bill would also require a report on Chinese industrial policies and require the Department of Energy to monitor the development of China’s renewable energy sector.[54][55][56][57]

In October 2011, Stabenow called for tax breaks for firms developing bio-based products, using crops like soybeans and corn to create prescriptions drugs, plastics, and soaps.[58]

In August 2012, Stabenow expressed support for “strategic partnerships between farmers and industry” and for a recent Obama directive to boost federal purchases of bio-based products.[59]

In 2015, she introduced the Stabenow-Portman Amendment (SA 1299) to address currency manipulation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership.[60][61]

In 2015, the International Economic Development Council gave Stabenow the Congressional Leadership Award “for her significant contributions in the area of economic development.” The IEDC cited her work on the 2014 Farm Bill, her sponsorship in 2013 of the New Skills for New Jobs Act, and her role in the federal bridge loan program.”[62][63]

In 2017, Stabenow introduced her American Jobs Agenda, which included two acts: the Make It In America Act and the Bring Jobs Home Act. The former, “would close loopholes in a 1933 law designed to give American companies priority when the federal government purchases goods.” She said the act would require that the U.S. government: “buy American…If the federal agency says they need a waiver, they need to measure how many American jobs will be impacted by purchasing that product made overseas.”[64][65] The latter, “would create a tax cut for companies bringing jobs and business activities back to America from another country.”[66][67]

In April 2017, Stabenow was one of eight Democratic senators to sign a letter to Trump noting government-subsidized Chinese steel had been placed into the American market in recent years below cost and had hurt the domestic steel industry and the iron ore industry that fed it, calling on him to raise the steel issue with President of China Xi Jinping in his meeting with him.[68]

In May 2017, she and Senator Gary Peters announced a $210,000 EDA grant to the West Michigan Shoreline Regional Development Commission “to help spur economic development in West Michigan.”[69] The same month, she said that owing to a major change in farmers’ margins since the 2014 Farm Bill, the farm safety net needed to be strengthened, especially for dairy farmers.[70]

At a July 13, 2017, economics roundtable, she said that the “#1 request she gets in Michigan” is for “Professional technical jobs, building construction jobs—folks that can actually make things and do things.” She said that Democrats can succeed in elections by “going to our core. We are the party that are willing to take risks to make things better…We believe in our core in an economy that actually works for everybody. That is how you grow America.”[71]

The Biotechnology Industry Organization thanked Stabenow in 2017 for supporting development of a “biobased economy,” specifically for her introduction of the Renewable Chemicals Act of 2017, which would “allow taxpayers to claim a production tax credit of 15 cents per pound of biobased content of each renewable chemical produced during the taxable year.”[72][73][74]

On October 3, 2017, Stabenow and Peters introduced the Small Business Access to Capital Act, designed to “reauthorize and improve the State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) to help small businesses grow and create jobs.” It built “on the successful SSBCI initiative that both lawmakers championed in the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010” and that “funds the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and other state-led lending programs that leverage private financing to help small businesses access the capital they need.”[75][76][77][78]

Immigration

Stabenow has received high marks from groups supporting immigration (American Immigration Lawyers Association, 2013–14, 100%; National Hispanic Leadership Agenda, 2013–14, 100%) and low marks from groups opposed to immigration: Federation for American Immigration Reform, 2014, 0%; Numbers USA, 2017, 0%.[79]

During the two-day January 2018 government shutdown, Stabenow was among 81 senators who effectively ended the shutdown by approving a three-week stopgap spending bill that “included reauthorizing the Children’s Health Insurance Program for six years”. This agreement was obtained after the Republican leadership “pledged to soon take up immigration legislation”. She said they had “reached a bipartisan agreement that funds children’s health insurance and moves us closer to a solution that provides long-term certainty for Michigan families and our national defense”.[80][81]

In January 2017, she opposed Trump’s executive order temporarily limiting immigration from several Muslim majority countries, saying it: “is ruining America’s reputation in the world, undermining our relationships with our most critical allies, and most heartbreakingly, destroying the lives of good and law-abiding people.”[82][83][84]

Stabenow voted against providing COVID-19 pandemic financial support to undocumented immigrants on February 4, 2021.[85]

International relations

Stabenow supported Obama’s Iran deal that sought to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons for 10 years and attempted to halt their uranium production.[86]

Income inequality

Recounting a 2014 Senate hearing on income inequality, George Packer singled out Stabenow as the only committee member who pushed back on the idea that it was caused largely by the withdrawal from the workforce of middle-aged people who preferred to collect welfare. Stabenow “pointed out that almost all the voters she heard from in high-unemployment Michigan still wanted to work.”[87]

Government spending

She has received low scores from low-spending advocates (Club for Growth, 2016, 8%; Council for Citizens against Government Waste, 2015, 0%; National Taxpayers Union, 2015, 9%).[88]

Education

Stabenow meeting with students from the Ross School of Business in 2016

In 2011, Stabenow introduced the Reengaging Americans in Serious Education Act (RAISE UP Act), whereby the Labor Department would fund programs to help “disconnected youth” get diplomas, degrees, and job certifications. In 2012, she co-sponsored a bill to freeze student loan interest rates at 3.4 percent and make additional funds available for Pell Grants.[89]

In 2016, Stabenow and others introduced the Reducing Educational Debt Act, which she promoted with the #InTheRed hashtag.[90][91]

She expressed “strong concerns” about Trump’s nomination of Betsy DeVos as Education Secretary, saying: “DeVos and her family have a long record of pushing policies that I believe have seriously undermined public education in Michigan and failed our children.”[92]

Gun policy

Stabenow supports gun control and supports a national assault weapons ban.[93]
After the Orlando nightclub shooting, Stabenow participated in the Chris Murphy gun control filibuster.[94] One month later, she supported bills to ban people on the terrorist watchlist from buying guns and to expand background checks. Neither bill passed the Senate. Stabenow blamed the National Rifle Association of America (NRA) for the bills’ failure to pass.[95]

In 2017, following the Las Vegas shooting, Stabenow and Debbie Dingell introduced a law that would make it illegal for people convicted of misdemeanor stalking to buy guns.[96]

Stabenow has an “A+” rating from the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence and an “F” rating from both the NRA and the Gun Owners of America.[97]

Health care

Stabenow has helped open 10 community health centers in Detroit while in office.[45]

She has received high scores from Planned Parenthood (2017, 100%) and low scores from National Right to Life Committee, (2013, 0%).[98]

In the 2000 campaign, she: “promised to make the pharmaceutical industry lower prescription drug prices, to maintain Social Security benefits and to give Medicare a new prescription drug plan.” She pledged to “fight the pharmaceutical and insurance industries—the two industries that spend the most money lobbying federal officials” and accused the pharmaceutical industry of “making up to 20 percent net profit each year…on the backs of families, seniors and businesses.” Her spokesperson said: “In the last election, I think the pharmaceutical industry spent more campaigning against her than any other candidate…She was enemy number one.”[99][100][101][102] Stabenow voted for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in December 2009,[103] and for the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010.[104] She also sponsored S. 2257, the Excellence in Mental Health Act.[105]

On September 1, 2016, she said that approving money to combat Zika was a top congressional priority.[106]

In August 2019, Stabenow was one of 19 senators to sign a letter to United States Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin and United States Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar requesting data from the Trump administration in order to help states and Congress understand the potential consequences in the event that the Texas v. United States Affordable Care Act (ACA) lawsuit prevailed in courts, writing that an overhaul of the present health care system would form “an enormous hole in the pocketbooks of the people we serve as well as wreck state budgets”.[107]

Housing

In April 2019, Stabenow was one of 41 senators to sign a bipartisan letter to the housing subcommittee praising the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Section 4 Capacity Building program as authorizing “HUD to partner with national nonprofit community development organizations to provide education, training, and financial support to local community development corporations (CDCs) across the country” and expressing disappointment that Trump’s budget “has slated this program for elimination after decades of successful economic and community development.” The senators wrote of their hope that the subcommittee would support continued funding for Section 4 in Fiscal Year 2020.[108]

Defense

In December 2011, Stabenow voted in favor of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012.[109] The bill included highly controversial provisions, drafted by Senators Carl Levin and John McCain in closed session, that would allow for the indefinite military detention without trial of American citizens deemed potential terrorists and enemies of the state.[110]

Environment

Climate change

On August 10, 2009, Stabenow was reported by The Detroit News as saying, “Global warming creates volatility. I feel it when I’m flying. The storms are more volatile. We are paying the price in more hurricanes and tornadoes.”[111] She has, however, opposed regulation of greenhouse gases, enhanced fuel efficiency standards in California, and greenhouse gas emission reporting standards.[112]

Stabenow voted for the SBIR/STTR Reauthorization Act of 2011 (S.493). In March 2011, ThinkProgress accused her of joining “the pro-polluter frenzy sweeping the U.S. Senate,” saying that the legislation was: “being used as a vehicle for senators who wish to prevent regulation of greenhouse pollution from oil refineries, coal-fired power plants, heavy industry, and other major emitters. Stabenow has added her amendment to three others intended to hamstring the Environmental Protection Agency on behalf of carbon polluters.”[112]

Stabenow’s proposed amendment to keep the EPA from regulating greenhouse gas emissions for two years also drew criticism.[113] The amendment would have given “coal-fired power plants, oil refineries and other industrial sources a two year exemption” from rules requiring them to report greenhouse gas emissions.[114] She defended her position by calling her amendment: “a common-sense approach that allows protections from carbon pollution, determined by scientists and public health experts, to continue being developed while providing businesses the support and incentives they need as they reduce pollution, generate new clean energy technologies and create jobs.”[115]

In February 2019, in response to reports of the EPA intending to decide against setting drinking water limits for perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) as part of an upcoming national strategy to manage the chemicals, Stabenow was one of 20 senators to sign a letter to Acting EPA Administrator Andrew R. Wheeler calling on the agency: “to develop enforceable federal drinking water standards for PFOA and PFOS, as well as institute immediate actions to protect the public from contamination from additional per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).”[116]

Drilling in the Great Lakes

In 2010, Stabenow called for a total ban on drilling in the Great Lakes. Critics noted that “a U.S. federal ban on all oil and natural gas offshore drilling in the Great Lakes” had already “been in place since 2005” and that Canada banned offshore oil drilling but had “roughly 500 offshore gas wells in Lake Erie” plus 23 “slant wells” that “drill for oil on shore but extend under Lake Erie.”[117] In 2015, Stabenow and Gary Peters introduced the Pipeline Improvement and Preventing Spills Act “to ban shipping of crude oil by vessel on the Great Lakes and require a comprehensive, top-to-bottom review of hazardous pipelines in the region.”[118][119]

In May 2017, Stabenow expressed support for the bipartisan effort to retain funding for The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.[120]

In September 2016, Stabenow and Peters led an effort to link an aid package for the Flint water crisis to flood relief funds for Louisiana.[121]

Canadian waste disposal

On August 31, 2006, Stabenow, Senator Carl Levin and Representative John Dingell announced an agreement that would completely cease Ontario‘s dumping of solid waste in Michigan within four years. This had been an issue in Michigan for the past several years. Stabenow had previously introduced legislation in the Senate intended to reduce the dumping of Canadian trash in Michigan.[122] In July 2006, the Senate unanimously passed a law sponsored by Stabenow requiring the payment of a $420 inspection fee for every truckload of Canadian trash brought into Michigan.[123]

Fairness doctrine

Asked in 2009 by Bill Press whether she would support a return of the Fairness Doctrine, under which the federal government enforced an ideological “balance” on the airwaves, Stabenow said yes: “I absolutely think it’s time to be bringing accountability to the airwaves.” Asked whether she would push for Senate hearings on the subject, she said, “I have already had some discussions with colleagues and, you know, I feel like that’s gonna happen. Yep.” It has been noted that Stabenow’s then husband was Tom Athans, an executive in left-wing radio (Air America, Democracy Radio), whose career would have benefited from such legislation.[124]

Stabenow is probably the most prominent politician to seriously support a new Fairness Doctrine.[125][126]

GMOs

Stabenow, as Senate Agriculture Committee Chair, added an amendment to the 2013–14 Farm Bill that prohibited state laws requiring GMO labeling for foods. She has been criticized because this amendment aided Monsanto and other agribusinesses, which donated over three-quarters of a million dollars to her campaign during that election cycle.[127][128] In 2016, she was again criticized for her role in the passage of a law that overruled state laws mandating GMO labeling.[129]

Trump nominations

In January 2017, Stabenow opposed Trump’s nomination of Jeff Sessions as AG: “Because of his record on civil rights and his votes against anti-domestic violence legislation, I cannot support him to be our nation’s highest law enforcement officer…Families in Michigan and across the country deserve an attorney general who will enforce the nation’s laws fairly and equally.”[130]

That March, she opposed Trump’s nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court: “After reviewing Judge Gorsuch’s rulings, it is clear that he has a long record of siding with special interests and institutions instead of hard-working Americans. And, therefore, in my judgment, he does not meet this standard of balance and impartiality.”[131]

In July 2018, citing his past rulings on presidential powers, she opposed the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, furthermore stating that the FBI should perform a background check regarding multiple allegations of sexual assault.[132][133]

She similarly opposed Trump’s 2020 nomination of Amy Coney Barrett, stating: “It’s very clear from her writings, multiple writings, that she will be the vote that takes away health care for millions of Americans, including 130 million people and counting with pre-existing conditions…”[134] She voted against the nomination while wearing a face mask depicting Barrett’s predecessor Ruth Bader Ginsburg.[135]

Retirement

On January 5, 2023, Stabenow announced her intention to retire from the Senate. Her announcement cited a desire to “pass the torch” to Michigan’s next generation of leadership: “I have always believed it’s not enough to be the first unless there is a second and a third”. She also noted time with family as a motivation for her retirement. If she serves in the Senate until her term ends in January 2025, she will have held elective office for 50 years.[136] In February 2023, Michigan Representative Elissa Slotkin launched a campaign to succeed Stabenow in the Senate.[137]

Awards and honors

In February 2023, a portrait of Stabenow by Michigan artist Joshua Adam Risner was unveiled in the Russell Senate Office Building. Congressional committee chairs traditionally receive portraits in their committee rooms. Stabenow’s portrait came due to her years as chair of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.[138] It was commissioned by the Historical Society of Michigan.[139]

On October 3, 2024, Washington Park in Lansing, Michigan was renamed Debbie Stabenow Park in her honor.[140]

Personal life

Stabenow is a member of the United Methodist Church.[141]

Stabenow was first married to Dennis Stabenow.[142] The couple had two children and divorced in 1990.[142]

In 2003, Stabenow married Tom Athans, co-founder of Democracy Radio and former executive vice president of Air America. She has a stepdaughter from this marriage. They divorced in 2010.[143]

Stabenow had a cameo appearance in the 2016 film Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice as governor of the unspecified state in which Metropolis is located. She was invited to appear because the scene was filmed in Michigan, and for her support for film-industry incentives.[144][145]

In 2024, Stabenow declined to run for a fifth Senate term, citing a wish to spend more time with her family,[146] including her 96-year-old mother.[147]

Electoral history

2000 United States Senate election in Michigan[148]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticDebbie Stabenow 2,061,952 49.47%
RepublicanSpencer Abraham (incumbent)1,994,69347.86%
GreenMatthew Abel37,5420.90%
LibertarianMichael Corliss29,9660.72%
ReformMark Forton26,2740.63%
ConstitutionJohn Mangopoulos11,6280.28%
Natural LawWilliam Quarton5,6300.14%
Majority67,2591.61%
Turnout4,165,685
Democratic gain from RepublicanSwing−4.02%
2006 United States Senate election in Michigan
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticDebbie Stabenow (incumbent) 2,151,278 56.9% +7.4%
RepublicanMichael Bouchard1,559,59741.3%−6.6%
LibertarianLeonard Schwartz27,0120.7%0%
GreenDavid Sole23,8900.6%−0.3%
ConstitutionDennis FitzSimons18,3410.5%+0.2
Majority591,68115.6%
Turnout3,780,142
Democratic holdSwing7%
2012 United States Senate election in Michigan
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticDebbie Stabenow (incumbent) 2,735,826 58.8% +1.9%
RepublicanPete Hoekstra1,767,38638.0%−3.3%
LibertarianScotty Boman84,4801.8%+1.1%
GreenHarley Mikkelson27,8900.6%
ConstitutionRichard Matkin26,0380.6%+0.1%
Natural LawJohn Litle11,2290.2%+0.1%
Write-in690.0%
Majority968,44020.8%
Turnout4,652,918
Democratic holdSwing2%
2018 United States Senate election in Michigan[149]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticDebbie Stabenow (incumbent) 2,214,478 52.3% −6.5%
RepublicanJohn E. James1,938,81845.8%+7.8%
GreenMarcia Squier40,2040.9%+0.3%
ConstitutionGeorge Huffman0.6%+0.6%
Natural LawJohn Wilhelm16,5020.2%+0.2%
Majority275,6606.50%−14.3%
Turnout4,237,253
Democratic holdSwing6%

See also

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Michigan House of Representatives
Preceded by

Member of the Michigan House of Representatives
from the 58th district

1979–1991
Succeeded by

Michigan Senate
Preceded by

Member of the Michigan Senate
from the 24th district

1991–1994
Succeeded by

Party political offices
Preceded by

Olivia Maynard
Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Michigan
1994
Succeeded by

Jim Agee
Preceded by

Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Michigan
(Class 1)

2000, 2006, 2012, 2018
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Secretary of the Senate Democratic Conference
2005–2007
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Chair of the Senate Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee
2007–2011
Succeeded by

New office Vice Chair of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee
2011–2017
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Chair of the Senate Democratic Policy and Communications Committee
2017–present
Succeeded by

Amy Klobuchar
Designate

as Chair of the Senate Democratic Steering and Policy Committee

Succeeded by

Cory Booker
Designate

as Chair of the Senate Democratic Strategic Communications Committee

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Michigan’s 8th congressional district

1997–2001
Succeeded by

U.S. Senate
Preceded by

U.S. Senator (Class 1) from Michigan
2001–present
Served alongside: Carl Levin, Gary Peters
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee
2011–2015
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Ranking Member of the Senate Agriculture Committee
2015–2021
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee
2021–present
Succeeded by

Amy Klobuchar
Designate
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded by

Order of precedence of the United States
as United States Senator
Succeeded by

United States senators by seniority
11th


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