U.S. Attorney Mark Totten, who was appointed by President Joe Biden and who oversaw federal prosecutions in Lansing, will leave his post on Monday.
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Michigan's Democratic secretary of state announced Wednesday that she is running to succeed Gretchen Whitmer as governor in 2026, as the party tries to find its footing after November's significant losses in the battleground state.
The rally was rebranded from the Women's March to the People's March to broaden support after Donald Trump's win in November.
A prominent Michigan lawyer floated last week the framework of a potential ballot proposal to boost transparency and ethics standards.
Michigan’s Democratic secretary of state announced Wednesday she is running to succeed Gretchen Whitmer as governor in 2026, as the party tries to find its footing after November’s significant losses in the battleground state.
President Joe Biden’s tenure was marked by controversy and failure. Many are questioning how Democrats can come back from 2024.
Joe Biden, in one of his final acts as president Monday, commuted the life sentence of Native American rights activist Leonard Peltier, who was convicted of killing two FBI agents on the Pine ...
While President Donald Trump took aim at the electric vehicle industry this week, there is still optimism about the industry’s future in Michigan, a state retooling from America’s
The Michigan Department of Transportation will close the Grand River Avenue bridge over the Red Cedar River starting Feb. 3 for maintenance work. The bridge is located on Grand River Avenue (M-43) east of Okemos and west of Williamston,
The House on Wednesday passed the Laken Riley Act, sending the immigration-related bill to President Trump’s desk in what is poised to be his first legislative victory since returning to the White House this week. The chamber cleared the bill in a 263-156 vote. Forty-six Democrats voted with all present Republicans in favor of the…
The Laken Riley Act would put immigrants without legal status under federal detention without the possibility of being released if they are arrested for certain crimes.
House Republicans are reportedly eyeing deep cuts to Medicaid to fund tax breaks for the rich and other far-right priorities. Punchbowl News reported on Jan. 24 that House Republican committee chairs held a private meeting in which they identified between $2 trillion and $3.