Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan speaks to a crowd while giving his final State of the City Address inside the new development at the Hudson’s site in downtown Detroit on Tuesday, March 25, 2025.
Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan speaks to a crowd while giving his final State of the City Address inside the new development at the Hudson’s site in downtown Detroit on Tuesday, March 25, 2025.
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Mike Duggan ends 2026 independent campaign for Michigan governor

Former Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan is ending his bid for governor, he announced Thursday, May 21. Duggan’s departure from the race is another signal that independent candidates face challenging if not near-impossible paths to winning statewide elections.  

Duggan cited internal polling and “networks of national party money” in an announcement to supporters sent Thursday morning.

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“If we were even in the polls and behind in fundraising, we have a path to winning.  If we were behind in the polls and even in fundraising, we have a path. But we’re behind in both … I no longer feel good about our chances to win,” Duggan said in a statement.

News of Duggan’s departure from the race is likely a boost to Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, who is considered the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination based on polling and fundraising. With Duggan no longer in the field, there’s significantly less chance of Democratic-leaning voters breaking away from Benson in November. And historical trends favor Democrats — typically, the party opposite control of Congress and the White House fares well in midterm years. With President Donald Trump, a Republican, facing low approval ratings amid continued economic inflation and dissatisfaction over his handling of the U.S. war in Iran, the GOP could be bracing for a challenging race. 

Duggan, in late 2024, took political prognosticators by surprise when he announced he was leaving the Democratic Party to run for governor as an independent. He was considered a longtime party stalwart, having been deputy to former Wayne County Executive Ed McNamara and later being elected county prosecutor as a Democrat.

He said throughout his campaign, voters were disillusioned with a two-party system in politics and offered himself as a candidate who could bridge divides. But recent polls signaled an uphill climb. A Detroit Regional Chamber poll published May 12 found Duggan trailing both Jocelyn Benson and Republican candidates Perry Johnson and U.S. Rep. John James, R-Shelby Township, in hypothetical three-way races. The survey also found that Benson was consolidating support among Democratic-leaning voters and independents, biting into Duggan’s share, compared to a February poll sponsored by the chamber. 

There’s little history of a successful independent statewide run for office in Michigan. The last candidate for governor to win on a ticket that wasn’t Democratic or Republican was William Woodbridge, a Whig who was in office in 1840-41 before leaving to become a U.S. senator.

The Detroit Regional Chamber PAC endorsed Duggan’s independent bid. Duggan’s departure from the race comes days before the chamber’s annual Mackinac Policy Conference, when business and political leaders are slated to meet on the island to discuss issues shaping the state. 

This story will be updated.

You can reach Arpan Lobo at alobo@freepress.com

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Mike Duggan ends 2026 independent campaign for Michigan governor

Reporting by Arpan Lobo, Detroit Free Press / Detroit Free Press

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

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