7 Burning Questions for 2022

Will Gretchen Whitmer be reelected? Will Detroit allow recreational pot shops to open? How will Coleman Young II and once-nemesis Mike Duggan get along? Our panelists make their predictions.
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Presidential election years get the most ink, but a year like 2022 has the potential to set the tone and direction for the entire decade in Michigan. The governor鈥檚 race, which once seemed like it would be a referendum on whether Gretchen Whitmer had fulfilled her 2018 promise to 鈥渇ix the damn roads,鈥 will instead largely be a public judgment on her handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Redistricting will also kick in, potentially giving certain parties and certain current officeholders happiness or heartburn. And changes on the Detroit City Council, as a result of the 2021 elections, promise to make life interesting for Mayor Mike Duggan.

For the third consecutive year, 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit assembled a crack panel from around the state and across the political spectrum to offer predictions on how it will all shake out. It鈥檚 a somewhat thankless task, but they had as much fun making these guesses as we think you鈥檒l have reading them.


Meet the Experts

Dennis Darnoi is a Republican political consultant based in Farmington Hills.

Joe DiSano is a Democratic political consultant based in Lansing.

Mildred Gaddis is host of The Mildred Gaddis Show on Kiss-FM (105.9) as well as a longtime fixture on Black talk radio in Detroit.

Matt Grossmann is a political science professor at Michigan State University in East Lansing.

Adrian Hemond is a Democratic political consultant and CEO of Grassroots Midwest, based in Lansing.

Tom Ivacko is executive director of the Center forLocal, State, and Urban Policy at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Nancy Kaffer is a columnist and member of the editorial board for the Detroit Free Press.

Luke Londo is a member of the Hazel Park City Council and a former staffer for Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette and U.S. Rep. Dan Benishek 鈥 both Republicans.

Darren Nichols was a longtime City Hall reporter for The Detroit News and is now a contributing columnist for the Detroit Free Press.

Jer Staes is producer and host of the Daily Detroit podcast.


How will Detroit City Councilmember Coleman Young II and Mayor Mike Duggan get along? Super duper!

Young, the son of the city鈥檚 first Black and longest-serving mayor, took some brutal shots at Duggan, now the city鈥檚 second-longest-serving mayor, during their 2017 faceoff. Now Young will be an at-large member of the Council 鈥 that is, elected by the entire city 鈥 and will have to work either with or against Duggan. How鈥檚 that going to go?

Coleman Young
Detroit City Councilmember Coleman Young photograph courtesy of Coleman Young

Swimmingly! 鈥淚 think they鈥檙e going to get along just well, I really do,鈥 says radio host Mildred Gaddis. 鈥淧eople are going to be surprised that the relationship is better than people believe it is.鈥 Says Hazel Park City Councilmember Luke Londo: 鈥淗e and Mayor Duggan share a lot of the same priorities, including vaccinating residents, breaking down barriers with the police, and continuing to move the city forward. It won鈥檛 be all sunshine and roses, but it will be productive.鈥

Columnists Darren Nichols and Nancy Kaffer, who interviewed Young for the Detroit Free Press, en route to the paper鈥檚 endorsement of his candidacy for City Council, say the 39-year-old former state senator has matured into a calmer, less bombastic politician. 鈥淒oes he challenge the mayor on some of the things that he is doing? Yes, he will,鈥 Nichols says. 鈥淭o me, the question becomes, Do you get a softer, gentler legislator that criticizes the mayor in a more pragmatic way? The question is what the style will be.鈥 Kaffer agrees: 鈥淗e鈥檚 a very personable, friendly guy, and Mike Duggan is obviously an extremely savvy politician who knows he needs a supportive council. Both of these guys are too professional.鈥

Mike Duggan
Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan // Photograph courtesy of the City of Detroit

That鈥檚 not to say there won鈥檛 be disputes. Young is part of a progressive shift on the council in a city that also overwhelmingly reelected a decidedly pro-business moderate to the top job. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to see issues raised that you wouldn鈥檛 have seen in previous councils,鈥 podcaster Jer Staes says. Young and Duggan will 鈥渉ave to feel each other out quite a bit鈥 on issues such as overcharged property taxes. But, Staes says, Young is 鈥渁 smart politician. He knows how to horse trade. He鈥檚 in the catbird seat to win a lot of concessions.鈥

There鈥檚 another obvious reason for Young to tone it down and get into Duggan鈥檚 good graces: He鈥檒l almost certainly run to replace Duggan, if the popular incumbent chooses not to run again in 2025 or 2029. 鈥淐oleman Young is going to put that into his calculations,鈥 GOP strategist Dennis Darnoi says. To that end, Democratic strategist Joe DiSano says, 鈥淪pending four years being the anti-Duggan, when the public has overwhelming rewarded Duggan, is simply silly.鈥


If Roe v. Wade is struck down, does that impact the 2022 elections in Michigan? Uh, yeah.

The increasingly conservative majority of the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule in 2022 on cases from Texas and Mississippi involving laws restricting the legal right to abortion. If they do away with Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark case that found a constitutional right for a woman to terminate her pregnancy, our panel says, it will be a political atomic bomb in favor of the Democrats, the likes of which have been rarely seen in American politics. 鈥淢ichigan would presumably revert to its previous 1931 law, which bans abortion except when the woman鈥檚 life is at risk,鈥 urban policy expert Tom Ivacko says. 鈥淚n such a scenario, I would expect a very large Democratic turnout, although GOP voters might also be extra motivated to maintain control of the legislature, too. Either way, abortion rights would be a key issue, if not the key issue, in the 2022 elections.鈥

Londo, a former GOP staffer, doubts there鈥檚 an upside for Republicans. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l see Oakland County become firmly blue, Grand Traverse and Isabella back in the blue column, and even counties like Midland, Bay, Calhoun, and Macomb coming way closer than they ever should,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his could be the single biggest driver for Democratic turnout we鈥檝e seen in a generation.鈥 Darnoi agrees, noting that the GOP is poised to have a wave year 鈥 unless this happens. 鈥淚t takes the conversation off the economy, off education, off Gretchen Whitmer.鈥

Kaffer is more circumspect, though. The outcome depends on new redistricting maps 鈥 which had not been approved as of press time 鈥 because the current ones are heavily gerrymandered to bolster and protect Republican majorities in the legislature. Fairer maps would be big for Democrats, who would need to take control in Lansing in order to legalize abortion. 鈥淚f we have different maps that more accurately reflect the political breakdown of our population, then yeah, I think Roe being struck down may actually make a difference.鈥


Does Gretchen Whitmer get reelected? Probably, but it鈥檒l be close.

Our original question was actually 鈥Gretchen Whitmer versus James Craig: Who wins?鈥 but that had to be amended, because some of our panelists aren鈥檛 entirely sure the former Detroit police chief will be the Republican nominee. While Craig is clearly the frontrunner and establishment favorite to take on Whitmer 鈥 he鈥檇 raised $1.4 million as of late October, including maximum contributions from former GOP Govs. John Engler and Rick Snyder 鈥 many say he鈥檚 been a lackluster campaigner and has yet to answer for a big spike in violent crime plaguing the Motor City.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer // Photograph courtesy of the State of Michigan

There is room, then, for another hopeful to build a following. Darnoi, for instance, suggests that auto dealer Kevin Rinke, who has said he is willing to self-fund his campaign to the tune of $10 million, could turn out to be 鈥淢ichigan鈥檚 Glenn Youngkin鈥 鈥 that is, a wealthy first-time Republican candidate who muscles out a favored Democrat for the gubernatorial seat, as the Virginia governor did in 2021.

Still, Darnoi 鈥 and almost every other panelist 鈥 believes Whitmer will win, regardless of her opponent, perhaps in a close race. The sky-high popularity she enjoyed at the height of the COVID-19 crisis in 2020 has waned considerably, but she has a stunning $12 million campaign war chest and doesn鈥檛 need to waste it on a primary, while the Republicans duke it out. She also has history on her side: Michigan has not failed to reelect an incumbent governor since Engler unseated Democrat James Blanchard in 1990.

Both DiSano and Kaffer believe Whitmer faces a stiffer challenge, in part because, after a 2020 of bold fiats aimed at diminishing the spread of the pandemic, she spent 2021 avoiding hard choices and relegating decisions about mask and vaccine mandates to localities. In doing so, she 鈥渦ndercut her hard-earned COVID fighter credentials,鈥 weakening herself with her base, DiSano says. Agrees Kaffer: 鈥淪he鈥檚 more vulnerable than she has to be.鈥

That being said, none of the current GOP contenders seem likely to unseat an indefatigable and savvy campaigner who will be able to tout the billions she鈥檚 gotten from Washington to fulfill her 鈥渇ix the damn roads鈥 pledge from 2018. Also coming to fruition on Whitmer鈥檚 watch was bipartisan auto-insurance reform and a recovering post-COVID economy.

Craig is 鈥渏ust not a very well-vetted candidate, not a candidate that has a lot of experience, not a candidate that comes with a built-in fundraising network,鈥 Democratic consultant Adrian Hemond says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not impossible for him to win, but he鈥檚 gonna need those tailwinds鈥 from an anti-Democratic wave election to win. Some believe Craig 鈥 a Black law-and-order conservative with roots in Detroit 鈥 can dent Democratic loyalty among Detroit voters, but Nichols is dubious. 鈥淩epublicans also are discounting the ground-level chatter among the minority masses who are living in some of the worst neighborhoods in Detroit, where James Craig is not very popular,鈥 he says. What鈥檚 more, Craig may need to become more 鈥淭rumpy鈥 鈥 that is, openly question the results of the 2020 election and align with the anti-immigration, anti-diversity credo of the 45th president 鈥 and that would turn off independent suburban voters, Staes says.

Michigan State University political scientist Matt Grossmann is our only panelist predicting a Whitmer loss. 鈥淚t will be a referendum on the national Democrats, and history suggests that you go toward the Republicans,鈥 he says, adding that the winners of 18 of 20 of the past Michigan gubernatorial elections were of the opposite party of the sitting president. His caveat: Craig, who he also thinks will get the nod, hasn鈥檛 shown himself a worthy opponent yet. 鈥淚鈥檓 not that impressed so far.鈥


How about Jocelyn Benson and/or Dana Nessel? Depends on Whitmer.

Whitmer鈥檚 fate is largely seen as a bellwether for that of Secretary of State Benson and Attorney General Nessel, Nichols and others say. If the national mood is so sour for Democrats that Whitmer is booted, the other two statewide constitutional officers have little chance of survival.

If Whitmer prevails, so too will the rest of the ticket, although most panelists say Benson is safer, if only because the Republicans seem set to nominate one of two wildly right-wing, very Trumpy candidates in either GOP activist Kristina Karamo or state Rep. Beau LaFave. Karamo, who has the Trump endorsement, recently spoke at a conference for adherents of QAnon, a cult-like right-wing movement steeped in disinformation and conspiracy theories, Darnoi says. In another year, Benson might have had to deal with criticism of how the Department of Motor Vehicles has functioned, but her willingness to stand up to Trump鈥檚 debunked claims of voter fraud in Michigan in the 2020 election are probably going to be the more germane issue, Kaffer says.

Nessel may struggle more, the gang thinks. Of the three, she is the most stridently progressive and prevailed in the trio鈥檚 closest race in 2018, so a red wave could be bigger trouble for her, especially if she faces a rematch against former Michigan House Speaker Tom Leonard, Darnoi says. 鈥淭om Leonard has a really credible claim as to why he might be in the best position to challenge her, and now she has a record that conservatives can really dislike,鈥 Darnoi says. The trouble for Leonard, though, is that Trump has endorsed Matt DePerno, who has vocally backed the former president鈥檚 untrue claims about the 2020 election, and 鈥渋f Tom has to outflank the insanity and inanity of Matt DePerno to get the GOP nomination, he鈥檚 going to struggle in the general,鈥 Londo says.

DiSano is an outlier on our panel, saying Benson is more vulnerable because of the DMV drama. Nessel, he says, is a more dogged, confrontational, and thus more effective campaigner.


Do any recreational marijuana shops open in Detroit this year? Unlikely.

Detroit has struggled since the legalization of non-medicinal pot as Duggan and the Council attempt to create a framework for issuing licenses that gives advantages and opportunities to minorities, long-term residents, and those whose lives were disrupted by prosecution for weed-related crime. A court rejected one such plan as unconstitutional, leaving the state鈥檚 largest city unable to partake in the marijuana gold rush.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 see it happening in 2022 because I don鈥檛 think the political will is there,鈥 Nichols says. 鈥淭hey are concerned with the lack of minority participation in the industry. That鈥檚 a very big issue, but the question becomes, How do you change it?鈥 Staes agrees that figuring out a scheme that accomplishes that and passes legal muster will take more than another year. 鈥淭he big hang-up is how to craft a system that includes legacy Detroiters and people of diverse backgrounds without running afoul of the court,鈥 he says.

Darnoi, however, is more optimistic. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e really behind all the other communities, but the opportunity is there and the money to do it is certainly there, so yeah, it will be done in this upcoming year.鈥

And Londo, the councilmember, has a snarky ulterior motive for rooting against Detroit working things out: 鈥淚 hope not, because Hazel Park is grateful for the continued business of Detroit residents who seek our multitude of superior marijuana products.鈥


What is COVID By The End of 2022? A dull headache.听

The pandemic that dominated the news in 2020 and 2021 will morph into an endemic virus that requires vigilance and regular booster shots, but it won鈥檛 be the mass killer it has been 鈥 at least in the U.S. 鈥淚t will still be a part of our lives, and I believe that we鈥檒l still be wearing masks,鈥 Gaddis says. Kaffer agrees. 鈥淚t will become just one more risk that you manage, like you do all the other risks in your life.鈥

Politically, 鈥渢he salience will continue to decline,鈥 Grossmann says. It will be a presence in the governor鈥檚 race, because so much of Whitmer鈥檚 bid for a second term will rely on what people thought of her leadership in the crisis, Darnoi and others predict, but the voters will be looking backward at the events and policies around COVID, rather than ahead.

鈥淐OVID-19 will still be on the radar by the end of 2022, but after nearly three years, it will have faded in terms of dominating headlines,鈥 Ivacko says. 鈥淭he 2022 election outcomes will be the hot topic 鈥 including what they mean for Trump and his hold on the GOP looking toward 2024.鈥

If it鈥檚 not, though 鈥 if COVID resurges and continues to cause a large amount of death and economic pain 鈥 then, DiSano warns, 鈥淒emocrats are dead in the water. That鈥檚 the simple answer.鈥


Will any Michigan pro sports team have a winning record in 2022? Think soccer!

Most of our panelists heard this question, thought of the pathetic 2021 performances of Detroit鈥檚 entry in the four major sports leagues 鈥 the Tigers, Lions, Red Wings, and Pistons 鈥 and groped for some optimism. Both Nichols and Ivacko, for instance, say the Tigers, who finished strong last year, will 鈥済et over the hump in 2022, and it will be a fun summer at Comerica,鈥 as Ivacko puts it. Hemond thinks the Pistons might 鈥渃rack .500.鈥 And Londo laid down a marker that could haunt him when 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit revisits these answers in January 2023: 鈥淢ark my words 鈥 the Red Wings will have a winning record and make the playoffs.鈥

But there actually is an easy answer to this question, one that only Londo and Staes went for: Detroit City Football Club. The team, which turns 10 this year and has never had a losing record, was the National Independent Soccer Association鈥檚 2021 champ. Londo admits a slight conflict of interest 鈥 he owns a share of the team 鈥 so let鈥檚 just go with Staes on this: 鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to be a Detroit City FC fan, and more people should be one because we can have a local sports team that won鈥檛 make us cry in our beer every week.鈥


This story is featured in the January 2022 issue of 糖心vlog安卓版. Read more stories in our听digital edition