Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer insists Americans are ready for a Woman as President.
We have not had a Woman President yet. I think we will at some point in the near future.
What are the risks and opportunities she sees for Democrats in the coming elections? This is a special edition of Up First from NPR News. Gretchen Whitmer is not running for anything right now, but she's thinking about this fall's elections.
We know that there will be efforts to compromise the election or to dissuade people from showing up, to scare people away, to threaten people. We cannot let that stand.
Our conversation was at the Convention Center where protesters tried to disrupt Michigan's ballot counting in 2020. Now it is the scene of the Detroit Auto Show, and we also talk through tariffs. Why haven't they crashed the economy in the way the critics predicted? Stay with us for a talk with Governor Whitmer. Governor Whitmer, thanks for welcoming us here.
Thank you. I'm glad you're here.
It's amazing to be at this auto show. I want to talk about cars, the auto industry, and tariffs. In a moment, I want to begin with something else. As we're talking, as we're recording this, there have been a number of news developments relating to the Department of Justice, the US Department of Justice. I've got a list here. Us officials said that immigration agents have what they call federal immunity as they conduct their duties in places like Minnesota. We learned of an investigation of the Federal Reserve. We learned of an investigation in which a journalist house was raided and their devices were taken. Senator Alyssa Slotkin of Michigan said she is under investigation for something. What does that all add up to?
I think an abuse of power. I think that's pretty clear. That's the through line there. I think it's a very serious and scary moment in this country. I appreciate those who are raising their voices. I worry about the safety of people who are just out there trying to do the right thing and protest or do their jobs and cast their votes. But I think it's an abuse of power is what it adds up to.
Has it gotten to the point where you would have difficulty working with or collaborating with this President, which is something you've tried to do?
Well, listen, I have worked with people I don't agree with my whole political career. This is not new. I work with people that I disagree with 99% of the things on. My oath is to the people of Michigan, and at the end of the day, that's my North Star. So if there's an opportunity for me to do something for the people of Michigan, I'm always going to take that opportunity. But it never means I'm going to not live my values and be the leader that I think we deserve.
We, as you just note, we're at an auto show. It might have been somebody who disagrees with you peeling out in the car. There are test runs going on around us and everything else. Are you concerned about democracy itself?
I am. I absolutely am. And that's one of the reasons of many that I think the important thing that Democratic leaders can do right now is to lead with integrity, to fight back where we must, and to make sure that we're recruiting a great group of democratic leaders to put on the ballot in 2026 so that we can be ready for 2028.
Which I want to talk about. Can you deal with this President? If he makes an agreement, does he keep it?
Well, you know what? I worked really hard to get a secure new fighter mission at Salfridge Air National Guard base in Macomb County. It is about 850 million dollars of economic activity to my state. It was very much an unsure thing if we could get that done. The President came here and announced it. But until those planes get here on the ground, I'm going to keep working at it, make sure that it happens.
You said in a speech that we were just watching before this interview that the President's tariffs, have taken a terrible toll. Impressive alliteration. How much damage have they done, really, though, to the auto industry?
Well, you look at what's going on here. We've had nine months of contraction when it comes to manufacturing in this country. If the goal is to onshore jobs and to bring investment to the United States, that's something I think we can all say we want. But this capricious tariff policy that's ever-changing has absolutely shifted costs onto people, meant that businesses aren't making investments, and has certainly made doing business in this country a lot harder, and that's what we're seeing.
Why do you think it is that the United Auto Auto Workers is not on the same page with you on that? They support the tariffs, have opposed the North American Free Trade Agreement and its successor agreement for a long time.
The United Auto Workers are a big, diverse group of people, and some of the leadership says that they like tariffs, but right now we are seeing contraction of US manufacturing. That's job losses. And ultimately, their rank and file members got to be able to afford to take care of their families and know that they got a job to show up to. And that's very much at risk right now.
Do you think you're going to persuade them to change their mind?
I'm not working to persuade them to change their mind. I'm doing what I know to be the right thing to do for the Michigan economy, for the United States economy. And that means fighting to make sure that as they go in to renegotiate the USMCA, they keep the parts that make sense, they improve on the parts that don't, but we can't scuttle it and we can't have a capricious set of rules depending on one person's mood from day to day. We've got to have a real strategy.
Mary Barra, the head of General Motors, gave an interview to CBS the other day in which she acknowledged that the tariffs had cost her company billions of dollars because, of course, cars are made constantly with parts going back and forth across the border to Canada and the border to Mexico. Cost them billions of dollars. And yet she said the administration had worked with them to minimize the damage and that they had, in fact, been able to bring some production back to the United States. Does that imply that the tariffs are, to some extent, working as the President wanted them to, bringing jobs back?
I'm not going to put words in Mary's mouth. She does phenomenal job at General Motors, but she's got a hard job to do, and she's got to figure out how to work with this administration, which we're all trying to do. At the end of the day, though, we know that tariffs have increased costs on the average American consumer. They've cost Americans jobs. They've made America less competitive country as a whole. You can see what the toll is that it's been on manufacturing. Meanwhile, China continues to put their foot on the gas, and I think that's why it's such a concerning moment for for us here in Michigan, in particular, but for us as a nation.
I want to ask about China, but why do you think it is that tariffs have not yet crashed the economy as some people feared they would?
Well, nine months of contraction in manufacturing is a big problem. That's a big, I think, indicator of what happens. We're the canary in the coal mine, if you will. When America catches a cold, Michigan gets the flu. We feel it harder and we feel it earlier. I'm telling you, it's taking a toll.
Why do you think it is that this The industry that we're surrounded by is retreating on EVs, electric vehicles, which seemed to be the future a short time ago.
Well, we had policies that supported the transition, and now we don't. These are companies that have to make decades long investments. They were making them, and then all of a sudden, a change in Washington, DC has forced them to reevaluate. Meanwhile, China is moving ahead on EVs and batteries. They have upended the whole European market. They We want to do that here in the United States. We can't let that happen. And so I don't care what car you drive. I want it to be made here in Michigan. I want it to be made in the United States. We've got to compete. We've got to move forward on all of those fronts, not one or the other.
You're right that the President has pushed back on subsidies, tax credits, and other supports for EVs. But it seems that even when Joe Biden was President, Ford could not make an F150 EV pickup truck at a cost that people were willing to It was too expensive for people, and even at that, they were losing money on the truck. Meanwhile, the Chinese can sell a car for a few thousand dollars, a decent electric car for a few thousand dollars. It sounds like something is fundamentally not working there beyond this or that federal policy.
There are a lot of pieces that go into it, Steve. But one of them is that the Chinese government is underwriting all of those vehicles. That's what they have done in Europe, is the government funds, they can sell at a loss, They eat up the market, and then they will jack up prices. That's exactly what they want to do here as well. We do not have a fair level playing ground, and that's why our international policies matter, but they've got to be smart. We can't penalize our allies, our partners like Canada and Mexico, and make it easier for the Chinese. They're already operating at an unlevel playing field, and they are out to gut the American market.
The US has effectively kept Chinese cars out of this market. Do you think that should continue? Absolutely.
Absolutely. I mean, they're already operating on an unlevel playing field. We've got to do a lot of things to make the United States more competitive and to move faster. That includes getting rid of these capricious tariffs. But there's a lot more work that we need to do here to shore up not just this industry, but manufacturing generally.
The President has said he wants foreign direct investment in the United States, more of it. Would you welcome Chinese investment in Michigan if you had that opportunity?
I think it depends on what the company and what the product is and whether or not we've got something that we can make that in lieu of Chinese cooperation.
In a moment, we return to the Detroit Auto Show to ask Gretchen Whitmer about her political future and her parties. This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive in up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart.
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There's a lot What's going on right now? Mounting economic inequality, threats to democracy, environmental disaster, the sour stench of chaos in the air. I'm Brooklyn Gladstone, host of WNYC's On The Media. Want to understand the reasons and the meanings of the narratives that led us here, and maybe how to head them off at the pass?
That's on the media's specialty. Take a listen wherever you get your podcasts. Governor, I want people to know, if they don't, you're not currently running for anything.
That's right.
Is that going to stay the same, by the way?
As I enter this last 11 and a half months of governor, I know that the best thing I can do is stay focused and show people that when Democratic governors lead, we make their lives better. That's why my focus is going to stay on Michigan. But also I'm the vice chair of the Democratic Governors Association. We've got 36 races this year. 24 incumbent governors represent more 60% of the nation. Who your governor is matters more than ever right now. Those two things are going to take up all my focus through the end of this year.
You're going to try to accelerate like that car, I would imagine. Since you're not running, you can give advice, and it's almost your job to give advice to people running in '26 and '28, perhaps as well. I have some questions about the direction of the Democratic Party. What does your party need to change in order to win Michigan next time?
You know what? I won Michigan twice, handily. I am proud and grateful for this opportunity, but I think it's because I stayed focused on the fundamentals, the dinner table issues, helping people find an affordable place to live, a good paying job, a school that prepares their kids, and roads that don't tear up their vehicle. This is how people keep money in their pockets. This is how Michiganders can get ahead. I don't think Michigan is unique in that. I think every person in this country wants and expects government to make their lives better. And so that's been our formula here in Michigan. I think that that can be replicated everywhere successfully.
Have National Democrats done something that have pushed voters away?
I don't think there's one thing here or there, but when you're not really in it with the people that you want to deserve, seeing their lives every day, understanding what is possible in terms of giving retirees relief by not taxing their pensions, which is something that we did in my first term here. That's the stuff that really matters. And that's the stuff that voters want and need to see from their elected officials.
There are a lot of people who voted for Trump, not because they love him, but because they want a drastic change. Do you have anything to say? Do Democrats have anything to say to people who want drastic change in the way the country has been run?
I think drastic change might be an oversimplification. I think that people want leaders who understand them and care about them. I've met a lot of Michiganers who voted both for me and Donald Trump twice. I don't understand everything that makes that voter tick. But when I talk to them, they tell me, I think you're the one that understands what I'm going through. You're the one that's talking about the issues that matter to me. So that's why I always say, focus on the fundamentals. A leader has got to know how to solve problems, get things done, and make sure that people's lives are better.
We interviewed Pete Buttijudge as part of this series, and one of the things that he said was that Democrats made a mistake by defending the status status quo too much by defending institutions, which sounds like a good thing, but they're institutions that weren't fundamentally working for people, that a lot of federal agencies, for example, were not really delivering things that the public understood. Do you agree with that?
Yeah. I mean, you've never heard someone say, Hey, let me, I'm the status quo. I wouldn't vote for that. I think that people are frustrated. Their costs keep going up. It's harder and harder to get ahead. Their kids aren't finding jobs. I mean, this is the fundamentals for people, and we've always got to be looking to improve, to get stronger, to get more competitive, to help more people get where they want to be headed. I think that is something that's been a gap.
But I was thinking about your story specifically because if I'm not mistaken, both of your parents at one time or another were in government. Yes. They both served in opposite parties, if I'm I'm not mistaken. Of course, you spent a long time in government. How do you think it is that people have come to feel so disconnected from their government?
Probably a lot of things that play into it. But as we're seeing right now, who your leaders are matter more than ever. Who your governor is plays an outsized role in whether or not you've got a stable statewide economy in which to make an investment or which you can get a degree or a skill set that gets you in a good paying job. And so I do think that what we've seen in Michigan, we had the highest youth voter turnout in my re-election in the country. People understood that what we were doing really mattered at the state level. And so I do think that in a non presidential year, this is a moment where we can connect what governors are doing, what people's lives, how they're impacted by what happens at the state level.
Democrats did really badly with men in 2024. And then in your state of the state speech in early 2025, about a year ago, you warned about a generation of men falling behind their fathers and their grandfathers. What were you saying? And is anything better now?
Well, I was addressing a need, right? When I said that, some people pushed back and said, Oh, are you abandoning your plans to help women get ahead? I said, No, of course not. I'm recognizing that there's a unique vulnerability here, though. When we look at the efforts that we undertook to make college or skill sets more affordable, women were signing up two to one to men. When we announced opportunities that bring down the cost of a first home payment. Women were signing up two to one for men. We were not reaching men. So did we design a bunch of programs for men alone? No. But we do more outreach to make sure that we are meeting men where they are so they understand what's available to them, too, because we want an opportunity for every person, not some, not this group, not that group, but so that every person has that chance to get ahead, to get the job they want, to get the home, an affordable home that we all need.
There's a whole conversation about the demoralization of men, about men feeling left out, not seeing a way forward. There are different flavors of that. I mean, there's a sociological approach to it. There's also a very intently political and even radical version of Is society doing something to men?
I don't know all of the different pressures. I've been studying it. I'm listening to probably a lot of the same podcast that you are to understand what can we do, How do we bridge this gap? It is real, and I think that's the first step. The second is really reaching out and listening and making sure that every part of our society can take advantage of of opportunities that are available, and we create ones where maybe we need to.
One of the arguments made, of course, is that Democrats have somehow tried to be too inclusive. Tilted the playing field the wrong way. Do you see anything to that claim?
No, I don't think so. When you say, Let's save the rainforest, it doesn't mean you say, I hate all the other forests, right? It's recognizing a unique vulnerability. I think that's smart. I think that that's what we have to do when it comes to all of our policies. Democrats are a big tent. We want everyone to be successful. It's not picking and choosing. It's not a zero-sum game where I only win if you lose. Everyone can get ahead, and that's got to be our mindset. And that's why I'm a Democrat. Sometimes Maybe our message is too obtuse for people, and we have to really have those interactions where people feel like, Yeah, you matter, too.
What do you mean too obtuse for people?
Well, We make everything so general that sometimes people can't see themselves in it. I think that that's a pitfall.
What would you do about that?
My favorite thing to do, I wrote a whole book about listening to people. You're not learning if you're not listening. People will tell you what they need. They will be very direct with you. We saw an auto worker very direct the other day with the President of the United States.
Oh, this is the person who yelled at the President about Jeffrey Epstein.
I'm making a joke. Yeah, go on. I'm saying if you engage with people, they will tell you what they need. That's why when I talk about fixing the damn road, Steve, it's not just about a smoother drive. It's about the person who doesn't have to take money out of their savings or their rent or their childcare budget to fix the rim on their wheel. This is about the personal economy and the ability to get ahead. I think that's what I mean when I say that. Every person's got a story. Every person matters. And my job as governor is not just to make sure that all the people that voted for me can get ahead. It's to make sure that all the people Michigan can.
Why did you just draw that distinction right now that you were only for your voters? What do you mean by that?
Well, when you ask, Are Democrats only talking to one group or another? I don't just talk to Democrats. I think that when I took an oath of office, it's to serve the people of Michigan, not just the people who voted, not just the people who voted for me. My favorite thing is to have a conversation with someone who didn't and learn from them and understand what motivated them.
Does that make you different from the President?
I think there are a lot of things that make me different from the President.
We heard there Governor Whitmer's views of her party, its troubles, and particularly its troubles with men. In a moment, we'll ask what she thinks about a woman as President.
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Short, focused episodes, one topic at a time, about five five minutes or so. We carry out reporting from across all of NPR's coverage, so you are always getting the biggest, most urgent stories. Listen to Trump's terms on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. One of your fellow Democrats was on a stage not too long ago, Michelle Obama, and was asked about a woman as President, and she said, We're not ready. And then speaking to the audience, effectively to the American electorate said, You are not ready. You are lying if you say that you are ready. Do you think she was right about that?
Well, first, I love Michelle Obama, so the last thing I want to do is disagree with her. But I think America is ready for a woman president. The The question comes down to a choice between two people. And what we saw in this last election, while Kamal Harris didn't beat President Trump, we saw women get elected across the country. We saw Just recently, Abigail Spamberger and Mikey Sheryl got elected. We saw Alyssa Slacken get elected the US Senate here in Michigan. We saw women win up and down the ballot in hard, important states to win. I do think that there's an appetite. I just, for whatever reason, we have not had a woman president yet. I think we will at some point in the near future.
Michelle Obama's evidence was the last election. I think if we were to spin out that thought, it would be that in her view, the other candidate was so obviously unfit for the office, and still he managed to win, that maybe voting for a woman was just too much for some people.
I think that there were a lot of things that came into play, and I don't know that it can be whittled down to one characteristic or another, one event or another, or a timeline or not, or the lack of a primary.
I don't know.
You don't think it was just that Kamalani was- I don't think it was just gender, no.
I've been thinking about the way that each president, in addition to their specific policies, ends up presenting a different vision of America and changing American politics. Obama, there was a famous book, Game Change, changed American politics. Trump clearly has changed American politics. What do you see that the next president would need to do? Where do you think politics are going next? What do you think will change next?
I don't know. I think 2026 is going to give us a lot of insight. I saw what happened and worked closely with the Spamberger campaign and the Sheryl campaign and the DGA, but I think that this year is going to be very telling in terms of what trajectory that we're on. I think it remains to be seen.
Part of it has to do with technology. Obama took advantage of the Internet in a particular way and found a new group of voters. Trump took advantage of the Internet in a particular way, found new voters, and also dominated the conversation in a way that no President ever had, it seems to me. Now the technology is changing again, artificial intelligence and everything else. You must be thinking about that.
Yeah, that's why I say I think what happens in this next 12 months is going to be very telling and give us a lot of insight into the trajectory.
How are you thinking that through and what do you think will be new or influential in this midterm election now?
I don't know that I can predict it.
I want to come to this location where we are. We're surrounded by cars, we're surrounded by an auto show. It is also a giant multi-purpose convention center where ballots were counted in the 2020 election, and people who believe the false claim that the election was stolen were pounding on the glass and trying to interfere in different ways with the count. And that raises questions for me about the next couple of elections. Do you believe the federal government will allow free and fair elections in 2026 and 2028?
Well, we're going to work to make sure that Michigan is ready. And we take every election seriously. We know that there will be efforts to compromise the election or to dissuade people from showing up, to scare people away, to threaten people. We cannot let that stand. We are going to be prepared, and we are going to also, as we did in elections past, work with other states that are anticipating a lot of the nefarious efforts that we are here and use best practices and move forward. But I'm concerned about it. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't.
What do you assume the President's approach is? He's talked about redistricting, gerrymandering, but do you assume that the President will be doing more to interfere from your point of view with the results?
I think it would be a mistake to assume that they're not going to. I don't know precisely what it is that they might come up with, but we've got smart, sophisticated, savvy people around the tabletop that we will continue to get prepared.
Some people spin out theories and they will say, Well, DHS is everywhere. Homeland security people are everywhere, and they might be used in some way.
I don't think it's paranoia to have that concern.
Why do you think Michigan has been spared compared to some other states, Minnesota, California, which have had National Guard on the streets and everything else that we've seen.
First, I'll just say I appreciate the work that my colleagues in Illinois and California, and of course, Minnesota are doing. They are under extreme stress, and I stand in solidarity with them. I will also say that our approach in Michigan is to try to keep the temperature down, to keep open lines of communication mission, and that's what we're going to continue to do, and hopefully, we'll continue to be successful. But I know in these moments, there's a lot of unpredictable. And so we're on high alert.
You said, Other than just being prepared, do you have a task force? Do you have a group of people who are studying this? How are you preparing?
There are important reasons that I'm not going into a whole lot more detail on that, Steve. I think I'll just leave it at this. We've got some brilliant folks who are working on this, and we will be prepared.
Governors are talking? Democratic governors are talking about this? Yes. I want to ask one other thing about this, because I'm remembering that in 2020, the President very specifically tried to bend the electoral votes coming out of Michigan, asked for help from Michigan Republicans in the legislature, and ultimately didn't get it. Michigan Republicans refused to go along. Do you have confidence that the other party in this state would stand with the results once again the next couple of times?
I know that there are good people in the Republican Party that would. I don't know if the whole party leadership would. I don't know what to anticipate coming out of the oval office going into the election. But that's why I'm really glad that right now we got a Democratic governor that's going to be overseeing a lot of it going into this election. And that's why I'm going to work so hard to make sure that we have a Democratic governor elected this fall as well.
Well, that's an interesting question. If you don't have a Democratic governor, obviously, you'd have a Republican in 2028. Would that add to the risk in your view?
I think that would make my concern level higher, yeah, depending on who it is.
Governor, thanks so much. I enjoyed talking with you. Thanks, Steve.
You, too.
Really appreciate it. This has been a special edition of Up First from NPR News. It's one of our all-platform interviews. It's a podcast, it's video, and it's on the radio on NPR's morning edition. This episode of Up First was edited by Rina Advani. It was produced by Adam Bierne, Katie Klein, and Zyad Batch. We get engineering support from Robert Rodriguez, and our executive producer is Jay Schaler. I'm Steve Inskeep. Thanks for joining us. This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive in up to 40 currencies with only a few simple tabs. Be smart.
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Gretchen Whitmer is in her final year as governor of the swing state of Michigan. The Democratic governor sat for an interview with NPR's Steve Inskeep and talked about tariffs, the prospects of a female president, and the security of upcoming elections.Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.This bonus episode of Up First was edited by Reena Advani. It was produced by Adam Bearne, Kaity Kline and Ziad Buchh. We get engineering support from Robert Rodriguez. Our Executive Producer is Jay Shaylor.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy