The retiring senator, well-known for her love of Michigan and her commitment to protecting the rights of Michiganders, was asked to talk about her legacy. But the straight-talker had something far more urgent on her mind.
MICHIGANโDemocratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan has a warning for the women and men of the Mitten State: If Donald Trump is reelected, he will undo everything weโve accomplished to protect reproductive freedom.
โWe worked so hard, people got petitions signed. We got the (constitutional amendment to protect abortion) on the ballot. We voted in 2022,โ Stabenow tells The โGander in an exclusive interview. โBut if we donโt protect all that, if Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are not reelected and Trump comes in with the Republicans, all of that will be out the window. So thatโs my message.โ
Stabenow, who has represented Michigan in the US Senate since 2001, in the US House of Representatives from 1997-2001, and in state and local government since 1975, will retire after her current term ends in January 2025.ย
The Clare native has always been a strong proponent of a womanโs right to make her own reproductive decisions, and she is now urging like-minded Michiganders to stay engaged through the 2024 election.ย
โListen, you did your work โฆ But the reality is weโve got to do it one more time. Trumpโs got to be out of there. Weโve got to hold onto the Senate, retake the House, and then we can actually put into law a new Roe v. Wade protection.โ
Michiganders have fought hard since the repeal of Roe v. Wade to enshrine reproductive rights for residents across the state, especially after a majority of voters supported Proposal 3 at the polls in November 2022.ย
โWe thought we had this all protected,โ Stabenow says, adding that sheโs thankful for what Michiganโs voters have done to protect womenโs rights in recent years.ย
Stabenow is urging Michiganders and voters across the country to reelect Biden and give Democrats the majority in Congress. If they do that, she says, legislators could passโand President Biden would signโa national law that protects reproductive freedom, just as Roe v. Wade did.ย
President Biden echoed the senatorโs sentiments in his recent State of the Union address when he vowed, โIf you, the American people, send me a Congress that supports the right to choose, I promise you I will restore Roe v. Wade, as the law of the land again.โย
Right now, there are 48 Democrats, 49 Republicans, and three Independents (who caucus with the Democrats) in the US Senate. (Every state gets two senators. Find yours here.) In the US House of Representatives, there are 213 Democrats, 219 Republicans, and three vacancies. (Thatโs a total of 435โfind your reps here.) A total of 468 seats (33 in the Senate and all in the House) are up for election on November 5, 2024.
Stabenow also wants Michiganโs men to understand that reproductive freedom, including the right to an abortion, isnโt just a womenโs issue.
โIt affects everybody you loveโyour daughter, your sister, your wife, your mother,โ she says. โIt affects you in every way, whether or not you and your family will make your own reproductive decisions.โ
Could abortion access go away in Michigan under Donald Trump?
According to recent reporting by the New York Times, aides say Trump hopes to impose a 16-week national abortion ban if he returns to power. He reportedly picked 16 weeks not due to advice of any medical professionals but because itโs a round number. โKnow what I like about 16? Itโs even. Itโs four months,โ he was reported to have said in private conversations.ย
While Trump has said he does support exceptions for rape, incest, and when a motherโs life is in danger, he has not expressed support for exceptions for other health risks to the mother, including threats of impairment to her bodily functionsโnor for a woman whose fetus has a fatal anomaly and wonโt survive outside the uterus.
Despite all the work Michiganโs local organizers put into getting Proposal 3 onto the ballot and then approved by voters, a national abortion ban would override its protections.
Even if Trump canโt get a ban through Congress, there are plans to make abortion impossible nationwide by enforcing the 1873 Comstock Act, as detailed in Project 2025โs Mandate for Leadership. Project 2025 is the โPresidential Transition Projectโโthe plans and policies that would go into effect under a newly elected Trump administration. It was compiled by right-wing conservative organization the Heritage Foundation. Among other things, Project 2025 would immediately replace the current executive branch of government with a โunitary executiveโโa president who has absolute power over the executive branch.ย
The Comstock Act of 1873 was an attempt by a man named Anthony Comstock to clean up a culture of impurity. He convinced the 42nd Congress to prohibit things he found to be โimmoralโโincluding the mailing or shipping of sex toys, contraceptives, โlewdโ writings, and anything that could be used in an abortion (whether medication or surgical).
Though Congress repealed portions of the law related to birth control in 1971, anti-abortion groups and Trump are arguing that the Comstock Act can still be used to prevent the mailing of mifepristone, one of two medications used in a medication abortion, along with any surgical supplies that doctors need to perform abortions.
That move alone would end all access to abortion in Michigan, and the entire country.
All health care is under threat in 2024
An increasing number of women have gone public with stories about almost dying while awaiting treatment for pregnancy complications and miscarriagesโdelayed due to abortion bans in states like Texas, Tennessee, Florida, Oklahoma, and idaho.ย
Some have also lost their ability to bear children after being refused treatment until they were near death.
โItโs incredibly shocking and frightening to see the extent to which Republicans are willing to say to women, โSit in the parking lot [of hospitals] in your car and only come in when youโre really, really almost deadโ,โ says Sen. Stabenow.
โItโs unbelievable. The men that I know donโt want that for their families. For their wives, for their daughters, for anybody they know. I mean, what in the world? The devaluing of womenโs lives, itโs shocking, actually.โย

When it comes to accessible health careโan issue that originally drew Stabenow into politics in 1974, when a local commissioner tried to close down a nursing home in Ingham Countyโthe senator points to Trumpโs plans to slash Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security reserves.ย
During a March 11 appearance on CNBCโs Squawk Box, Trump stated, โThere is a lot you can do in terms of entitlementsโin terms of cutting.โ
Stabenow says that, in opposition to cutting these services that directly benefit the American people, Biden and Democrats in Congress have made affordable health care a priority. Theyโve capped insulin at $35 a month and out-of-pocket prescription drug costs at $3,300 a year for seniors. In 2025, that cap will drop to $2,000.
โI have people saying to me, โWow, wow, that really made a difference to me and my family and my ability to buy food and pay the rent. Thatโs amazing,โโ Stabenow says.
Similar to reproductive health care, however, she warns that all those benefits could be gone if Trump returns to the White House.ย
โThereโs no question. [Republicans] have already said they’re going to take away all that,โ she says. โTheyโre going to stop Medicare from negotiating lower prices. Theyโre going to take away all the protections in terms of out-of-pocket costs. Theyโre going to take away all of it. These guys are about protecting the drug companies.โ
She points out that not one Republican voted to cap insulin at $35 a month or allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices.
Stabenow goes on to tell The โGander that she is proud to see that a record-breaking 21 million people have signed up for the Affordable Healthcare Act in 2024, including 418,000 in Michigan.
โWe have a president now who puts people first, who has the right values, who gets that, in the past, weโve just seen an economy that was based on helping the wealthyโand heโs turning that around,โ she says. โWe need another four years to really lock this in and make sure that this effort to grow the middle class locks in.โ
More than 150 million Americansโabout 45% of the populationโcurrently receive health care benefits through Medicare and Medicaid, while 68 million receive monthly Social Security checks after having paid into the program all of their working lives.
Who will fill Stabenowโs seat?
As the first Michigan woman elected to the US Senate, Stabenow has been a groundbreaker for more than two decadesโand she remains hopeful that women will continue to be leaders in the state long after her term ends.
โItโs really important to me to keep the legacy going of women moving forward in Michigan,โ she says. โIโve done a lot of firstsโthe first woman to preside over the Michigan House of Representatives, first woman being the senator from Michigan. But, you know what? If thereโs not a second, itโs called a token. And so I think youโve got to have a second, a third, and a fourth.โ
The race for Stabenowโs seat is expected to be the โlone competitive open seat in the country this year,โ according to the AP.
Right now, there are three Democrats and at least 12 Republicans vying for the chance to take it in November. Of them, Stabenow calls Democrat Elissa Slotkinโcurrently one of Michiganโs US Representativesโโterrific,โ though she has a long-held policy of not officially endorsing candidates before Democratic primaries.
โWe in Michigan have been so blessed to be able to move from very few women in office to now a woman governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state,โ she continues. โAnd so weโve come a long way. I really hope that I have helped to break down those doors, and thatโs my goal now, is to be able to pass the torch.โ
All Michigan voters are eligible to vote in the August 6 primary election.



















