Michigan GOP Senate candidate Mike Rogers rallies black support at Detroit church
DETROIT, Mich. — Michigan GOP Senate candidate Mike Rogers spoke at a Detroit church Tuesday, joining Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) and Pastor Lorenzo Sewell in an eleventh-hour appeal to black voters in the swing state.
Rogers, a former Michigan congressman locked in a tight contest with Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin, presented an optimistic vision of Republican progress among Black voters — a voting bloc that Democrats have dominated for decades.
“We can feel that there’s movement here,” said Rogers. “That people are saying, hey, I’m not sure I’m a Republican, and we’re saying you don’t have to say you’re Republican. We just need you to be open to some ideas and some solutions, rather than trying the same thing over and over and over and getting the same result.”

South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott endorsed Rogers before the mostly black panel, telling them: “We must go where we’re not invited. Do not wait for an invitation—just show up. I’ll say the proof is in the pudding. When you show up, the community is receptive.”
While they strategized ways to win the black vote, those in attendance still acknowledged that Democrats will still net the vast majority of votes from black Americans.