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Adam Hollier to challenge Rep. Shri Thanedar for 3rd time [1]

['Todd Spangler']

Date: 2025-04-14

Adam Hollier to challenge Rep. Shri Thanedar for 3rd time

Show Caption Hide Caption Michigan votes are in: 2024 election results from key races 2024 Michigan general election results from key races are in, which includes 13 district races.

Former state Sen. Adam Hollier, of Detroit, said Monday he will make another attempt at defeating U.S. Rep. Shri Thanedar in next year's Democratic primary.

Last year, Hollier — running a second time against Thaendar, D-Detroit, in the predominantly Democrat 13th Congressional District — stumbled badly after putting together a string of endorsements, including those from Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson; former U.S. Rep. Brenda Lawrence, D-Southfield, and Wayne County Executive Warren Evans, only to be knocked off the primary ballot for failing to file enough valid petition signatures.

Thanedar, an Indian immigrant and millionaire businessman, easily beat Detroit City Council member Mary Waters and went on to retain the seat. In 2022, in what was then a recently redrawn district, Thanedar, then a state representative, won out in a nine-person primary, with Hollier coming in second, 28%-23.5%.

Hollier, who served for a time as director of Michigan’s Veterans Affairs Agency under Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, issued a statement on Monday saying, "From housing to daycare to the rising costs of everything from groceries to the brakes on our cars, we’re in a real crisis in this country. We need bold solutions and leaders who won’t back down in the face of this challenge. The last thing we need are more millionaires and billionaires like Elon Musk and Shri Thanedar who are only in it for themselves.”

While both Musk, who is the head of Tesla and a key adviser to Republican President Donald Trump, and Thanedar are both wealthy, Thanedar has been consistently critical of Trump's agenda on using tariffs widely and his and Musk's efforts to eradicate or defund parts of the federal government, including the Department of Education. He has also been a reliable Democratic vote in the U.S. House.

Thanedar, responding to Hollier's criticism, said he has proven repeatedly he can win in Detroit and called his challenger's ability to make the ballot in 2024 "irredeemable incompetence." "Voters in the 13th District, 30% of whom are at or below poverty, have serious problems they need addressed. They are looking for someone competent and qualified, not someone who will hire his friends and disastrously fail to accomplish simple tasks," Thanedar said.

Thanedar also noted that as a state senator in 2018 he supported a plan to build a tunnel under the Straits of Mackinac to house Line 5, a pipeline that has been widely opposed by environmentalists.

Thanedar has been the target of claims, at least prior to his last election, that his office was not adequately focused on policy issues or constituent services, accusations he strongly denied. The Detroit News also reported on Thanedar's use of his office budget to pay for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of media, advertising and billboards last year. Thanedar has said the spending was intended to better serve constituents and was reviewed by the relevant committee that signs off on office spending.

On Monday, Thanedar defended his record, saying his office has helped resolve some 2,800 constituent cases and gotten $30 million approved in community projects. "We have world-class constituent communication, including a record 11 in-person town halls," he said.

Thanedar was also criticized in the last election, meanwhile, for appearing to change his position on what he had called in the state Legislature Israel's "apartheid" regime, only to criticize other Democratic groups that he felt did not forcefully enough denounce Hamas' attack on Israel in October 2023, which led to Israel's assault on Gaza in reprisal. The American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, a key supporter of Israeli policies in the U.S., backed Hollier in the 2022 election.

Hollier, who was born and raised in Detroit accused Thanedar of spending hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars "putting up self-portraits of himself all over the district,” a reference to Thanedar's billboards. Hollier said he wants to focus on building more affordable housing in metro Detroit, lower the costs of child care, fight tariffs and reduce taxes on poor and middle class people.

“Here in Detroit, when we get knocked down, we get right back up," he said in a prepared statement. "We keep fighting."

Contact Todd Spangler: [email protected]. Follow him on X @tsspangler.

This story has been updated with new information.

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[1] Url: https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2025/04/14/adam-hollier-shri-thanedar-detroit-congressional-district/83080051007/

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