I remember when Mallory McMorrow rang our doorbell, campaigning door to door when she first ran for the Michigan Senate. Yes, we voted for her. Hate Won’t Win is both her memoir about how she got into politics and her career in Lansing and a how-to guide on how to become political forces as voters and citizens.
McMorrow was frustrated about the political chaos in the country and was inspired to run for office. She believed in the American dream where everyone mattered. Her mother had patterned a life of service. McMorrow’s education and career had taken her across the county. Then, she married a “fourth-generation Royal Oaker”–where I lived from age 11 to marriage.
McMorrow ran in a traditionally Republican area against a Republican incumbent under criticism for lack of dedication. And she won, the same year that Gretchen Whitmer was elected governor. McMorrow was the youngest woman ever elected to the Michigan Senate.
She soon came up against the ingrained ‘Old Boy’s Club’ acceptance of sexual harassment. At orientation, another senator touched her inappropriately, and when she learned that other women had experienced the same unwanted advances, she reported him. Consequences for the man were limited, but the atmosphere in the Senate changed for the better. Whitmer later told her that “this place has been a snake pit for years.”
But the challenges were just beginning. McMorrow saw the Michigan Capitol overrun with armed extremists, some of whom later participated in a kidnapping plot against Governor Whitmer. There was the COVID-19 crisis, the January 6 violence. Another senator accused her of grooming children.
McMorrow was the second sitting Michigan senator to give birth while in office; the legislature required in-person participation. McMorrow introduced a family leave disclosure act requiring disclosure of family leave policies upon hire.
You are our voice of reason in a world gone mad. from Hate Won’t Win by Mallory McMorrow
McMorrow gave a speech decrying politically based dehumanization. It ended, “I know who I am. I know what faith and service means, and what it calls for in this moment. We will not let hate win.”
She had not planned to run for reelection. She was tired of being targeted by Republicans, tired of introducing bills that went nowhere. But after her speech went viral, she was invited on all the news channels and messages came in supporting her.
McMorrow decries the division that separates and demonizes neighbors. She warns against the cable news designed to bait you into binge watching and rile up emotions. She notes that liking and sharing memes isn’t political action. Then, she clearly offers how to practice politics, influencing those in power or supporting candidates who stand for your values.
People have lost faith in politics and politicians. But to change the world we have to connect, act, and participate. Start local. Find your people. Embrace your civic duty. The state government has more power over you than the Federal, she states. We can’t impact every issue. Voting and protests alone can’t change things. But we can’t retreat, either.
It took five years for McMorrow to get a bill into law, a red flag law that helped the Royal Oak police manage a situation blocks from McMorrow’s home. The fight is always worth it.
She ends, “let’s create the future we want to see, together.”
Thanks to the publisher for a free book through NetGalley.