Michigan Democrat Mallory McMorrow scrubs thousands of posts after old social media remarks surface
Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, a leading Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, wiped roughly 6,000 posts from her X account this week after a string of reports spotlighted old social media remarks in which she mocked Michigan, fantasized about the coasts splitting from "Middle America," and expressed regret about leaving California. The mass deletion, which erased every post on her account from before 2020, came as McMorrow tries to win over the very voters she once appeared to dismiss.
CNN reporter Andrew Kaczynski flagged the disappearance of the posts, noting that 6,000 entries had vanished from McMorrow's feed. The purge followed earlier reporting by the New York Post in April 2025 that first drew attention to the candidate's social media history.
McMorrow has not publicly explained why the posts were deleted.
What the deleted posts said
The most widely cited post dates to December 2016, shortly after Donald Trump won his first presidential term. In it, McMorrow described a fantasy in which the United States broke apart along cultural lines. As Fox News reported:
"I had a dream that the U.S. amicably broke off into The Ring (coasts + Can + Mex + parts Mich/Tex) and Middle America."
That was not the only post that cut against the image of a proud Michigander running for statewide office. Another now-deleted tweet, from April 2014, read: "Aaaand it's snowing. Screw you, Michigan. #NYCtoLA." Still another simply declared: "I wish I never left California." Both posts were among those highlighted in the New York Post's reporting on McMorrow's social media trail.
Additional deleted remarks included comments agreeing with arguments that rural Americans needed to "see more of America" and posts in which McMorrow rooted for Notre Dame over the University of Michigan, a small detail, but one that reinforces the pattern of a candidate who seemed more comfortable anywhere but the state she now wants to represent.
The residency question
Beyond the tone of her old posts, the deletion spree has sharpened questions about McMorrow's own biography. In her 2025 autobiography, McMorrow wrote that she permanently relocated to Michigan in 2014. But CNN found archived tweets in which she described herself as a California resident and voter as late as July 2016.
Public records show McMorrow did not register to vote in Michigan until August 2016. Archived posts also referenced her voting in California's 2016 Democratic primary and voting in the Los Angeles area in November 2014, all well after the date she claims to have made Michigan her permanent home.
The gap between her published account and the social media record is not a matter of vague recollection. It involves specific elections, specific locations, and specific dates. Voters in a Senate race are entitled to know whether a candidate's autobiography lines up with the public record, and McMorrow is already facing separate scrutiny over an FEC complaint alleging undisclosed campaign spending.
From viral speech to Senate bid
McMorrow vaulted to national prominence in 2022 with a speech on the floor of the Michigan Senate that went viral. In it, she cast herself as a defender of marginalized children against what she called a "hollow, hateful scheme" by a Republican colleague who had sent a fundraising email opposing child sex changes and the use of critical race theory in school curricula.
McMorrow declared in the speech:
"I am a straight, white, Christian, married suburban mom... I am the biggest threat to your hollow, hateful scheme. Because you can't claim that you are targeting marginalized kids in the name of 'parental rights' if another parent is standing up to say no."
Longtime Democratic strategist James Carville praised the address, and the clip helped McMorrow build a national fundraising profile. That profile now underpins her bid for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by retiring Democratic Sen. Gary Peters.
The race is competitive. An Emerson College poll taken in early April showed McMorrow and former Wayne County health director Abdul El-Sayed virtually tied in the Democratic primary. Former Republican Michigan Rep. Mike Rogers is the likely GOP nominee for the general election.
A pattern of scrubbing the record
The instinct to quietly erase inconvenient posts before a big election is not unique to McMorrow. Politicians on both sides of the aisle have been caught sanitizing their social media when old statements clash with current positioning. But the scale here, 6,000 posts, every entry before 2020, suggests something more than routine housekeeping. It suggests a candidate who knew the record was a liability and chose deletion over explanation.
That choice may satisfy a communications consultant. It will not satisfy Michigan voters who watched McMorrow build a brand on moral clarity and "standing up" only to discover she spent years on social media looking down on the state she now asks to send her to Washington.
Democrats have faced a string of uncomfortable revelations about their candidates in recent cycles. From misconduct allegations against a Utah congressional candidate to questions about financial transparency, the party's vetting process keeps producing surprises that land after the primary field has narrowed.
McMorrow's campaign has offered no public statement addressing the deletions or the residency discrepancy. Her X account now starts cleanly at 2020, a digital fresh start that erases the very years most relevant to the questions voters are asking.
What voters still don't know
Several questions remain unanswered. Did McMorrow vote in California elections after she says she moved to Michigan permanently? What other posts were among the 6,000 deleted? And why did she wait until the scrutiny became national to act, rather than addressing the posts directly when the New York Post first reported on them more than a year ago?
None of these questions require speculation. They require answers, the kind a candidate for the United States Senate owes the public. Voters are already skeptical of politicians who preach transparency while practicing the opposite, and McMorrow's mass deletion fits that mold precisely.
Michigan deserves a senator who actually wants to live there, not one who has to delete the evidence that she didn't.






