Next Michigan governor needs ‘laser focus’ on prosperity, biz group says

  • Michigan’s prosperity metrics continue to lag the nation’s
  • A new report offers a roadmap to the next governor, offering strategies that could markedly improve the state
  • Business Leaders for Michigan, which authored the report, urges focus on education, the workforce and business fundamentals

Michigan’s next governor will need to turn around the state with unifying and decisive leadership on education, talent and competitiveness, a leading business group says.

Business Leaders for Michigan on Monday is releasing a plan for how the winner of the 2026 gubernatorial election can boost the state’s economic performance and increase prosperity.

“What a governor focuses on, especially at the beginning of their tenure, can really define the next four to eight years of activity,” said Jeff Donofrio, president and CEO of the group.

The governor, the report notes, “is the only leader positioned to reverse our slide and overcome fractured governance, competing priorities and diffuse accountability.”

Donofrio said the 40-page “Michigan in a New Era” is a roadmap for state success when voters choose its next leader. So far, the race is crowded with many candidates seeking the job.

“‘Michigan in a New Era’ is not an assessment of what any one administration did or did not do over the last 30 years,” Donofrio told Bridge Michigan. “It is a forward-looking plan focused on where Michigan stands today and what we must do to compete and succeed in the future.

“The trends highlighted in the plan have developed over decades, across multiple administrations and economic cycles.”

He said the focus of the report “isn’t on assigning credit or blame. It’s on establishing a consistent, nonpartisan direction for the decade ahead so Michigan can win in a rapidly changing world.”

Accelerating growth

The report hones in on Michigan’s potential to overcome what Donofrio called “decades of slow growth, industrial disruption, talent outmigration and inconsistent policies” that have left the state playing catch-up as other states increase prosperity.

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