2026年53日,美国东部时间12:23 / 美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)
作者:艾莉森·梅因
密歇根州民主党联邦参议员候选人马里·麦克马罗为被删除的推文作出解释,此前CNN曾就此发布报道
9:55 • 消息来源:CNN
密歇根州民主党州参议员马里·麦克马罗是该州竞争激烈的民主党联邦参议院初选中的候选人,她为自己的“真实性”进行了辩护,此前CNN的KFile栏目调查发现她删除了过往批评美国中西部农村地区、赞扬加利福尼亚州的社交媒体帖文,引发了批评。
麦克马罗在“周日内幕政治”节目中接受CNN记者马努·拉朱采访时表示,“我可不是那种在襁褓里就想当官、想进入国会的人。”
“我最初的职业是汽车设计师,后来从事了一份完全不同的工作,当时根本没想着从政,”她说,“我和普通人一样发过一些日常推文,而民众现在渴望真实,这就是我们在11月大选中需要展现的东西。”
这位密歇根州民主党人此前曾表示,她不会支持参议院少数党领袖查克·舒默继续担任党团领袖,她称选民在竞选活动中对她的呼吁做出了“回应”,她呼吁“民主党领导层更新换代,要明白——我不是终身政客,而是作为一名美国人和密歇根州居民——我们真正面临的风险是什么。”
麦克马罗以缅因州为例,该州民主党领导人钦点的候选人、州长珍妮特·米尔斯上周退出了参议院竞选,原因是她未能在民主党初选中获得足够势头以筹集资金,对手是进步派候选人格雷厄姆·普拉特纳,后者也因过往网络帖文受到抨击。
“我们刚刚在缅因州看到了这样的结果。我认为更大的隐患是那些唯恐哪天要参选公职,因而把自己包装得完美无缺的人,如果你想要的就是这种候选人,本次初选另有两位对手符合这一标准,”麦克马罗说道。
CNN调查曝光的约6000条被删除帖文,反映了麦克马罗的一系列观点,从对“黑人的命也是命”运动的支持,到将唐纳德·特朗普总统及其支持者比作纳粹分子。
2017年1月,X平台上有用户写道:“加州应该拥有自己的外交官,这样我们就不会因为来自国家另一端的蠢货而遭到核打击”,麦克马罗回复称:“像这样的日子让我更加想念加州。”
此后,麦克马罗将自己定位为这场拥挤的密歇根州参议员竞选中的务实派。
周日,她为自己过往暗示美国农村民众应向沿海精英学习的帖文辩护,称:“特朗普成功地将我们彼此对立,让我们相信彼此是敌人。我在美国各地生活过,结识过许多不同的人,我坚持这一观点。”
“那条推文是我发过的最措辞欠佳的推文吗?没错,我发过数千条推文,”她继续说道,“这体现了一定的真实性,也是2016年大选后我们需要直面的问题:像唐纳德·特朗普这样的人怎么可能当选。”
另一位密歇根州联邦参议员竞选候选人、哈莉·史蒂文斯议员得到了一些民主党建制派人士的支持,她周四告诉拉朱,她认为麦克马罗的帖文“有点俗气”,“与我们州的价值观非常脱节”。她警告称,这些帖文可能会在大选中成为隐患,对手将是前共和党众议员迈克·罗杰斯——罗杰斯在2024年以微弱劣势输给了参议员埃利萨·斯洛特金。
“在摇摆州,我们为何要在大选期间翻旧账?”史蒂文斯说道,随后补充称,麦克马罗过往言论可能带来的风险“非常令人担忧”。
麦克马罗周日告诉拉朱,她删除数百条过往推文并非担心其成为政治隐患,而是因为“决定删除2021年之前的所有帖文”。
麦克马罗的另一位初选对手阿卜杜勒·埃尔赛义德也在大规模清理帖文的过程中删除了几条过往有争议的社交媒体内容,其中包括一些与“ defund the police(解散警局)”运动相关的帖文。此后他澄清了自己的立场,上个月在密歇根州接受拉朱采访时,他表示支持“投资那些能保障我们安全的领域”。
麦克马罗称有关汽车的帖文是在预示“黑暗未来”
麦克马罗此前曾在汽车行业担任设计师和撰稿人,她向拉朱解释称,自己发布“汽车已死”的帖文,是当时与多位汽车记者展开的更广泛对话的一部分,当时大家都在抱怨科技巨头CEO们谈论要用自动驾驶汽车和拼车项目淘汰传统汽车。
“那是我在畅想一个没有汽车的黑暗未来,当时正值科技巨头掌控一切的时刻,”她说。
这位密歇根州民主党人也没有为自己过往将特朗普政府比作纳粹德国的言论道歉,她告诉拉朱:“我们看到威权主义抬头,这令人深感担忧。”她补充道,“将民众彼此对立,让人们相信如果你的经济状况不佳,那是其他人的错,这会将我们置于极其危险的境地。”
拉朱还就麦克马罗在近期出版的一本书中声称自己2014年从加州“永久搬迁”至密歇根州,与她被删除的帖文显示其迟至2016年6月仍在加州生活并投票的说法之间的矛盾进行了追问。
麦克马罗表示,她和丈夫2014年就决定搬到密歇根州,但“和许多千禧一代一样,搬家需要时间”,她当时并未完全在密歇根定居,直到2016年晚些时候才更改了选民登记信息。
Michigan Senate candidate defends her deleted posts after CNN report: ‘People are desperate for authenticity’
May 3, 2026, 12:23 PM ET / CNN
By Alison Main
Democratic Michigan Senate candidate Mallory McMorrow explains deleted tweets following CNN report
9:55 • Source: CNN
Democratic Michigan Senate candidate Mallory McMorrow explains deleted tweets following CNN report
9:55
Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, a candidate in the state’s competitive Democratic US Senate primary, made the case for her “authenticity” while responding to criticism she’s facing after an investigation by CNN’s KFile revealed she deleted old social media posts criticizing the rural Midwest and praising California.
McMorrow told CNN’s Manu Raju on “Inside Politics Sunday” that she is “not somebody who wanted to be in office or wanted to be in Congress when I was in diapers.”
“I started my career as a car designer, and then I worked in a very different career and wasn’t thinking about it,” she said. “I tweeted normal things like a normal person, and people are desperate for authenticity, so that is what we need in November.”
The Michigan Democrat, who has said she would not back Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to lead the caucus, said voters are “responding” to her call on the campaign trail for “new leadership in the Democratic Party that recognizes — not as a lifelong politician, but as an American and as Michiganders here — what’s actually at stake here.”
McMorrow pointed to Maine, where Democratic leaders’ handpicked candidate, Gov. Janet Mills, dropped out of the Senate race last week after failing to garner the momentum needed to raise money in the Democratic primary against Graham Platner, a progressive who has also come under fire for his old online posts.
“We just saw what happened in Maine. I think the bigger liability is somebody who’s been so concerned that one day they might run for office that everything about them is manufactured, and if that is what you’re looking for, there are two other opponents in this race who fit that bill,” McMorrow said.
The roughly 6,000 deleted posts resurfaced by CNN’s investigation reflect a range of McMorrow’s views, from support of the Black Lives Matter movement to comparing President Donald Trump and his supporters to Nazis.
In January 2017, when a user on X wrote, “California should have its own diplomats” to “make sure we don’t get nuked because of morons from the other side of the country,” Morrow responded, “There are days like these that make me miss California even more.”
McMorrow has since branded herself as the pragmatist in the crowded Michigan race.
On Sunday, she stood by past posts in which she implied rural Americans should learn from coastal elites, saying, “Trump has succeeded in weaponizing us against each other, convincing us that we are each other’s enemies. I’ve lived all over the country. I’ve met a lot of different people, and I stand by that.”
“Was it the most eloquent tweet I’ve ever tweeted? No, I’ve tweeted thousands of times,” she continued. “There is a level of authenticity and just grappling in the wake of the 2016 election, of how somebody like Donald Trump could have been elected.”
Rep. Haley Stevens, another candidate in the Michigan Senate race favored by some establishment Democrats, told Raju on Thursday she thinks McMorrow’s posts were “a little tacky” and “very out of touch with what our state is all about.” She warned they could be a liability in the general election against former Republican Rep. Mike Rogers, who narrowly lost to Sen. Elissa Slotkin in 2024.
“Why litigate that in a general election when we know we’re in a swing state?” Stevens said, later adding that the potential risk McMorrow’s past statements posed was “very concerning.”
McMorrow told Raju on Sunday she did not delete hundreds of her past tweets because she was concerned that they would become a political liability, but rather because of “a decision to delete everything to 2021.”
Abdul El-Sayed, another of McMorrow’s primary opponents, also removed several old controversial social media posts as part of a larger purge, including some aligned with the “defund the police” movement. He has since clarified his position, telling Raju in Michigan last month he supports “investing in the things that are going to keep us safe.”
McMorrow says car post was foreshadowing ‘a dark future’
McMorrow, who previously worked in the auto industry as a designer and writer, explained to Raju that a post of hers declaring “cars are dead” was part of a broader “conversation with a number of automotive journalists bemoaning the way that tech CEOs were talking about eliminating cars with autonomous vehicles and ride-share programs.”
“That was me thinking about a dark future where there are no cars and at a moment where Big Tech is taking over everything,” she said.
The Michigan Democrat also did not back down from past comparisons of the Trump administration to Nazi Germany, telling Raju, “it is deeply concerning that we see an authoritarian slide.” She added that “dividing people against each other to convince people that if you’re not doing well economically, it’s somebody else’s fault, is an incredibly dangerous place for us to be in.”
Raju also pressed McMorrow on the discrepancy between her claim in a recent book that she “permanently relocated” to Michigan from California in 2014 and her own deleted posts suggesting she still lived and voted in California as late as June 2016.
McMorrow said she and her husband decided to move to Michigan in 2014, though “like a lot of millennials, moving takes time” and she was not fully settled in Michigan and did not change her voter registration until later in 2016.
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