Michigan
Michigan Republicans have a money problem
With less than a 100 days to go before the presidential election, the Michigan GOP is entangled in financial turmoil, despite recent attempts to stabilize the state party’s shaky finances.
After a troublesome year under the helm of former Michigan GOP Chair Kristina Karamo, who clashed with some long-term, big-name donors to the party during her leadership, new chair Pete Hoekstra vowed to put the party back on the right track. Recent financial statements prove that, in the time between Karamo’s ouster in January and now, Hoekstra hasn’t yet achieved that goal financially.
The latest financial report from the Michigan GOP, released on July 25, shows that the party has only $384,000 on hand in its federal campaign account, while owing $184,000 in its state account.
Bill Pugliano/Getty Images
Those are dire numbers for the party, especially when compared to the funds available to the Michigan Democratic Party, which recently reported having over six times the amount of money in their federal campaign account than the Michigan GOP. As of June 30, the Michigan Democratic Party reported having $2,273,068.51 cash on hand.
“The Michigan GOP Chair Pete Hoekstra vowed to get the party’s financial state in order when he took over for disgraced chair Kristina Karamo—clearly this hasn’t happened,” Andrew Feldman, founder and principal of the progressive strategic communications firm Feldman Strategies, told Newsweek.
“Regardless of what Donald Trump says about his support in Michigan, this financial picture plus new polls showing the race is tied are bad news for him, and puts the MAGA GOP in a tough place with just over three months until Election Day,” he added.
Michigan is a key swing state having gone for the Democratic nominee for president in seven of the last eight elections, including for Joe Biden in 2020. Trump won the state in 2016, one of the key victories in his ascent to the White House.
Newsweek reached out to the Michigan GOP for comment by email on Wednesday but has not received a response.
Political consultant and former Michigan GOP Executive Director Jeff Timmer, who describes himself as an “erstwhile” Republican, told Newsweek that looking at the current Michigan GOP’s campaign account, the party’s “really missing two entire zeros after that $300,000. They should have $30 million in their account. They don’t even have $3 million. They have one tenth of that.”
While saying that Karamo was “a quantum level bad fundraiser”, Timmer believes Hoekstra is “just an atomic level bad fundraiser.” Investors just aren’t willing to put money behind Trump in the battleground state, Timmer said.
“The historic donors to the party have said, this is not my circus, they’re not my monkeys. There have been reports that the DeVos family has resumed donations to the Michigan GOP, but they have committed like $10,000 each. That’s a fraction of what they were doing 25 years ago. They haven’t really invested; they’ve just written token checks.”
According to recent Federal Election Commission filings by the Michigan Republican Party, seven members of the DeVos family—Betsy, Dick, Cheri, Dan, Pamella, Doug and Maria—donated $10,000 each to the party in June, as reported by MLive.
Donations were resumed after a yearlong freeze while Karamo was at the helm of the party.
For Timmer, the Michigan GOP just doesn’t have enough money in their account to compete in one competitive legislative race, “let alone fight to regain control of the legislature in Lansing,” he told Newsweek. “They’re functionally bankrupt with $300,000—might as well be zero dollars. They matter the same in these next hundred days.”
Timmer expects the financial troubles of the Michigan GOP to cost Trump the state in November. “I fully expect that at the end of the day, Trump will lose Michigan and the Republicans will lose the Congressional and Senate races here,” he said.
Michigan
Ndi Etta, younger brother of current DL, picks Michigan football
Breaking down Michigan basketball’s season-defining win vs MSU
‘Hail Yes’ podcast hosts Andrew Birkle and Tony Garcia break down Michigan basketball’s season-defining rivalry win over Michigan State at Breslin Center in East Lansing on Friday, Jan. 30.
The Michigan football family continues to grow, literally.
Sunday, Feb. 1, brought the Wolverines a commitment from linebacker Ndi Etta, who is the younger brother of U-M defensive tackle Enow Etta
The elder Etta briefly entered the transfer portal earlier this offseason, but ultimately stayed in the fold.
A 6-foot-1, 215-pound linebacker in the class of 2026 from Liberty Christian High School in Argyle, Texas – just outside of Fort Worth – the younger Etta took an official visit to Ann Arbor over this past weekend, then subsequently committed to Michigan ahead of National Signing Day on Wednesday.
Etta does not have a profile or a listing among 247Sports’ composite rankings. He recorded 68 tackles (including 17 for loss), 10½ sacks, four pass breakups, two forced fumbles and more than 20 quarterback pressures as a senior.
Etta is the second class of 2026 commit to pledge to new Michigan coach Kyle Whittingham, joining three-star defensive back Ernest Nunley, appearing to round out the incoming class with 23 prospects. Prior to Etta’s commitment, the class was ranked 12th in the nation, per 247 Sports, and fourth in the Big Ten (behind No. 5 Ohio State, No. 3 Oregon and No. 1 USC).
Michigan has added several players related to current Wolverines this offseason, including Christian Pierce (younger brother of Trey Pierce), Braydon Alford (son of running backs coach Tony Alford) and Max Alford, who is Alford’s nephew.
Tony Garcia is the Wolverines beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at apgarcia@freepress.com and follow him on X at @RealTonyGarcia.
Michigan
In a year, foreign investors bought another 71,000 acres of Michigan agricultural land
An investment fund tied to Japan bought thousands of acres of Michigan forest two years ago, picking up parcels across seven Upper Peninsula counties.
The deal included nearly 42,000 acres in Marquette County, roughly 9,000 acres in Gogebic County and almost 6,000 acres in Ontonagon County, among others.
These tracts joined Michigan’s growing ledger of foreign-owned agricultural land, which includes forest land, cropland and pastures.
In a year, foreign buyers picked up roughly 71,000 acres of Michigan farmland, the latest federal data shows, putting Michigan among the top states for agricultural land owned by overseas investors.
Michigan ranks sixth for the number of acres and third for the percentage of agricultural land held by foreign entities.
The acreage ticked up – going from 8.5% to 8.8% of the state’s agricultural land – despite a growing push from lawmakers to restrict foreign buyers from scooping up land throughout the country.
Even so, this remains a fraction of Michigan’s farming acreage.
“When it comes to foreign ownership, the thing to keep in mind is that we’re talking about a very small share of privately held agricultural land that is owned by foreign entities,” said David Ortega, an economics professor from Michigan State University.
Foreign buyers focus on Michigan forests
Foreign investors – anyone who’s not a citizen, not a legal immigrant or U.S. entities that have a “significant foreign interest” – are required to report their land purchases to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, USDA, every year.
The latest foreign agriculture land report, which provides data through 2024, was released in mid-January.
It shows that foreign investors increased their holdings of property, now owning nearly 46 million acres of farmland throughout the country. This accounts for 3.6% of all agricultural acres and 2% of all land in the United States.
In Michigan, foreign owners now hold 1,893,774 acres, or nearly 3,000 square miles, which is 5% of the entire state and 8.8% of the agricultural land. This is more than double the acreage reported a decade ago.
About 90% of these holdings are forestland. The bulk of it is scattered throughout the Upper Peninsula, with Keweenaw County topping the list at 373,274 forest acres, followed by Gogebic County with 235,556 acres and Ontonagon County with 212,123 acres.
It’s largely foreign timber investment firms who own farmland in Michigan, the data shows, but it can be tricky to trace who, exactly, are the entities behind these acres.
Among the largest foreign land holders are Verdant Timber and Sage Timber, two limited liability companies, LLCs, whose complex ownership structure was traced by Bridge Michigan back to the government of Singapore’s wealth fund.
Because of those holdings, Bridge’s reporting found Singapore now owns roughly 5% of the Upper Peninsula land.
“There’s a lack of transparency in terms of true ownership because some of the companies there might be multiple layers of ownership before you actually get to who really owns this particular parcel of land,” Ortega said. “There might be shell companies and those types of things.”
What countries?
In Michigan, Singapore is the top country, tied to more than 540,000 acres of agricultural land. That’s largely because Verdant Timber and Sage Timber acquired large swaths of forestland in 2022.
Behind that are entities from the Netherlands and Canada, which own 458,480 and 358,488 acres of agricultural land respectively.
Renewable energy has also driven U.S. land acquisitions in recent years, according to research from Cornell University. Most of the land leased by foreign entities is being used for wind and solar projects, while whole ownership is largely focused on timber production.
In Michigan, Apple Blossom Wind LLC, a Canadian company, purchased nearly 10,000 acres of cropland two years ago for a wind power project in Huron County. And wind firms from Italy have also bought land in Gratiot, Shiawassee and St. Clair counties in recent years.
The latest USDA report shows that two LLCs linked to private Japanese entities accounted for the biggest foreign agricultural land purchases in 2024.
The companies, MFCF Siscowet LLC and MFCF TRS LLC, bought 67,000 acres of forest across the Upper Peninsula.
These appear to be tied to Manulife, a timberland investment manager, that operates the Manulife Forest Climate Fund. The fund was launched two years ago with a goal to “promote climate change mitigation” by investing in forestry to limit timber production.
The Manulife Forest Climate Fund announced early last year it acquired property in the Upper Peninsula called Siscowet. The land had been held by the seller for over 100 years, a news release said, primarily used for timber production.
The fund also acquired land called Eagle Cap in southeastern Washington and northern Oregon and timberland throughout Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas.
These acquisitions show that investors view “forests as a top natural climate solution,” said Eric Cooperstrom from Manulife Investment Management, in a January 2025 statement about the fund.
It’s not just foreign buyers who have eyed Upper Peninsula forests, but land sales also raise questions about public access. In 2022, the Nature Conservancy purchased 32,000 acres in the Keweenaw Heartlands from a New York-based investment firm with a goal to protect the land from being parceled up for development.
Ortega says most of the foreign investors are private companies, not governments, that see the value in agricultural real estate. In Michigan, farmland values have jumped by 34% in the past five years going from an average of $5,040 an acre to $6,800.
“It’s got steady returns. It’s less risky than other investments,” he said. “And on our side, a lot of this ownership and investment leads to economic activity, taxes and inflows of resources to the state.”
Growing backlash to foreign farmland ownership
Ortega says most of the farmland is being held by companies from countries that are “friendly” with the United States.
Despite that, foreign ownership of agricultural land has become a political flashpoint.
The USDA said in its report there’s been “considerable interest in Chinese, Iranian, North Korean and Russian investor holdings” of agricultural land even though they account for just a sliver of all holdings throughout the country.
Chinese investors own 1% of the foreign-held U.S. agricultural acres, and there have been no filings from the government of China. Iranian investors reported owning 547 acres, Russian investors reported 11 acres and North Korea reported zero.
In Michigan, there have been no filings associated with China.
There’s been heightened attention on this, according to Ortega, because foreign ownership of agricultural land has been framed as a threat to national and food security. Concerns grew after there were some high-profile acquisitions by Chinese investors near military bases in other states in recent years.
Because of that, there’s been a Republican push in statehouses throughout the country to restrict “foreign adversaries” from purchasing farmland.
More than 20 states have passed bills that put some guardrails on foreign ownership of agricultural land, according to research from Ortega, who also testified before the U.S. Senate, and Lin Lin, a lead author of the study. A federal bill was also introduced last year that also aims to limit foreign buyers of farmland. And the USDA rolled out a “national farm security action plan” last year.
Despite those efforts, the laws have varied in scope.
Oklahoma, for example, banned certain countries from buying farmland, largely over fears about China. But the law reportedly carved out exceptions for Smithfield Foods, a Chinese-owned company, allowing it to keep raising hogs on its farmland.
Meanwhile, Arkansas reportedly ordered Syngenta, a seed and chemical company owned by China, to sell 160 acres of farmland. The company also faced a $280,000 fine for failing to report its foreign ownership.
In Michigan, the state House passed a bill package introduced last year that would block “foreign countries of concern,” like China, Russia, Iran and others, from owning Michigan farmland. It would also require any foreign-owned land to be registered with the state.
State Rep. Gina Johnsen, R-Portland, who introduced one of the bills, said allowing “our enemies to scoop up our farmland” creates national security risks.
“By purchasing Michigan farmland, these bad actors want to steal away our symbol for food security, generations of farming traditions, and American self-reliance. But this isn’t just about property – it’s about power,” she said in a statement last year.
Another bill, HB 4234, would prohibit certain countries from purchasing farmland within 20 miles of a military base.
Both bills passed the state House but have not been taken up by the Senate yet.
But Ortega pushes back on the claim that foreign ownership threatens food production – underscoring the point that it only accounts for a fraction of all agricultural land.
“That just doesn’t really hold up because we produce more than enough food in the U.S. to just feed ourselves, but feed other parts of the world,” he said. “And we’re talking about a very, very small share of agricultural land that’s owned by foreigners that’s actually used for production.”
Michigan
Michigan State defeats Penn State in Beaver Stadium on Charlie Stramel hat trick
Ice Skating at Beaver Stadium, open to the public
Penn State’s Beaver Stadium is transforming its football field into an ice rink for public skating and collegiate hockey games.
Charlie Stramel, have yourself a day.
The senior forward came up with the hat trick for No. 2 Michigan State men’s hockey in its 5-4 overtime win over fifth-ranked Penn State in front of over 60,000 people outdoors at Beaver Stadium on Saturday, Jan. 31, which included the overtime winning goal on a 1-on-1 opportunity against Penn State goaltender Kevin Reidler.
Stamel’s overtime winning goal also completes the weekend and season sweep over the Nittany Lions for the Spartans, who beat Penn State 6-3 on Friday, Jan. 30 inside Pegula Ice Arena in Happy Valley.
“Huge thanks to Penn State for putting this event on. To play in front of that many people, it’s pretty surreal and obviously happy with the win, but unreal environment, and super cool hockey game to be a part of,” Stramel said after the game on the Big Ten Network.
Stramel, who was drafted by the Minnesota Wild in the first round of the 2023 NHL Draft with the 21st overall pick, scored his first goal of the afternoon in the first period when he cleaned up the rebound of Porter Martone shot attempt with a chip hot into the back of the net. His second came with two seconds remaining in the second period when he finished off a pass from Daniel Russell that came from behind the net.
With his hat trick on the afternoon, Stramel now has 23 goals on the season, making him Michigan State’s leader.
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