Michigan
M’m! M’m! Bad! Campbell’s Soup sues Michigan congressional hopeful for false endorsement
A little-known candidate for Michigan’s 13th Congressional District is being sued over her use of a design similar to the Campbell’s Soup logo in campaign materials.
The Camden, N.J.-based Campbell’s Co. and the Campbell’s Soup Co. Brands LP filed the complaint Friday in Michigan’s Eastern District against Democratic congressional candidate Shelby Campbell of Detroit. In the filing, the corporation claims Campbell’s unauthorized use of its logo and refusal to stop was trademark infringement, false designation of origin and false endorsement.
Campbell, 31, told The Detroit News Sunday she has always felt a connection to the soup brand and thought her use of the logo for a single batch of stickers was harmless.
“Growing up, we had the whole house decorated with Campbell’s Soup logos,” said Campbell, a third-generation automotive worker. “I’ve used ‘soup’ in my email and social media since I was 18.”
The attorney for Campbell’s Soup Co., Leah Imbrogno with Detroit-based Foley & Lardner LLP, could not be immediately reached Sunday for comment.
Campbell’s Soup Co. said Shelby Campbell’s intentional use of the logo was not approved and has led to confusion with customers who’ve reached out to ask if the company had endorsed her. It was clear, the lawsuit said, that her use of the logo was a way to use the Campbell brand to boost her candidacy.
As of Friday, when the complaint was filed, her campaign’s X account was “soup4change” and used the logo as a header, her campaign’s website address was www.soup4change.com, her TikTok account was “@atasteofsoup” and her Instagram account was “@atasteofthesoup.” The campaign used hashtags such as “vote4soup” or “soup4change.”
Shelby Campbell did clearly mark her TikTok and Instagram profiles that used “soup” in the name as personal profiles, and her biography pointed people to follow her professional profile “@shelby4congress,” according to a Detroit News review.
Campbell Soup Co. said in the lawsuit it was committed to protecting its brand from those who would “infringe or dilute” the trademark. The company pointed to similar lawsuits filed, including one against Jane Foodie LLC for selling packaged soups in cans with a design that mimicked Campbell’s Soup cans and various political candidates across the country with the last name of Campbell who used the logo in their campaign materials.
Campbell admitted to using stickers with a similar design to the company’s logo, but claimed she only made one batch of them and was not making a profit off of them.
In the lawsuit, the company asked Shelby Campbell to stop using the design over a month before filing the complaint. She refused to and said she understood her use was not breaking the law. She posted her response to the company on her private social media page, writing “Lmfao yall gonna make me blow up and really win congress easily I ain’t scared byeeee,” a screenshot included in the complaint shows.
It’s not clear where Campbell’s Soup Co. got screenshots of Campbell’s social media pages. But Shelby Campbell said that after the comments she made about conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s death, she knew “MAGAs” — people backing the Make America Great Again movement — were watching her feeds and assumed they sent the posts to the company.
Campbell said she wasn’t sure if she’d continue using a similar logo but said she might just “change it to blue.”
Shelby Campbell is not a well-known name in the 2026 Democratic primary for Michigan’s 13th Congressional District, where state Rep. Donovan McKinney of Detroit is challenging incumbent U.S. Rep. Shri Thanedar of Detroit. The field of well-known Democrats narrowed when former state Sen. Adam Hollier decided to bow out of the primary and run instead for Secretary of State. Nazmul Hassan is also running in the Democratic primary, while Republican Andrew Lorenz and Green Party candidate D. Etta Wilcoxon have filed paperwork to run.
“I’m really excited for the campaign otherwise,” Campbell said. “I want girls to know that just because they may have made bad decisions in the past they can have a great future.”
satwood@detroitnews.com
Michigan
Michigan football signs former No. 1-ranked running back
Michigan football moved quickly to help fill its running back room on Thursday, adding the No. 1-ranked rusher in the 2024 recruiting class to the roster.
Taylor Tatum, who spent the last two seasons at Oklahoma, signed with the Wolverines for the 2026 season, The Ann Arbor News/MLive confirmed.
Tatum, listed at 5-foot-10 and 212 pounds, has three seasons of college eligibility remaining.
He appeared in 12 games for the Sooners, most of it during his true-freshman season in 2024. That first season, Tatum rushed for 278 yards and three touchdowns, highlighted by a five-carry, 69-yard game in Oklahoma’s season opener against Temple.
Tatum was hampered by injuries in 2025, appearing in just one game against South Carolina, where he rushed once for negative-1 yard.
A former four-star recruit, Tatum was considered the nation’s No. 1 running back in 2024 out of Longview High School in Texas, where he set the school record for career rushing touchdowns (53). He picked Oklahoma over Ohio State, Alabama, Oregon, USC, among others.
Tatum was also a member of the Oklahoma baseball team, though he didn’t appear in a game in 2025.
The signing comes just a day after Michigan’s leading rusher in 2025, Jordan Marshall, announced his return to the Wolverines. Since the transfer portal opened last Friday, reserve running backs Bryson Kuzdzal and Jasper Parker have entered. Parker has since signed to play at Arkansas next season.
Meanwhile, Michigan awaits a decision from its other star back, Justice Haynes, who’s left the door open to a return to college. A pair of freshmen backs, Savion Hiter and Jonathan Brown, also joined the team this week.
Tony Alford, Michigan’s running backs coach, was one of three assistants retained by new head coach Kyle Whittingham.
Michigan
Kyle Whittingham knows what Michigan football needs
Kyle Whittingham says appeal of Michigan football job was obvious
New Michigan football coach Kyle Whittingham said the appeal of the job was obvious on Sunday, Dec. 28, in Orlando.
Michigan football is primed to win now, new coach Kyle Whittingham said this week on “The Dan Patrick Show.”
The Wolverines have made far too many headlines off the field, which is why Whittingham told Patrick the organization needs to simply get back to focusing on the reason they’re all together as a team − football.
“The place doesn’t need a rebuild, it needs a reboot of trust and getting rid of the drama and just get back to playing Michigan football without all the distractions,” Whittingham said. “It didn’t come from the players. The players were not involved. It was not some player issue – it was just the peripheral.
“Guys here have a great attitude, I met with everyone of them last week at the bowl site. Quality young men, care about academics, excited to be at Michigan, but they’ve dealt with a lot over the last few years.”
Whittingham, 66, takes over as the 22nd head coach in program history after a pair of scandals rocked the previous two men who held his job.
Jim Harbaugh led the Wolverines from 2015-23 − and left on top by winning a national championship − but also was found to have a lack of institutional control in his program by NCAA investigators after two separate NCAA violations occurred under his watch: impermissible recruiting and illegal sign-stealing.
More recently, Sherrone Moore was fired in scandal after he was found to have had a relationship with a subordinate and was subsequently arrested after he allegedly went to her house and threatened his own life − he was jailed for two nights and charged with felony home invasion, misdemeanor stalking and misdemeanor breaking and entering.
Patrick asked if there was any selling point Whittingham needed to hear specifically from Michigan. Whittingham said when he stepped away from Utah in mid-December there were only a handful of program’s he would have even entertained. He called Michigan “a special place.”
“Needed to hear that Michigan was what I thought it was,” he said. “Hey’re committed to winning here, we do have some challenges with entrance requirements, there is a little bit of a hurdle there, but talk about athletes, resources, tradition − it’s all here at Michigan.”
Whittingham also quipped about the irony of previously being a team that wore red (Utah) whose primary rival wore blue (BYU) to flipping that. It’s also not lost on him that his mentor, Urban Meyer, went 7-0 against Michigan in his tenure in Columbus − Whittingham joked at his opening press conference that Meyer’s name alone might be considered a “four-letter word” in Ann Arbor.
“Blue was our rival at Utah for years,” he said. “Now I’ve got to get used to saying, ‘Go Blue.’”
Whittingham is in the throes of one of the busiest times on the college football calendar. The transfer portal opened for a 15-day window Jan. 2-16, setting off a scramble to both retain players, scout the database and find appropriate fits for the team.
Whittingham has only known his roster and coaches for approximately 10 days – he said while down in Florida he was going to “lock himself” in a room at Schembechler Hall in Ann Arbor to watch film on the players on his roster. He has been able to keep Bryce Underwood, Andrew Marsh, Andrew Babalola, Blake Frazier, Evan Link, Jake Guarnera and Zeke Berry − the last two of whom had put their names in the transfer portal before indicating their return to U-M for 2026.
With money flowing, back-channeling frequent and poaching at an all-time high, Whittingham doesn’t see college football’s current model as something that will last as currently constructed for more than a handful of years.
“It is not sustainable, there’s no question about that,” Whittingham said. “Something’s gotta give. Within a 2- to 4-, 5-year window, you’re going to see a major overhaul of Division I football. I think it’s going to become more of a minor league NFL model. I think you’re gonna see a salary cap, collective bargaining, players as employees.
“I think all that’s coming because we cannot maintain this pace.”
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
Michigan Lottery contributions over $1B to K-12 schools for 7th year in a row, state says
LANSING, MI – The Michigan Lottery’s annual contribution to K-12 education reached more than $1 billion for the seventh time in a row in 2025, according to the state.
The amount at $1.16 billion makes up roughly 5-6% of the state’s School Aid Fund, which has exceeded $20 billion in recent years.
It peaked in 2021 at $1.4 billion, according to the state budget office, marking a 78.4% increase in six years at the time. The reported portion for 2025 marks a slight decrease when compared to the previous five years.
In a release on Wednesday, Jan. 7, the state reported the total Lottery contribution had reached more than $30 billion since it began in 1972 and $8.7 billion within a seven-year span.
“In (2025), Lottery retailers earned more than $300 million in commissions for the sixth straight year,” Acting Lottery Commissioner Joe Froehlich said in a statement. “The support the Lottery provides to public education and to businesses throughout the state is critical and far-reaching.”
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s office utilized Wednesday’s announcement to recap the current state investment in K-12 schools based on the budget deal lawmakers green-lit in October three months after the current fiscal year was already underway.
That includes a 4.6% hike to $10,050 per student, $201.6 million to maintain a free universal meals program that Whitmer said saves “parents almost $1,000 a year per kid,” and a series of investments geared toward boosting literacy skills.
“This year’s lottery contributions will help build on that progress and make a difference for students, educators and schools across Michigan,” the governor said in a statement.
Other budget highlights included hundreds of millions in grants to reduce class sizes and school infrastructure, as well as for career-technical education and English-language learners.
Additionally, there was another $258.7 million boost to $1.3 billion for at-risk student supports and $321 million to support mental health and school safety initiatives ― the latter including a waiver requirement that spurred litigation from schools against the state in late 2025.
According to the Michigan Lottery, participating retailers earned more than $330 million in commissions for the 2025 fiscal year. Since 2019, when the Lottery’s streak of billion-dollar contributions to the School Aid Fund began, the state reported more than $2.3 billion in commissions.
Lottery products are sold at more than 10,000 locations across the state, and over 700 retailers sold $1 million or more last year in Lottery games.
Michigan residents took home more than $2.8 billion in prizes in 2025 and over $58 billion since the Lottery began.
According to the state, roughly 25 cents went to the School Aid Fund from every dollar spent on a Michigan Lottery Ticket, while 63 cents went to players as prizes, 9 cents to vendor commissions and 3 cents to the Lottery’s operations.
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