In a Michigan township earlier this year, voters handed a data-center developer something rare: a loss at the ballot box. The project had cleared the local planning commission.
That pattern is what makes the August 2026 Democratic primary in Michigan's 7th Congressional District worth watching. It will test whether the ballot box can stop a data-center project that the planning commission has already approved.
Will Lawrence, who co-founded the Sunrise Movement, the national climate-activist group that emerged from the 2018 push for a Green New Deal, is running for the seat on a platform calling for a moratorium on new data-center development. Senator Bernie Sanders endorsed him in May, citing a demand for "real accountability for big tech and AI companies" (The Guardian, 2026-05-21). The endorsement signals that a national progressive infrastructure now treats anti-data-center politics as a vehicle for the larger argument about who controls AI infrastructure.
Polling shared with WIRED by the Lawrence campaign, conducted by the progressive research firm Data for Progress, found that more than 40 percent of likely MI-7 Democratic primary voters said they would be "much more likely" to back a candidate calling for a data-center moratorium. Among voters under 45, roughly 80 percent said they would be "much more likely" or "more likely" to do so (WIRED, 2026). The numbers are campaign-shared rather than independently published, and the steep age skew is the more durable finding. That gap suggests the issue is generational, not just geographic.
Lawrence frames the moratorium as continuous with rural resistance to utility-scale renewable energy siting in Michigan, the same land-use fight that has roiled township boards from Saline to the state's western counties. Reporting from Fortune documented the Saline-area farmland siting fight in May 2026 as a preview of the politics to come (Fortune, 2026-05-06). Cleanview, a clean-energy project tracker, lists more than 11 planned data-center projects across the state, which is the denominator Lawrence is campaigning against.
The MI-7 race is also where the developer-workaround pattern has become visible. WIRED reports that two data-center projects inside the district have already been stalled by organized local opposition, even though both had cleared the relevant planning reviews. In the 6th district, a township vote earlier this year defeated a data-center project that had been tied to Oracle-area siting plans, an electoral outcome that had previously been rare in data-center siting fights.
The Stargate Project, the OpenAI-led AI infrastructure buildout driving much of the new siting, has its own Michigan live updates page, an indicator that the state is one of the named hubs in the rollout (CNBC, 2026-06-01). When Governor Whitmer posed alongside the OpenAI CEO at a Michigan data-center groundbreaking earlier this month, the photo drew immediate criticism from local and progressive media (MLive, 2026-06; Planet Detroit, 2026-06). The reaction matters less for what it says about Whitmer's full data-center record than for what it says about the political risk of standing next to one.
The most useful counter to the "this is just a progressive movement" framing is the bipartisan rally the Detroit News reported on June 23, 2026, where Democrats, Republicans, and local officials jointly called for a moratorium on new data-center development (Detroit News, 2026-06-23). Rural landowners, township officials, climate organizers, and a national progressive infrastructure in the same room changes what the movement is. Lawrence's own line is that data-center opposition is the through-line connecting rural siting fights to a new phase of AI politics.
The August 2026 primary will be a real-time read on whether the ballot-box strategy scales. Lawrence leads the internal polling but is a distant third in fundraising, the David-versus-money frame the campaign is leaning into. If a moratorium candidate wins a competitive Democratic primary in a swing district on a message that explicitly named data centers, every Democratic incumbent in a similar district gets a new piece of homework. If the candidate loses, the question shifts to whether the bipartisan rally coalition has anywhere else to go.