Michigan Senate Candidate Unveils 'Terms of Engagement' for Data Centers, Demanding Transparency and Accountability.
Abdul El-Sayed, a progressive Democrat running in the 2026 Senate primary, has released what he calls "terms of engagement" aimed at protecting Michigan communities from the negative impacts of large-scale data center projects. At least 15 data center proposals have been submitted across the state in the past year, including a massive 1.4-gigawatt facility tied to Oracle and OpenAI.
El-Sayed's campaign argues that utility companies are pushing for rapid approvals without adequate oversight, while residents face rising energy bills and reliability issues. The former Detroit health director and Wayne County health executive has built his Senate run around challenging corporate power and prioritizing public health, affordability, and environmental protection.
Under El-Sayed's framework, data center projects would be required to meet a series of conditions before receiving approval, including:
* No rate hikes for residential ratepayers
* Community transparency and involvement in approvals
* Energy reliability guarantees to improve grid stability
* Jobs guarantees with penalties for failed promises
* Water protection using closed-loop cooling systems
* Community benefits agreements with tangible benefits
* Bar on clean-energy loopholes
* Enforceability of all commitments
El-Sayed's campaign emphasizes that he has never taken campaign contributions from utility companies that could benefit from rapid data center expansion. His opponents, U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, have supported tax exemptions for data center development without enforceable protections.
The "Our Communities, Our Terms" policy is part of a broader push by El-Sayed to ensure large infrastructure projects deliver measurable benefits to the communities that host them.
Abdul El-Sayed, a progressive Democrat running in the 2026 Senate primary, has released what he calls "terms of engagement" aimed at protecting Michigan communities from the negative impacts of large-scale data center projects. At least 15 data center proposals have been submitted across the state in the past year, including a massive 1.4-gigawatt facility tied to Oracle and OpenAI.
El-Sayed's campaign argues that utility companies are pushing for rapid approvals without adequate oversight, while residents face rising energy bills and reliability issues. The former Detroit health director and Wayne County health executive has built his Senate run around challenging corporate power and prioritizing public health, affordability, and environmental protection.
Under El-Sayed's framework, data center projects would be required to meet a series of conditions before receiving approval, including:
* No rate hikes for residential ratepayers
* Community transparency and involvement in approvals
* Energy reliability guarantees to improve grid stability
* Jobs guarantees with penalties for failed promises
* Water protection using closed-loop cooling systems
* Community benefits agreements with tangible benefits
* Bar on clean-energy loopholes
* Enforceability of all commitments
El-Sayed's campaign emphasizes that he has never taken campaign contributions from utility companies that could benefit from rapid data center expansion. His opponents, U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, have supported tax exemptions for data center development without enforceable protections.
The "Our Communities, Our Terms" policy is part of a broader push by El-Sayed to ensure large infrastructure projects deliver measurable benefits to the communities that host them.