Goblin House
Area: Full Workup (one official, all sections) (eo_full_workup)
Filed: 2026-05-02T00:25:48.880Z
Source: External LLM via /handoff/congress (attempt #71759)
Resolved official: Haley M. Stevens (entity #11073)
Ingest result: 43 facts · 45 sources · 3 silences · 2 contradictions · 9 voting_records · 8 skipped
Single super-prompt covering every per-official research area in one LLM call: donor mapping, silences, contradictions, telling votes, and constituency baseline. The LLM returns ONE JSON object; the ingest pipeline dispatches each section to its typed table independently, so a malformed or no-data section never blocks the rest.
{ "target_official": { "name": "Haley M. Stevens", "bioguide_id": "S001215" }, "donor_mapping": { "facts": [ { "fact_text": "American Israel Public Affairs Cmte is Stevens' top contributor in the 2023-2024 cycle at $47,100 ($37,100 individuals, $10,000 PAC). AIPAC's United Democracy Project super PAC spent over $4 million on ads supporting Stevens in the 2022 primary against Andy Levin, and overall pro-Israel groups contributed over $785,000 to her campaign since 2022.", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "fact_text": "Stevens' 2023-2024 campaign top contributors include Huntsman Corp ($15,000), Blackstone Group ($13,700), Ford Motor Co ($12,832), General Motors ($11,440), Comcast Corp ($10,500), National Assn of Realtors ($10,100), and Honeywell International ($10,216).", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "fact_text": "In the 2022 Michigan Democratic primary, AIPAC's United Democracy Project super PAC spent at least $4.2 million supporting Stevens against Rep. Andy Levin — who favored conditioning military aid to Israel — in what became the most expensive House primary in Michigan history.", "date_occurred": "2022-08-02", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/07/29/andy-levin-haley-stevens-aipac-michigan/" }, { "fact_text": "Stevens' 2026 Q1 fundraising: $1.9M disclosed, 91.9% from individual donors, $1.7M spent, $3.4M cash on hand. Quiver Quantitative estimates her net worth at $238.3K (435th highest in Congress) with approximately $55.3K in publicly traded assets.", "date_occurred": "2026-04-17", "confidence": "primary", "source_url": "https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Fundraising+Update:+Representative+Haley+M.+Stevens+just+disclosed+$1.9M+of+new+fundraising" }, { "fact_text": "CODEPINK Detroit organized a protest on November 10, 2025 outside Stevens' Farmington Hills office, stating she has received over $5 million from AIPAC since 2019. Activists demanded she break ties with the Israel lobby and prioritize Michigan constituents.", "date_occurred": "2025-11-10", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://arabamericannews.com/2025/11/14/detroit-constituents-protest-rep-haley-stevens-allegiance-to-aipac/" }, { "fact_text": "Stevens voted for H.R. 8038 (Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 providing $26.38B in aid to Israel). Only 37 House Democrats opposed the bill.", "date_occurred": "2024-04-20", "confidence": "primary", "source_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/8038" }, { "fact_text": "Stevens' campaign received $20,085 from State of Michigan entities and employees, reflecting her deep local ties; $13,036 from Henry Ford Health System; and $12,334 from University of Michigan.", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "fact_text": "Stevens is running for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat in 2026, having raised over $1 million in one period — among the top fundraisers in the country for competitive Senate races. Her opponents include state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and Abdul El-Sayed.", "date_occurred": "2025-07-17", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://michiganchronicle.env-realtimesmedianewsnetwork-rtmwebsites.kinsta.cloud/2025/07/17/michigan-u-s-senate-race-stevens-tops-mcmorrow-el-sayed-in-total-campaign-cash/" } ], "connections": [ { "donor_entity_name": "American Israel Public Affairs Cmte", "relationship_type": "major_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $47,100 ($37,100 individuals, $10,000 PAC) — top contributor. AIPAC's United Democracy Project spent $4M+ on Stevens' behalf in the 2022 primary. Pro-Israel groups contributed $785,000+ since 2022. AIPAC routed independent expenditures through United Democracy Project (-$8,942) in the 2024 cycle.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "Huntsman Corp", "relationship_type": "major_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $15,000 ($5,000 individuals, $10,000 PAC). Second-largest contributor.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "Ford Motor Co", "relationship_type": "major_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $12,832 ($2,832 individuals, $10,000 PAC). Ford is a major employer in Michigan's automotive industry, central to the 11th District economy.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "General Motors", "relationship_type": "major_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $11,440 ($1,440 individuals, $10,000 PAC).", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "Comcast Corp", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $10,500 ($500 individuals, $10,000 PAC).", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "National Assn of Realtors", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $10,100 ($100 individuals, $10,000 PAC).", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "Honeywell International", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $10,216 ($216 individuals, $10,000 PAC).", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "donor_entity_name": "United Auto Workers", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "2023-2024 cycle: $7,536 ($36 individuals, $7,500 PAC). UAW is central to Michigan's manufacturing workforce and has endorsed Stevens.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" } ] }, "silences": [ { "topic": "Stevens signed a 2018 Town Hall pledge promising at least four town halls each year — then held zero in 2024, only telephone town halls, and fell far short of her commitment across multiple years", "expected_position": "After signing a campaign pledge vowing to hold at least four town halls per year and telling constituents on Facebook that accessibility was her 'number one priority,' Stevens would be expected to maintain consistent in-person town halls as promised.", "window_start": "2020-01-01", "window_end": "2026-05-01", "evidence_summary": "Stevens held 12 town halls in her first year (2019), then just 2 in 2020 (pre-COVID), 1 in 2021, and only 8 total in-person town halls between 2022-2025 of which only 4 were in her district. She held zero in-person town halls in 2024 — only a 'tele town hall' on December 16. In 2023 she traveled to Florida for an 'environmental town hall' at the University of Central Florida rather than holding one in her district. Meanwhile, her Senate rivals Mallory McMorrow and Abdul El-Sayed held 9 town halls around the state between October and December 2025 alone. Stevens held a town hall at Oakland University on March 1, 2025 with a panel but constituents who attended expressed frustration that she was 'one person in the body' and wanted her 'more active' and 'outside of the room.' Her Senate rivals even trolled her after she was a no-show at the Michigan Black Summit. Stevens' office has been active on other fronts — issuing press releases on voting rights, introducing the Release Your Taxes Act, and holding telephone town halls — proving she was communicatively active through controlled formats rather than open unfiltered public forums.", "primary_url": "https://www.nrsc.org/press-releases/townhall-while-her-senate-rivals-campaign-statewide-haley-stevens-hides-from-voters-2026-02-10/" }, { "topic": "Stevens refused to meet with Arab American and Muslim constituents demanding a Gaza ceasefire, with one constituent reporting Stevens' office called police on them for threatening to protest outside her Farmington Hills district office", "expected_position": "As the representative of a district that includes significant Arab American and Muslim communities in Oakland County, and facing a primary challenger (Ahmed Ghanim) specifically running on her refusal to support a ceasefire, Stevens would be expected to engage substantively with these constituents rather than having her deputy district director berate and belittle callers.", "window_start": "2023-10-07", "window_end": "2024-09-30", "evidence_summary": "The Detroit Metro Times reported in May 2024 that Amy and Ray Hollifield called Stevens' district office to express frustrations about her pro-Israel stance. Stevens' deputy district director Michael Tash 'berated and belittled' them. After Amy Hollifield hung up, Tash 'called her back on her cell phone yelling and berating her.' Ray Hollifield called back and was told Stevens' office had called the police on him for threatening to protest. Ahmed Ghanim filed as a primary challenger on this issue. Stevens was active on foreign policy during this window: she joined Republicans in voting for $14.3B Israel aid (November 2023), voted for $17.6B standalone Israel aid (February 2024), and appeared on CNN stating 'Why aren't the hostages coming out?' (September 2024). She held a town hall and multiple press events but did not meet substantively with ceasefire advocates.", "primary_url": "https://www.metrotimes.com/detroit/Print?oid=36320506" }, { "topic": "Stevens skipped a vote on deporting undocumented immigrants convicted of DUI (June 2025), avoiding taking a position during her Senate campaign", "expected_position": "As a congresswoman running for Senate statewide in Michigan, Stevens would be expected to cast votes on high-profile immigration enforcement legislation rather than skipping them, especially when her campaign faces scrutiny on immigration positions.", "window_start": "2025-06-26", "window_end": "2025-06-27", "evidence_summary": "The NRSC reported that Stevens skipped voting on legislation to deport illegal aliens convicted of DUI on June 26, 2025. The NRSC framed the absence as 'hiding from position.' Stevens was active on other fronts at the time: she had just voted against H.R. 1 on May 22 and voted for the Protecting America's Workforce Act later that year. The skipped vote created a record gap on immigration enforcement during her Senate race.", "primary_url": "https://www.nrsc.org/press-releases/haley-stevens-hides-from-position-on-deporting-illegal-aliens-convicted-of-dui-2025-06-27/" } ], "contradictions": { "claims": [ { "claim_text": "Stevens stated in 2018 on Facebook that accessibility to constituents was her 'number one priority' and signed a Town Hall pledge promising to hold at least four town halls each year: 'I'm here to learn, listen, and lead — in that order!'", "claim_date": "2018-01-03", "claim_type": "platform", "source_url": "https://www.nrsc.org/press-releases/townhall-while-her-senate-rivals-campaign-statewide-haley-stevens-hides-from-voters-2026-02-10/" }, { "claim_text": "Stevens held zero in-person town halls in 2024 and only 8 total from 2022-2025 (just 4 in her district). One 2022 town hall was announced but there is 'no official record of it taking place.' In 2023, she traveled to Florida for an 'environmental town hall' outside her district.", "claim_date": "2025-12-31", "claim_type": "disclosure", "source_url": "https://townhall.com/tipsheet/amycurtis/2026/02/10/while-her-senate-rivals-campaign-statewide-haley-stevens-hides-from-voters-n2652025" }, { "claim_text": "Stevens said on CNN in September 2024: 'Those trucks are going in. Why aren't the hostages coming out?' — framing the Gaza humanitarian situation exclusively through the lens of hostage release while not addressing Palestinian civilian casualties.", "claim_date": "2024-09-04", "claim_type": "statement", "source_url": "https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2024/09/05/dem-rep-stevens-we-gave-aid-to-gaza-why-arent-the-hostages-coming-out/" }, { "claim_text": "Stevens' 2024 primary challenger Ahmed Ghanim ran specifically on her refusal to support a ceasefire. Arab American candidates filed to challenge her. CODEPINK protesters outside her Farmington Hills office said: 'People in this county are hurting! Why are we sending money to Israel?' Protesters held signs reading 'AIPAC bought your congresswoman.'", "claim_date": "2025-11-10", "claim_type": "statement", "source_url": "https://arabamericannews.com/2025/11/14/detroit-constituents-protest-rep-haley-stevens-allegiance-to-aipac/" } ], "contradictions": [ { "claim_a_idx": 0, "claim_b_idx": 1, "type": "platform_vs_vote", "severity": "high", "narrative": "Stevens made accessibility her 'number one priority,' signed a Town Hall pledge promising at least four per year, and held 12 in her first year. She then held zero in-person town halls in 2024 and only a fraction of her commitment in subsequent years, while her Senate rivals held nine town halls in just two months. Her Facebook statement 'I'm here to learn, listen, and lead — in that order!' contrasts with the fact that she held a town hall in Florida rather than her own district and had no verifiable record of events she claimed to have held. The two sources are from different hostnames: NRSC (nrsc.org) and Townhall (townhall.com)." }, { "claim_a_idx": 2, "claim_b_idx": 3, "type": "statement_vs_disclosure", "severity": "medium", "narrative": "Stevens' public framing on CNN focused exclusively on hostage release while not addressing the civilian death toll in Gaza — a framing her constituents and protesters directly challenged. Her office's response to constituents who called to express concerns was to berate and then call police on them, according to the Detroit Metro Times. This disconnect between her media-facing statements and her office's treatment of constituents who disagreed with her on the same issue reflects a same-policy-question tension. The two sources are from different hostnames: Breitbart (breitbart.com) and Arab American News (arabamericannews.com)." } ] }, "telling_votes": [ { "bill_id": "H.R. 1", "title": "One Big Beautiful Bill Act (budget reconciliation — Medicaid/SNAP cuts, tax reform)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-07-03", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/1", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted nay with all 214 Democrats on a bill the AFL-CIO assessed would enact 'devastating cuts to Medicaid, SNAP, and other important social safety programs.' Her district has 5.8% poverty but many working-class auto manufacturing families rely on Medicaid. The AFL-CIO gave Stevens a 92% 2025 score and 99% lifetime. Her vote aligned with constituent interest — protecting the social safety net for working families in Oakland County's manufacturing communities. The NRSC attacked her for the vote, calling her 'obsessed with the radical left agenda.'", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 6126", "title": "Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($14.3B emergency Israel military aid after October 7)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2023-11-02", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/6126", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted yea, joining only 12 Democrats (out of 213) who broke with their party to support the Republican-led Israel aid package. The bill cut $14.3B from the IRS to fund the aid. AIPAC is her #1 donor ($47,100 in 2023-2024, $4M+ super PAC spending in 2022). Stevens' vote was donor_aligned: her top donor's legislative priority overrode the Democratic caucus position and the concerns of her Arab American constituents who would later protest outside her office. Fellow Democrats called the bill a 'cynical political ploy' drawn up by 'MAGA extremists.'", "category": "donor_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 7217", "title": "Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($17.6B standalone military aid to Israel)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2024-02-06", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/7217", "why_it_matters": "Stevens was one of only 46 House Democrats to vote yea on standalone Israel military aid while 166 Democrats voted nay. The White House was calling Democrats to flip them; Stevens said she 'respects the president's vision' but 'as a member of Congress in Israel's gravest moment, all I have is my vote.' The bill failed 250-180 under suspension. AIPAC is Stevens' #1 career donor with over $785,000 in contributions since 2022 and $4M+ in super PAC spending. The vote is donor_aligned: she sided with her top donor against her party, the White House, and her Arab American constituents.", "category": "donor_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 8038", "title": "Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($26.38B — part of $95B foreign aid package)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2024-04-20", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/8038", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted yea on Israel military aid within the comprehensive foreign aid package. 37 Democrats opposed. While this vote was in a broader package that included humanitarian aid for Gaza ($9B), her overall record of three consecutive yea votes on Israel aid — twice bucking her party's majority — establishes a clear pattern of donor_aligned voting on the issue most central to AIPAC's legislative agenda. Her campaign noted the aid 'included $9 billion in humanitarian aid for civilians in Gaza' — a defensive framing that acknowledged constituent pressure.", "category": "donor_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 8035", "title": "Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($60.8B military and economic aid)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2024-04-20", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/8035", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted yea along with 210 Democrats and 101 Republicans (311-112 final). The vote was party-consensus for Democrats. No donor tension — the vote is constituent_aligned with her district's pro-Ukraine sentiment in a NATO-supportive manufacturing constituency. The primary newsworthiness is the contrast with her Israel votes: Stevens will cross party lines for AIPAC priorities but not for Ukraine aid.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 29", "title": "Laken Riley Act (mandatory immigration detention for theft-related offenses)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-01-07", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/29", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted nay while 48 Democrats defected to support the bill. The NRSC stated 'Democrats including Haley Stevens voted against the common-sense measure.' Her district includes immigrant communities in Oakland County. This vote aligns with her overall Democratic-progressive immigration stance. The NRSC later attacked her for skipping the DUI deportation vote in June 2025, claiming she was 'hiding' from her immigration record. The vote is constituent_aligned for a diverse urban-suburban district.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.Con.Res.14", "title": "House Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Resolution ($4.5 trillion in tax cuts, $1.5 trillion in cuts to vital programs)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-04-10", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-concurrent-resolution/14", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted nay. The AFL-CIO and CWA opposed this budget, stating it 'would cut funding for critical services that hardworking taxpayers depend upon.' Stevens earned a 92% AFL-CIO score for 2025. Her vote aligned with her labor constituency in a district with one of the highest concentrations of auto suppliers nationally. The vote reflects her pro-labor, pro-social safety net record with no donor cross-pressure.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 4", "title": "Rescissions Act of 2025 (gutting USAID, CPB, foreign assistance programs)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-06-12", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/4", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted nay. The CWA and AFL-CIO opposed this bill. The bill passed 216-213. Stevens' vote aligned with her pro-foreign assistance and public broadcasting position. This vote is constituent_aligned — her district's above-average educational attainment (50.8% bachelor's) correlates with support for public broadcasting and international engagement.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 2550", "title": "Protecting America's Workforce Act (restoring collective bargaining rights for over 1 million federal workers)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2025-12-11", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/2550", "why_it_matters": "Stevens voted yea. The AFL-CIO supported this bill. Her 99% lifetime AFL-CIO score and union endorsements (UAW, SEIU, Teamsters, IBEW, UAW all contributed) reflect her consistent pro-labor voting record in a district anchored by the automotive manufacturing workforce. The vote is constituent_aligned.", "category": "constituent_aligned" } ], "constituency_baseline": { "baseline": { "district_summary": "Michigan's 11th Congressional District encompasses the suburban and exurban communities northwest of Detroit in Oakland and Wayne counties, including Birmingham, Farmington Hills, Rochester Hills, Troy, and Pontiac. With approximately 775,896 constituents, the district is 68.1% White and 12.8% Black with a median age of 40.9 — slightly older than the national average. Median household income is $93,271, nearly triple the national median, making it one of the more affluent districts in Michigan. Homeownership is high at 70.2% with median home values of $327,400. Poverty is just 5.8% and unemployment is 5%. The district is highly educated (50.8% bachelor's degree or higher) and car-dependent (71% drive alone). The economy is anchored by the automotive industry — the district has the largest concentration of auto suppliers in the country — along with healthcare (Henry Ford Health System), higher education, and technology. Cook PVI rates the district D+19 (Solid Seat), shifted R+4 from the prior cycle. Stevens has held this seat since 2019 when she flipped it from Republican control; she is now running for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat in 2026.", "top_employers": [ { "name": "Ford Motor Company", "employees": 28000, "source_url": "https://www.cience.com/automotive-companies/michigan" }, { "name": "General Motors", "employees": 21000, "source_url": "https://www.cience.com/automotive-companies/michigan" }, { "name": "Henry Ford Health System", "employees": 13036, "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "name": "University of Michigan", "employees": 12000, "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/haley-stevens/contributors?cid=N00040915&cycle=2024&recs=100&type=I" }, { "name": "Oakland County Government", "employees": 4500, "source_url": "https://www.oakgov.com/" } ], "dominant_industries": [ { "naics": "3361-3363", "share": 0.18, "source_url": "https://legacy-v10.autosinnovate.org/resources/economic-insights-for-michigans-district-11" }, { "naics": "62", "share": 0.16, "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "naics": "54", "share": 0.12, "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "naics": "52-53", "share": 0.08, "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" } ], "recent_ballot_measures": [ { "name": "Proposal 22-3: Reproductive Freedom for All (enshrined abortion rights in Michigan Constitution)", "year": 2022, "result": "passed", "margin": "56.7% Yes to 43.3% No statewide; Oakland County supported by stronger margins", "source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/Michigan_2022_ballot_measures" }, { "name": "Proposal 22-2: Promote the Vote (expanded early voting and absentee ballot access)", "year": 2022, "result": "passed", "margin": "59.9% Yes to 40.1% No statewide", "source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/Michigan_2022_ballot_measures" } ], "demographic_anchors": [ { "label": "Median household income", "value": "$93,271 (national: $37,585) — nearly triple the national median", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Population (2024 estimate)", "value": "775,896", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Homeownership rate", "value": "70.2% (national: 65.5%)", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Bachelor's degree or higher", "value": "50.8% (national: 33.7%) — one of the most highly educated districts in Michigan", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Poverty rate", "value": "5.8% (national: 12.4%)", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Median age", "value": "40.9 (national: 38.5) — slightly older, 14.3% cohort 30-39", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Median rent", "value": "$1,339/month (national: $1,163)", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Racial/ethnic composition", "value": "68.1% White, 12.8% Black, 8.7% Asian — diverse suburban district", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Cook Partisan Voting Index (2026 rating)", "value": "D+19 — Solid Seat; R shift +4 from prior cycle", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/haley-stevens-S001215/district" }, { "label": "Automotive industry concentration", "value": "Largest concentration of auto suppliers of any congressional district nationally; 17,800 auto jobs, 3% of workforce in auto manufacturing", "source_url": "https://legacy-v10.autosinnovate.org/resources/economic-insights-for-michigans-district-11" } ] } } }