Democrat Marc Carmichael, a former state representative and retired statewide trade association executive, announced Monday he would run for the U. S. Senate seat being vacated by Republican incumbent Mike Braun.
Carmichael is the first Democrat to file for the seat and will likely face Republican U. S. Representative Jim Banks in November 2024.
“I’m running because I want to be of dignified and dedicated service to Indiana and all Hoosiers, in the mold of legislators like Richard Lugar and Lee Hamilton,” Carmichael said. “We deserve better than to be represented by someone as mean-spirited, blindly partisan and out of touch with the majority of Hoosiers as Jim Banks. His attacks on innocent LGBTQ children for purely political gain are disgusting and his vote against certifying the Biden election and dishonest rhetoric on FOX News after that election help lead to the riot at the U. S. Capitol on January 6. He should be ashamed.”
Carmichael said Banks, and his equally partisan sidekick, Club for Growth PAC President, David McIntosh, successfully pushed Mitch Daniels out of the race by threatening to unleash a $10 million sliming campaign against the former Indiana governor. “Daniels is too moderate and conciliatory for today’s Republican party,” Carmichael said. “It shows how desperate Banks and McIntosh are to keep the Republican Party on the extreme MAGA fringe where they are.”
Hoosiers deserve to be represented by a senator committed to keeping our military strong, taking care of our veterans and all military families, building a strong economy and creating good paying jobs, Carmichael said.
Carmichael said he will be a senator who:
In addition to the money that needs to be raised, each candidate for the U. S. Senate must collect the signatures of 500 verified voters on a petition in each of Indiana’s nine congressional districts to qualify for the ballot. “Until those signatures are gathered and verified nothing else really matters,” Carmichael said. “It is a monumental task you want to accomplish with quality people so you know every signature is legitimate. We are already underway.”
Carmichael is a lifelong Indiana resident and a 1972 Notre Dame graduate who was first elected to the Indiana House in 1986 when he easily defeated the sitting Republican House Speaker, J. Roberts Dailey, in a 60% Republican district. Carmichael defended his seat in 1988 and 1990 before stepping down to become the Director of Governmental Affairs for the Indiana Gas Company. In 1999 Carmichael took over as President of the Indiana Beverage Alliance, a statewide trade association for Indiana’s family owned beer distributors, and retired from that position in 2020. He is single with three children and five grandchildren.