Democratic Lieutenant Governors Want to Be Their Party’s Future

The Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association is helping its members in open primaries.

Garlin Gilchrist
Michigan Lt. Governor Garlin Gilchrist is running for governor. Scott Hasse/AP

As Democrats continue to look around for a way out of the political wilderness, a group representing the nation’s seconds-in-command is suggesting primary voters consider making 2026 the Year of the Lieutenant Governor.

“The LGs are a uniquely dynamic, diverse group of individuals and we should be the leaders that folks are elevating,” Austin Davis, the lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania and chair of the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association, told NOTUS in a recent interview. “We’re in a moment when the Democratic Party is looking for leadership who aren’t just going to go to Washington or go to their state capitals and be part of the problem, but who are going to be part of the solution.”

His candidates, Davis said, his fellow LGs, “are very exciting folks.”