The GOP needs a miracle. And they are working on it now.
And the Republican midterm playbook just leaked and it’s bigger than you think.
An Office That Used To Be An Afterthought — And Now Isn’t
A decade ago, the attorney general’s race was the kind of statewide office that got covered in the final two weeks of an election cycle and forgotten about immediately after. Not anymore. The Biden years transformed that calculus permanently, as Republican attorneys general became the most effective institutional check on a Democratic executive branch that pushed climate mandates, student loan cancellations, Title IX expansions, immigration catch-and-release policies, and regulatory overreach on a scale the federal courts ultimately found untenable.
Republicans AGs won those fights. They won in the Supreme Court. They won in the circuit courts. They won in district courts across the country. And in doing so, they demonstrated something that has now permanently elevated the office in the eyes of GOP strategists: a state attorney general with the will to fight can delay, limit, and sometimes kill federal policies that would otherwise take years to navigate through Congress.
The Republican Attorneys General Association — which raised a record $29.3 million across affiliated entities in 2025 — has drawn the obvious conclusion. It is now launching an $11 million television offensive targeting AG races in Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Georgia, and Kansas. Iowa Republican AG Brenna Bird’s campaign has already reserved more than $2 million in fall TV advertising separately. The GOP is not treating these races as statewide afterthoughts. They are treating them as front lines.
“Congress talks. Attorneys general act,” RAGA Chairman Austin Knudsen, who also serves as Montana’s attorney general, told Fox News Digital. “When we see something bad coming out of Washington, D.C., we can quickly mobilize. We can file lawsuits.”
Crime, Bail, And The Gift Michigan Democrats Just Handed Republicans
The messaging strategy driving the $11 million investment is not complicated. It is the same message that has worked for Republicans on crime since the “Defund the Police” era destroyed the left’s credibility with working-class voters: who do you trust to keep your community safe?
In Michigan, Republicans hit what RAGA Executive Director Adam Piper described as a near-perfect target. Democrats nominated Washtenaw County Prosecutor Eli Savit — whose office was the first in Michigan to eliminate cash bail and announced it would stop prosecuting certain drug offenses. Against that record, Republican nominee Doug Lloyd, a longtime Eaton County prosecutor, is presenting himself as exactly what voters are looking for in an unsettled post-pandemic environment.
“People want to feel safe in their communities, and they’re not feeling that safe right now,” Lloyd told Fox News Digital. “That’s an 80-20 issue.”
He was equally blunt about what he views as the fundamental wrong turn in progressive prosecutorial philosophy. “I believe that when you start making that statement that ‘I refuse to enforce the laws that our legislature has created and which are constitutional’, then you’re on the road to anarchy. We’ve seen how that’s gone for the last eight years and I believe that our citizens are actually tired of it.”
Knudsen put the national argument in the sharpest terms available. “We’ve seen the fentanyl, cartel fentanyl and methamphetamine flood in from the southern border during Joe Biden and flood every state,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any question that the winning message for AG races around the country in 2026 is public safety. Americans care about public safety, they care about law enforcement, they care about border security.”
A Broader Map And A Longer Game
The five-state initial TV buy — Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Georgia, and Kansas — tells its own story about the Republican AG strategy for 2026. Michigan and Wisconsin are classic Great Lakes battleground states where Trump’s 2024 performance demonstrated persistent Republican strength outside major metros. Minnesota is the most challenging Democrat-held AG’s office on the map, but also one with fresh vulnerability given the Feeding Our Future fraud scandal and questions about Democratic governance of state institutions. Georgia presents the opportunity to use the post-Laken Riley immigration enforcement debate to pin a Democratic AG nominee who voted against cooperation with federal immigration authorities.
Piper’s framing was unambiguous about the party’s posture. “RAGA has a good map in 2026 and will be on offense because the reality is voters prioritize public safety and prefer Republican AGs who fight crime and win at the courthouse over Democrat AGs who pander to criminals with cashless bail idiocracy. Democrats should understand that Republican AGs are not playing defense. We are taking the fight directly to them.”
The Democratic Attorneys General Association, which did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment for this story, will need to respond to that posture with something more than press releases. The party that spent years arguing that criminal justice reform was a political winner has watched that argument erode in election after election — at the presidential level, at the congressional level, and now, increasingly, at the state attorney general level where the daily consequences of those policies are most visible to ordinary voters. The GOP’s $11 million is a down payment. The real investment comes in October.