Overview
- Campbell’s short videos, which surged online over the weekend, show her dancing and using explicit language, drawing millions of views and coast-to-coast attention.
- She has welcomed the exposure and said the backlash reflects misogyny, and some of the most criticized posts were later taken down as she pledged to keep posting.
- The first-time candidate highlights a working‑class profile as a third‑generation UAW member and Detroit Mercy law student, and her website displays four past mugshots as part of her biography.
- She is competing in Michigan’s 13th District, a heavily Democratic area that votes August 4, with Rep. Shri Thanedar and several other Democrats on the ballot viewed as the main hurdle to Congress.
- Conservative accounts such as Libs of TikTok amplified the clips and right‑leaning outlets led the pile‑on, while local reporting detailed her issues focus on women, education, housing, and labor, and one outlet noted it could not independently verify every video.