The Official Elizabeth Warren Thread

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Elizabeth Warren Announces Her Bid for Senate

Elizabeth Warren Announces Her Bid for Senate
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Elizabeth Warren talks about why she's running for the United States Senate.

Starring: Molly Erdman
Directed by: Brian Shortall
Written/Produced by: Eddie Geller
Edited by: Richard Klopfenstein
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator

Sen. Elizabeth Warren to liberals:
I’m fighting back



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Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., questions Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew as he testifies at a Capitol
Hill hearing examining the Financial Stability Oversight Council's annual report to Congress in Washington, June 25, 2014.



McClatchy Washington Bureau
By Lesley Clark
July 18, 2014


DETROIT — Sen. Elizabeth Warren wowed a friendly crowd of influential liberal activists Friday in Detroit, pledging to fight against Republicans and the “sleazy lobbyists” she says have rigged the rules in Washington and harmed the middle class.

Warren took the stage in a crowded ballroom to calls of “Run, Liz, run” by activists waving “Elizabeth Warren for President” signs _ and did little to disappoint.

Speaking before the nation’s largest gathering of liberal activists, she railed against giant corporations, secret trade deals and Republicans she said were too cozy with big business.

“The tilt in the playing field is everywhere,” Warren said in a 15-minute speech that had the audience at the Netroots Nation on its feet. “We can whine about it, we can whimper about it or we can fight back. I’m fighting back.”

Progressives are hoping the populist Massachusetts Democrat makes a run for the presidency in 2016, challenging former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from the left. Though Warren has said she’s serving out her Senate term, which expires in 2019, her speech at times had the feel of a campaign.

She credited the activists with seeing that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which she helped develop, is up and running, declaring that it’s forced financial institutions to return more than $4 billion to consumers.

“You called out sleazy lobbyists and cowardly politicians,” she said. “You said, ‘We the people will have this agency,’ and you won the fight.”

Warren, who enjoys fervor among liberals for leading a charge to overhaul the financial system, called for more Wall Street regulations, accusing big banks of crashing the economy but continuing to “swagger through Washington blocking reform.”

Activists swooned, even if they’re not convinced she’ll run for president. She’s already proved a powerhouse this year, raising $2.6 million for other Democrats and campaigning for Senate candidates across the country, including one in Michigan Friday.

“I love her. I would be 1,000 percent behind her,” said Mooney Gow, 52, of Sacramento, Calif., a “Warren for President” hat perched on his head as he streamed out of the ballroom. “She would move the needle to the left, and that’s her job. “

Ready for Warren, a group that hopes to draft the senator to run for president, made a major splash at the event, handing out placards, stickers and faux straw boaters emblazoned with “Elizabeth Warren for President.”

One volunteer suggested a use for the Warren sticker: Affix it to the “Ready for Hillary” coffee tumblers that Ready for Hillary, Clinton’s campaign-in-waiting, had distributed. Clinton didn’t speak to the group.

After her speech, Warren appeared at a fundraiser for Senate candidate Rep. Gary Peters, D-Mich.

At another appearance, she drew a long line of admirers as she signed copies of her new book, “A Fighting Chance.” There, she deflected reporters’ questions about whether the visible support might draw her into running for president.

“I am focused on the 2014 race. It is absolutely critical to this country. We can’t get distracted from that,” she said.

Warren’s popularity has spurred Republicans to put her on their radar.

America Rising, a conservative group that does opposition research on Democrats, sent out a fundraising appeal this week that says it’s tracking Warren now, along with Clinton.

“Democrats are launching a campaign to draft liberal Democrat Elizabeth Warren for president,” the appeal says. “America can’t afford to let that happen.”



Activists have lauded Warren, a onetime Harvard professor, for her candor, and she didn’t mince words Friday. Though the Obama administration is pressing a major trade deal, Warren laced into the secrecy around it, saying Wall Street, pharmaceutical companies and “big polluters are smacking their lips at the possibility of rigging” the deals.

Conservatives, she charged, are “guided by an internal motto: ‘I got mine; the rest of you are on your own.’ ”

She proclaimed her allegiance to liberal values, including combating climate change, raising the minimum wage, mandating equal pay, protecting Social Security and revamping immigration law. And she drew loud applause for vowing to fight the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision on contraceptives.

“She hits a chord with us,” said Cathy Casas, 59, a retiree from Tampa, Fla., who’d arrived early to secure a seat in the ballroom so as not to miss a minute of Warren. “She’s so real, so genuine. Not a plastic politician.”

Email: lclark@mcclatchydc.com; Twitter: @lesleyclark
]​



Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2014/07/...berals.html?sp=/99/104/244/112/#storylink=cpy




 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
:lol:This ain't gonna get a republican in the White House!

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COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
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Warren voted as a Republican for many years saying, "I was a Republican because I thought that those were the people who best supported markets". She states that in 1995 she began to vote Democratic because she no longer believed that to be true, but she says that she has voted for both parties because she believed that neither party should dominate.

People from Massachusetts just do poorly nationally. I don't know what it is.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
michael-dukakis.jpg


johnkerrymc.jpg


110428_mitt_romney_ap_605.jpg



Warren voted as a Republican for many years saying, "I was a Republican because I thought that those were the people who best supported markets". She states that in 1995 she began to vote Democratic because she no longer believed that to be true, but she says that she has voted for both parties because she believed that neither party should dominate.

People from Massachusetts just do poorly nationally. I don't know what it is.


I've read that Wiki quote before -- which seems to be reflective of my own beliefs that an individual candidate's views on issues matter more than mere party affiliation.

Doesn't your Dukakis, Kerry and Romney analogy mean you're concerned that Warren would be "Massachusetts'd" instead ???

Except, how could you overlook that JFK and three other natives of Massachusetts (2 before JFK and 1 after) were elected president ???

 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered

I've read that Wiki quote before -- which seems to be reflective of my own beliefs that an individual candidate's views on issues matter more than mere party affiliation.

Doesn't your Dukakis, Kerry and Romney analogy mean you're concerned that Warren would be "Massachusetts'd" instead ???

Except, how could you overlook that JFK and three other natives of Massachusetts (2 before JFK and 1 after) were elected president ???


The Cleveland Browns won in 1964 and haven't seen a championship since.
 

muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor

Elizabeth Warren's chance of becoming POTUS is slim to none, and slim is locked nude in a temperature controlled, 40 degrees Fahrenheit, padded cell at Git-mo being force feed daily by the U.S. military.

She is NOT a neo-liberal corporate Democratic party member INSIDER - like Billary Clinton

In 2012 Scott Brown received more Wall Street financial industry money in his failed U.S. Senate bid against Elizabeth Warren than than anyone running for Congress that year. ALL OF the corporate Democratic party money, from Wall Street and others that went to Obama in 2008 went to Warren's RepubliKlan opponent Scott Brown in 2012

In a chapter from her latest book she recounts how neo-liberal consummate Democratic party Wall Street insider, former Secretary of the Treasury Larry Summers told her before her US Senate run how rigged the "system" would be against anyone not on the inside like herself. He was recruiting her to become another - useless-to-the average-citizen-interested-in-a-participatory-democracy - corporate Democrat. He did then and certainly does now, view her as one-of-those - "fucking retarded liberal Democrats" - that former white house chief of staff Rham Emanuel lamented about in 2009. The chapter from the book “A Fighting Chance” is below.



25% of American adults have not read a single book in the past year; they haven't cracked a paperback, fired up a Kindle, or even hit play on an audiobook while in the car. The number of non-book-readers has nearly tripled since 1978! READ- HERE




Insiders Don’t Criticize Insiders

By the time our February report came out, America had a new president. This might have been a moment for a new direction in economic policy and a chance to rethink the bailout strategy. But the crisis was still accelerating, and the economy remained on the edge of collapse.

After his election, President-elect Barack Obama had quickly signaled that the new administration would continue Paulson’s strategy, especially with his choice for a new Treasury secretary: Tim Geithner. As head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Geithner had worked as a regulator of the Wall Street banks for years, and in 2007 he had been approached about becoming CEO of Citibank. He was experienced with bailouts, too: in the spring of 2008, he had managed the rescue of Bear Stearns, and as the markets collapsed in the fall of 2008, he had worked alongside Secretary Paulson to engineer the bailout for insurance giant AIG.

The COP panelists met with the new secretary a few times during his early months on the job. In mid-March, the story broke that AIG had paid $168 million in bonuses—bonuses that would go to employees in the very same division that had brought the company to its knees. People were furious; one Republican senator called for the AIG executives to either “resign or go commit suicide.” COP was expanding its investigations, and we were starting to make a stir about what we saw as the shortcomings of Treasury’s approach on the bailout.

I started hearing that many Washington insiders were surprised (and some were aggravated) that we were going just as hard on the Democratic administration as we had on the Republicans, but I wasn’t going to stop and worry about that.

In early April, I got a call from the office of Larry Summers. I didn’t know Larry well, but I’d met him a few times while he was president of Harvard in the early 2000s. According to reports, Larry had been Tim Geithner’s mentor when they were both in the Treasury Department in the 1990s. Now Larry was the director of the National Economic Council, which meant that, along with Secretary Geithner, he advised President Obama on economic issues.

Would I be interested in meeting him for dinner? Sure, I replied. Larry’s office suggested the Bombay Club, an Indian restaurant near the White House. Quiet and softly lit, it served Washington’s power elite. When Larry arrived for our dinner, he ordered a Diet Coke as soon as he sat down. He glanced at the menu, ordered quickly, and soon the food started coming. It was a long dinner, with plenty of intense back-and-forth about everything from the bailout, to deregulation, to the foreclosure crisis. I also talked to Larry about an idea I’d been working on for a new consumer financial agency, and he seemed interested. We didn’t agree on everything, but I give Larry full credit: I’ll take honest conversation and debate any day of the week over the duck-and-cover stuff I so often saw in Washington that spring.

Late in the evening, Larry leaned back in his chair and offered me some advice. By now, I’d lost count of Larry’s Diet Cokes, and our table was strewn with bits of food and spilled sauces.
<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>
Larry’s tone was in the friendly-advice category. He teed it up this way: I had a choice. I could be an insider or I could be an outsider. Outsiders can say whatever they want. But people on the inside don’t listen to them. Insiders, however, get lots of access and a chance to push their ideas. People—powerful people—listen to what they have to say. But insiders also understand one unbreakable rule: They don’t criticize other insiders. I had been warned.</b></span>


READ the entire book, epub & mobi

Code:
http://www21.zippyshare.com/v/90192789/file.html






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