Massachusetts Could Have a African American Senator

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: The Herald News


Setti Warren


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Setti Warren, Newton's mayor, will challenge Senator Scott Brown



BOSTON —
Democratic Newton Mayor Setti Warren announced Monday that he would jump into the U.S. Senate race against Scott Brown to try to deny the popular Republican a full six-year term in office.

Warren, who's in the second year of his first term as the state's first popularly elected black mayor, is an Iraq War veteran who served a yearlong tour of duty as a naval intelligence specialist.

He conceded that while many people don't know him, he's about as familiar to voters as Brown was two years ago, when the Republican ran for the seat vacated by the death of longtime Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy.

In a five-minute video posted on his new Senate campaign website, Warren said he was grateful for the opportunities he'd been given in his life and faulted Brown for turning his back on some of the same programs that helped him escape a troubled past.

"I will be forever grateful for the support I was offered, the education I received and the opportunities I was given," the 40-year-old Warren said.

"Scott Brown would rather forget. Scott Brown admits he would rather not think about his own life when he votes against the very same programs that helped lift him as a troubled teen out of poverty," Warren said.

In a memoir released earlier this year, Brown recounted a difficult childhood, including his parent's divorce, frequent moves, his rocky relationship with multiple stepfathers, one of whom he said physically abused him, and his own shoplifting arrest. Brown also detailed how he was sexually abused at a summer camp.

Warren said Brown has let down Massachusetts voters by supporting the GOP leadership in Congress on issues such as extending the Bush-era tax cuts and opposing an extension of unemployment benefits.

Brown won the seat last year in a special election to fill the office left vacant by Kennedy, who died in August 2009.

"I believe Scott Brown is an honorable man. But he has not been the independent voice in the Senate that so many people expected him to be," Warren said in the video.

Since taking office, Brown has tried to walk a fine political line as a self-styled moderate Republican, including supporting repealing the federal ban on gays serving openly in the military.

Eric Fehrnstrom, Brown's campaign spokesman, said the senator is focused on his day job.

"It looks like there will be a very crowded Democratic primary, but the election is still 18 months away and Scott Brown's focus in the near term will continue to be on creating jobs and reducing spending," he said.

Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick, who won his own re-election battle last year, had talked up Warren as a possible challenger to Brown even before the mayor had publicly expressed any interest in the race.

"Good for him," Patrick said Monday when asked about Warren's announcement.

"He's a good man and I wish him well. I think it's going to be a full and rich field and the Democratic nominee will be strong," the governor said.

Warren and the other challengers to Brown face a number of hurdles. Brown is still popular among voters, according to recent polls, and is sitting on a campaign chest of more than $8 million.

In his video Warren is seated on the lawn outside his home in Newton, an upscale suburb west of Boston. Warren highlights several points of his career, including serving in the White House under former President Bill Clinton as special assistant in the Office of Cabinet Affairs. In March 2008, he was appointed New England director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. He also worked as a staffer for Democratic U.S. Sen. John Kerry.

Warren said he enlisted in the Navy after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Warren joins a growing Democratic field against Brown, including City Year co-founder Alan Khazei and former lieutenant governor candidate Robert Massie.

Warren lives in Newton with his wife and daughter. He planned to give more details about his campaign during a public announcement Tuesday.



 
source: The Herald News

Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick . . . "He's a good man and I wish him well. I think it's going to be a full and rich field" . . . the governor said


Consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren launches
US Senate campaign with tour of Massachusetts



Elizabeth%2BWarren.jpg



BOSTON — Harvard Law professor and consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren
officially launched her Democratic campaign for U.S. Senate on Wednesday
by greeting commuters at a rail station in Boston before embarking on a tour
of the state.

“The pressures on middle-class families are worse than ever, but it is the big
corporations that get their way in Washington,” Warren said in a statement
released Tuesday announcing her bid. “I want to change that. I will work my
heart out to earn the trust of the people of Massachusetts.”

Warren, 62, is a favorite of liberals and consumer groups, but some Democrats,
including Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, have voiced skepticism about how
strong a candidate she will be, given her lack of political experience.


Republicans have already branded Warren as a liberal academic whose Harvard
ties put her out of touch with the concerns of working families. They’ve also
mocked her as an outsider whose roots are in Oklahoma, not Massachusetts.

Other Democrats already announced include:


- Setti Warren, no relation to the consumer advocate, the first-term mayor of
the affluent Boston suburb of Newton and the state’s first popularly elected
black mayor;

- City Year youth program co-founder Alan Khazei; immigration attorney Marisa
DeFranco;

- state Rep. Tom Conroy; and Robert Massie, who unsuccessfully ran for
lieutenant governor in 1994.
 

Consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren launches
US Senate campaign with tour of Massachusetts



Elizabeth%2BWarren.jpg



BOSTON — Harvard Law professor and consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren
officially launched her Democratic campaign for U.S. Senate on Wednesday
by greeting commuters at a rail station in Boston before embarking on a tour
of the state.

“The pressures on middle-class families are worse than ever, but it is the big
corporations that get their way in Washington,” Warren said in a statement
released Tuesday announcing her bid. “I want to change that. I will work my
heart out to earn the trust of the people of Massachusetts.”

Warren, 62, is a favorite of liberals and consumer groups, but some Democrats,
including Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, have voiced skepticism about how
strong a candidate she will be, given her lack of political experience.


Republicans have already branded Warren as a liberal academic whose Harvard
ties put her out of touch with the concerns of working families. They’ve also
mocked her as an outsider whose roots are in Oklahoma, not Massachusetts.

Other Democrats already announced include:


- Setti Warren, no relation to the consumer advocate, the first-term mayor of
the affluent Boston suburb of Newton and the state’s first popularly elected
black mayor;

- City Year youth program co-founder Alan Khazei; immigration attorney Marisa
DeFranco;

- state Rep. Tom Conroy; and Robert Massie, who unsuccessfully ran for
lieutenant governor in 1994.

Elizabeth Warren will be a problem.
 
my bad I thought Mass had two senators.

Can't go wrong with Warren, GOP hates her.

Don't know to much about ole dude

You know they do:D but, to my knowledge, they're after Brown's seat. John Kerry has the other and he's not going anywhere until he's ready.
 

Massachusetts Could Have a African American Senator



source: The Herald News


Setti Warren


3pic01.jpg



Setti Warren, Newton's mayor, will challenge Senator Scott Brown



Elizabeth Warren will be a problem.




Elizabeth Warren Has One Less Challenger and a Viral Video




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By Shushannah Walshe
Sep 28, 2011


Elizabeth Warren has only been in the Massachusetts Senate race – her first for political office – a short time, but she has already drawn some high-profile praise from President Obama’s top adviser, the scorn of conservative talk radio and been featured in a viral video in which she launches into a thoughtful defense of government.

And today brought the news that Warren has one less primary competitor. <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">The Boston Globe reported that Newton Mayor Setti Warren (no relation to Elizabeth Warren) will announce Thursday that he is dropping out of the Democratic primary</span>.

Elizabeth Warren’s campaign is trying to raise some money off recent attacks Rush Limbaugh has thrown at the Massachusetts Senate candidate. It sent out an email to supporters today asking them to open their wallets in response to Limbaugh’s saying Warren had a “perverted, corrupt point of view.”

“There are two things I know for sure: When Rush Limbaugh attacks, you must be doing something right. And you must stand up to those attacks,” the email reads.

Limbaugh also called the Harvard professor and consumer advocate a “parasite,” all in response to a video of Warren at a house party in Andover, Mass., in August when she was testing the waters around the state before officially entering the race.

The video of Warren passionately refuting the idea that taxing the wealthy means Democrats are encouraging “class warfare” went modestly viral on YouTube and has been cited by liberal activists.


<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/hOyDR2b71ag" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>​


FULL STORY




 
dude knew he was wasting his time, Elizabeth has that seat sewn up lol


just curious is that his kid?
 
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
 
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