Senator Warren seeks to quiet critics
with 2020 campaign launch
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[February 09, 2019]
By Ginger Gibson
BOSTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Elizabeth
Warren, struggling to move past criticism over her Native American
heritage claims, will aim for a fresh start on Saturday when she
formally launches her 2020 presidential campaign.
The Massachusetts Democrat, a leader of the party’s progressive wing,
will make her announcement from a historic site in Lawrence, northwest
of Boston, that launched the U.S. organized labor movement. Warren, 69,
has made worker rights, fair wages and access to health care central to
her campaign.
She is part of an increasingly crowded and diverse field of Democrats
vying for the chance to challenge President Donald Trump, the likely
Republican nominee. A year before any ballots are cast in a Democratic
primary, many of those candidates are spending the weekend talking to
voters in the early nominating states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South
Carolina.
Warren's announcement will be followed on Sunday by U.S. Senator Amy
Klobuchar, who has said she will reveal her presidential plans in
Minnesota.
Warren's heritage claims have dogged her since her first campaign for
the Senate in 2012, and Trump mockingly refers to her as "Pocahontas."
Her ancestry drew fresh scrutiny last week with the discovery that she
described her race as American Indian on a form to join the Texas legal
bar in the 1980s.
She has repeatedly apologized, saying the claim was based on "family
lore" and she now understands tribal sovereignty dictates membership.
In addition to being a fierce Trump critic, Warren is an outspoken
critic of Wall Street who gained national notoriety for her efforts to
create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to regulate large
banks.
"The part of Elizabeth Warren’s history that we should be most worried
about right now is the fact that Republicans are trying to dismantle her
signature achievement, the CFPB," said Democratic strategist Rebecca
Katz, a former top aide to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.
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Potential 2020 Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Senator
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) speaks at an Organizing Event in Manchester,
New Hampshire, U.S., January 12, 2019. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File
Photo
Warren is one of four women so far seeking the Democratic
nomination, an unprecedented number of female candidates vying to
lead a country that has never had a woman chief executive.
Warren and the other women running, including Senators Kamala Harris
and Kirsten Gillibrand, are hoping to build on the success of women
candidates who played a significant role in Democrats regaining
control of the U.S. House of Representatives in November's
congressional elections.
"I like her anger," said Christiane Alsop, who has donated to
Warren's previous campaigns and is backing her presidential bid. "I
like her fighting spirit."
Warren heads next to Iowa, where U.S. Senator Cory Booker and South
Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, who also are running, campaigned on
Friday.
"I am running for president right now because I believe Americans
have surrendered to cynicism," Booker said at an event in Waterloo,
Iowa. “I want to see a revival of civic grace."
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson; additional reporting by Amanda Becker
in Waterloo, Iowa; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Cynthia Osterman)
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