Democrat Warren takes step to challenge
Trump in 2020
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[January 02, 2019]
By Doina Chiacu
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator
Elizabeth Warren, a liberal firebrand who has taken on Wall Street and
traded barbs with Donald Trump, on Monday became the most prominent
Democrat to announce a challenge to the Republican president in 2020.
Warren said she had formed an exploratory committee, which will allow
her to begin raising money to compete in what is expected to be a
crowded Democratic primary field before the November 2020 presidential
election.
She said on Twitter she would announce her decision on whether to run
early in 2019.
Warren, 69, a senator from Massachusetts since 2013, became one of
Trump's fiercest critics during the 2016 presidential race and they have
continued to exchange biting insults during his presidency. Trump
mockingly refers to her as "Pocahontas" because of her claim to Native
American ancestry.
Warren has denounced Trump as an "insecure money grubber" with a
platform of "racism, sexism and xenophobia," while Trump has described
the former Harvard Law School professor as "goofy" and a "lowlife" with
"a nasty mouth."
On Monday, Warren released a video in which she outlined her vision of a
path to opportunity for all Americans and charged that the U.S. middle
class was under attack from corporate interests. She later elaborated on
the theme in an exchange with reporters outside her Cambridge,
Massachusetts, home.
"America's middle class is getting hollowed out and opportunity for too
many of our young people is shrinking," she said. "So I'm in this fight
all the way. Right now Washington works great for the wealthy and the
well connected. It's just not working for anyone else."
Trump, in a phone interview with Fox News, said he would love to run
against Warren and again ridiculed her assertion of Native American
ancestry. Asked if he thought Warren really believed she could defeat
him, Trump said: "I don't know, you'd have to ask her psychiatrist."
The Democratic presidential field could eventually include Senators
Kamala Harris, Cory Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand, as well as former
Vice President Joe Biden. Julian Castro, former President Barack Obama's
housing secretary, formed an exploratory committee this month.
Warren welcomed the "strong and growing group of Democrats" making
arguments similar to those she is making, saying: "That's how we build a
movement. We do it together."
In searching for a candidate to run against Trump, Democrats will
grapple with the tension between the party's establishment and liberal
progressive wings that flared during the 2016 nominating primaries
between former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Senator Bernie
Sanders, an independent who ran under the Democratic banner.
A Warren candidacy can expect opposition from Wall Street. In the U.S.
Senate, she has been a strong voice on financial issues and a
self-described defender of the ordinary American against powerful
interests.
RESTRICTING BANKS
Following the 2007-2009 global financial crisis, Warren emerged as a
leading critic of Wall Street and continues to advocate for stiffer
regulation and oversight, including reinstating a rule that would
separate banks’ retail business from their riskier investment banking
activities.
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U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) gets in her vehicle, after
announcing she has formed an exploratory committee to run for
president in 2020, outside her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
U.S., December 31, 2018. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Warren, a member of the Senate Banking Committee, has fought the
Trump administration's efforts to weaken post-crisis financial
rules, going as far as to attack moderate Democrats who backed a May
rewrite of the 2010 Dodd-Frank reform law.
In a September interview marking 10 years since the financial
crisis, Warren was asked about breaking up big banks. "Oh yeah," she
told the New York Times. "Give me a chance."
She also has opposed the administration's efforts to undermine the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an agency she helped create,
and has pressured the Federal Reserve to take a tough line on
scandal-hit lender Wells Fargo & Co <WFC.N>.
Many of Warren's policy positions have focused on economic
inequality. She recently offered legislation calling on the U.S.
government to manufacture generic drugs to reduce their cost. In
2017, she joined other senators in a proposal to extend the federal
Medicare health insurance program for seniors to include everyone.
Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel dismissed
her as "another extreme far-left obstructionist and a total fraud."
Warren's 80 percent name recognition does not translate into actual
support, University of Virginia professor Larry Sabato said.
"Some Democrats swear by her and love her blunt style, while others
are put off by her and fear she’d lose to Trump," he said. "Warren
has a lot of convincing to do," adding the same is true of many
other Democratic contenders.
Warren will begin campaigning soon in some of the states with early
presidential nominating contests, a person familiar with her plans
said.
Trump's use of Pocahontas, a 17th century Native American woman
associated with the British colony in Jamestown, Virginia, was aimed
at drawing attention to a controversy over her heritage raised
during Warren’s 2012 Senate race.
Warren in October released a DNA analysis she said supported her
assertion that she had Native American lineage.
Trump’s reference has drawn criticism from some Native American
groups, while others criticized Warren for trying to lay claim to a
tribal heritage.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Additional reporting by Michelle Price
and Mohammad Zargham; Editing by Bill Trott and Peter Cooney)
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