Democratic White House hopeful Warren rails against corruption at big
N.Y. rally
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[September 17, 2019]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren on Monday denounced the
corruption she argues has crippled the country's politics and economy,
drawing her largest crowd thus far in a sign of her campaign's growing
strength.
"When you see a government that works great for those with money and
connections, and doesn't do much for anyone else, that's corruption,
plain and simple, and we need to call it out for what it is," Warren
said, as thousands of New Yorkers holding up "I'm a Warren Democrat"
placards cheered underneath an overcast sky in Manhattan's Washington
Square Park.
The rally came on the same day that Warren won the endorsement of the
Working Families Party (WFP), a progressive group with rising political
influence that previously backed U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders during his
2016 White House bid.
Nearly two-thirds of the organization's thousands of members chose
Warren. The endorsement could boost Warren's chances of positioning
herself, rather than Sanders, as the liberal alternative to Democratic
front-runner Joe Biden, the former vice president.
Warren, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, is the only Democratic
candidate out of a field of 20 who has seen her standing steadily rise
in public polling throughout the campaign.
The campaign said more than 20,000 people attended Monday's rally, which
would make it the biggest held by Warren thus far. The estimate could
not be independently verified.
Her speech on Monday focused on one of the core themes of her campaign:
the need to root out corruption in Washington and pursue "big,
structural change" as the precondition for accomplishing anything else.
Issues as disparate as climate change, gun safety and healthcare have
gone unaddressed because in each case, massive corporations have "bought
out" the government, she said.
"Take any big problem in America today, and you don't have to dig very
deep to see the same system at work," she said.
Ahead of the rally, Warren proposed what she called the "biggest 'end
corruption' plan since Watergate," a series of steps she outlined in her
speech.
Among other actions, Warren said she would "end lobbying as we know it,"
banning senior officials and lawmakers from ever becoming lobbyists and
severely restricting the ability of lobbyists to influence public
policy.
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U.S. Senator and democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren
speaks at Washington Square Park in New York, New York, U.S.
September 16, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
BLIND TRUST
Warren's plan also takes aim at President Donald Trump, a real
estate developer who as president regularly visits his own hotels,
resorts and golf clubs at taxpayers' expense. She would require
presidents and vice presidents to place business assets in a blind
trust to be sold and require all federal candidates to release their
tax returns.
Trump maintains ownership of his businesses but has ceded day-to-day
control to his sons. Last week, Trump, who has refused to release
his personal tax returns, said that before November 2020, he would
release an "extremely complete" financial report.
Warren bracketed her speech on Monday by recounting the horrific
fire that killed 146 workers, mostly young women, in 1911 at the
Triangle shirtwaist factory a few blocks away.
The deaths, she said, were the result of greedy garment companies
and the corrupt politicians who allowed them to flout their workers'
safety in favor of profits.
But the fire also spurred the state to overhaul its labor laws.
"They organized," she said. "They built a grassroots movement. They
persisted - and they changed the course of American history."
Warren has released a dizzying number of policy plans, and many
supporters at the rally wore campaign shirts that read, "Warren Has
a Plan for That."
Warren's ascendancy has been powered by voters like Maryann Hui. The
34-year-old has watched all the debates and candidate town halls and
has a spreadsheet of every candidate to keep track of which one she
likes the most.
"I can't tell you how it feels to be listened to by a person in
power," said Hui.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by David Shepardson
and Amanda Becker in Washington; Editing by Dan Grebler, Sandra
Maler and Darren Schuettler)
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