Warren ends White House bid, leaving Biden and Sanders to fight for
Democratic nod
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[March 06, 2020]
By Amanda Becker and Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Elizabeth Warren ended her
presidential campaign on Thursday after concluding she had no realistic
path to the Democratic nomination, leaving behind a two-man battle
between former Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders.
Warren, a liberal senator who won plaudits for her robust policy plans
and focused her campaign on fighting the corrupting influence of money
on politics, finished well behind the two front-runners on Tuesday in
contests in 14 states, including her home, Massachusetts.
Her exit meant that what was once hailed as the most diverse field of
candidates in U.S. history narrowed to a race between two white,
septuagenarian men for the nomination to face Republican President
Donald Trump in November.
Warren did not immediately endorse either of her rivals, saying she
would decide at a later time whether to do so. She has spoken with both
since Tuesday.
Biden, a 77-year-old moderate, and Sanders, a 78-year-old liberal, have
emerged as standard-bearers for the two major wings of the Democratic
Party.
Outside her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Thursday, Warren spoke
about her failure to find a middle ground between the party's factions.
"I was told when I first got into this, there are two lanes," she said.
"I thought it was possible that wasn't the case, and there was more room
to run a different kind of campaign. Apparently that wasn't the case."
The former bankruptcy law professor, who was largely responsible for
creating the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), had emerged as
a top contender last year, arguing she could serve as a consensus
candidate for progressives and centrists.
While Warren is more closely aligned ideologically with Sanders, she may
conclude that Biden - who surged to the lead in the race for the
Democratic nomination by winning 10 of the 14 'Super Tuesday' states -
is better positioned to help advance her policy priorities.
A Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on Thursday had Biden with a 10
percentage-point lead among Democrats and Democratic-leaning
independents.
Friendship between Warren and Sanders also developed cracks during the
campaign. In January, Warren accused Sanders of calling her a "liar"
after a debate in which he denied her statement that he had told her a
woman could not beat Trump.
Some polls have shown Warren's supporters almost evenly split between
Biden and Sanders when asked to pick their second-favorite candidate.
Both men appealed to her supporters: Biden called Warren the "fiercest
of fighters" on Twitter, and Sanders praised her work on women's rights,
corruption and healthcare before making his pitch.
"Today I would simply say to her supporters, of whom there are millions:
We are opening the door to you, we would love you to come on board," he
said in Burlington, Vermont.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren
talks to reporters outside her house about the end of her campaign
for U.S. president with her husband Bruce behind her after informing
her staff that she is withdrawing from the 2020 U.S. presidential
race in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder
Trump, who has for years sought to fuel dissent among Democrats by
suggesting that party leaders plot against Sanders, said Warren had
remained in the race too long.
"If she's a true progressive, which probably she is, she should have
dropped out three days ago. It would have been a whole different
race," Trump told a Fox News town hall. "So when you look at it, she
did him no favors. That was not a good friendship."
'ELECTABILITY'
The vague notion of "electability," a campaign buzzword as Democrats
prioritized defeating Trump, seemed especially damaging for Warren
and other non-white-male candidates.
"The general narrative was that the women might be too risky and I
think there were people who heard that enough that it started
showing up in polling... and becomes a vicious cycle that was hard
to break out of," said Christina Reynolds, a vice president at
EMILY's List, which works to elect women supporting abortion rights
and had endorsed Warren.
Warren said gender was a tricky issue.
"That is the trap question for every woman," she said. "If you say,
'Yeah, there was sexism in this race,' everyone says, 'Whiner!' If
you say, 'No, there was no sexism,' about a bazillion women say,
'What planet do you live on?'"
In Washington, Democratic House of Representatives Speaker Nancy
Pelosi said she believes the country is ready for a woman president
but misogyny still plays a role.
"Every time I get introduced as the most powerful woman or whatever,
I almost cry because I think - I wish that were not true," she said.
Meanwhile, Biden and Sanders stepped up their mutual attacks,
signaling a bruising battle to come as the race turns to six states
holding nominating contests on March 10.
Sanders blamed the "establishment" and corporate interests for his
losses on Tuesday. Biden called that "ridiculous."
"You got beaten by overwhelming support I have from the
African-American community, Bernie," Biden told NBC's "Today" show.
"You got beaten because of suburban women, Bernie. You got beaten
because of the middle-class, hardworking folks out there, Bernie."
(Reporting by Amanda Becker in Washington and Joseph Ax in New York,
additional reporting by Ginger Gibson and Doina Chiacu in
Washington; Wring by Ginger Gibson, Joseph Ax and Patricia Zengerle;
Editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis and Rosalba O'Brien)
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