Massachusetts
Related: About this forumWarren carves out a big role in a moment of crisis. Will that include a vice presidential nod?
WASHINGTON Dropping out of the presidential race has not stopped Senator Elizabeth Warren from making the case practically daily that her ideas meet the moment and her allies are hoping those ideas can shape a race for the White House that might still include her.
She has released a hailstorm of plans and legislation related to the coronavirus pandemic. She and her team have been in touch with presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden, who spoke warmly about one of their conversations on Thursday. She has also spoken with former president Barack Obama recently, according to a person familiar with the interaction.
Now, Warrens endorsement of Biden this week has fueled speculation that the Massachusetts Democrat is a serious contender for the partys vice presidential nomination an offer she said this week she would accept.
Any decision is up to vice president Biden, Warren said in an interview with the Globe. I am 100 percent committed to trying to help our country manage this crisis and begin to rebuild the economy in a way that works for everyone. Im going to do that no matter what.
Read more: https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/04/17/nation/warren-carves-out-big-role-moment-crisis-will-that-include-vice-presidential-nod/
rampartc
(5,835 posts)I am 100 percent committed to trying to help our country manage this crisis and begin to rebuild the economy in a way that works for everyone. Im going to do that no matter what. liz warren
BComplex
(9,078 posts)She knows the economy better than anyone I've ever seen.
SunSeeker
(53,664 posts)ramen
(862 posts)is well qualified for the job, and she is progressive enough to round out the Biden ticket well and fire up the more left-ish Democrats.
Only trouble is that, due to her being so good at her job, it would be a shame to lose her where she already is..
BlueMTexpat
(15,496 posts)But I want her to stay where she is right now! She can do more in the US Senate.
Losing her there would mean that a GOP Gov would appoint a GOP Senator. We already have WAY too many of those!
While I would love to see a woman Veep candidate, I would like to see other and younger women considered, not simply one of the women primary challengers.
But if one loves Warren and her ideas as I do, Katie Porter springs to mind. https://boingboing.net/2019/10/21/go-katie-go.html
From the link:
Porter's got an amazing background: she went magna cum laude at Harvard Law (Elizabeth Warren was one of her profs), and she's also a single mom of 3 and domestic abuse survivor. She's got an amazing, prosecutorial questioning style that is an absolute breath of fresh air in Congressional hearings, where the median lawmaker is barely capable of asking a coherent question.
...
tecelote
(5,141 posts)Lonestarblue
(11,827 posts)We have a chance at taking a majority, but if Republicans hold the Senate Mitch McConnell will see that nothing gets passed. He will hold up cabinet appointments and no judges will be approved.
Massachusetts has a Republican governor and he would appoint a Republican to the Senate until an election is held months later. Massachusetts is not guaranteed to elect a Democratic senatorremember Scott Brown. Plus, Massachusetts will vote Democratic for president, so Warren doesn't bring a state along. If we have a safe Senate majority, I would love to see Warren in a key cabinet position.
I think we need a VP candidate from a swing state.