http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/politics/2016/06/09/elizabeth-warren-endorse-hillary-clinton-msnbc-tonight/QrjxIM24ZY7EbiXDb9mMAN/story.html?event=event25

Elizabeth Warren ‘ready to jump in this fight’ for Hillary Clinton

Senator Elizabeth Warren ended months of neutrality and endorsed
Hillary Clinton in an interview with The Boston Globe on Thursday.

By Annie Linskey and Victoria McGrane GLOBE STAFF  JUNE 09, 2016
WASHINGTON — Senator Elizabeth Warren ended months of neutrality in
the Democratic primary Thursday and endorsed Hillary Clinton, urging
supporters of Bernie Sanders to get behind the presumptive nominee and
help defeat Donald Trump.

Warren’s endorsement followed President Obama’s by just a few hours,
but it could be equally as important in rallying a liberal base that
is suspicious of Clinton because of her warm relations with Wall
Street and a track record of supporting international free trade
deals.

“I’m ready,” Warren said in an interview with The Globe. “I’m ready to
jump in this fight and make sure that Hillary Clinton is the next
president of the United States and be sure that Donald Trump gets
nowhere near the White House.”

She added: “I’m supporting Hillary Clinton because she’s a fighter, a
fighter with guts.”

Asked whether Clinton should release the transcripts of paid speeches
she gave to Goldman Sachs, Warren said: “That’s for her to decide —
there will be a whole lot of issues to talk about over the next
several months.”

 View Story
Warren labels Trump ‘nasty, thin-skinned fraud’
The senator from Mass. delivered the remarks in Washington on Thursday.
 Transcript of conversation between Warren, Maddow

Sanders frequently calls on Clinton to release them.

She praised Sanders, saying that he has run an “incredible campaign.”

Warren, a champion of the left who passed up a presidential bid of her
own, despite the urging of legions of followers, is uniquely
positioned to serve as a bridge between the establishment candidacy of
Clinton and Sanders supporters, who are being forced to come to terms
with the Vermont senator’s loss.

Democrats view the freshman Massachusetts senator as a path of sorts
to party unity, which helps explain an upsurge in buzz about Warren as
a potential vice presidential pick. Senators and top staff say talking
up Warren for vice president is a way to show Sanders and his millions
of followers that the party establishment heard them loud and clear.

Warren and Clinton haven’t always been close — Warren called out
Clinton in her book “The Two Income Trap” for switching her vote on
legislation to overhaul bankruptcy laws when Clinton was in the
Senate.

“Hillary Clinton could not afford such a principled position.
Campaigns cost money, and that money wasn’t coming from families in
financial trouble,” Warren wrote in a biting critique of the episode
in which Clinton sided with the financial services sector and helped
pass an industry-friendly overhaul of the bankruptcy laws.

Warren did not directly address the issue when asked about it
Thursday. Instead, Warren told the Globe, “She’s someone who has had
to take on a lot, and she’s going to fight back.”

In an interview Thursday evening with MSNBC, Warren said she’s not
currently being vetted to be on the presidential ticket, but didn’t
clearly say whether staff-level discussions about her taking that role
were going on. “I know there’s been a lot of speculation on this. The
truth is I love the work that I do,” Warren said.

Asked if she believes she’s ready to be vice president — and step in
as commander in chief if events require — the Massachusetts senator
said: “Yes. I do.”

The day represented a shift in attention paid to progressive leaders,
as Sanders’ star was fading and Warren roared back into the spotlight.
A speech she delivered in Washington Thursday evening was broadcast
live on cable channels, while Sanders’ rally in the same city was just
shown in a corner of the screen.

Democratic colleagues enthused that Warren would be the right vice
presidential pick to prove that Clinton’s moves leftward during the
primary were not temporary.

“I have such admiration for Hillary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren, it’s
hard for me to convey that to you,” said the Senate’s minority leader,
Harry Reid, adding that he has “no problem” with two women being on
the ticket.

Minutes after word spread Thursday that Obama had endorsed Clinton,
Reid invited Sanders for a very public display of unity. Waves of
reporters were ushered in and out of a small room to witness the two
men awkwardly sitting next to each other. No questions were allowed.

At first, Sanders frowned, but he cracked a smile after Reid murmured
words not audible over the camera clicks.

Later, Reid told reporters he complimented Sanders for having
“vitality and energy” and predicted he’d be “good for the party.”

Sanders vowed to remain in the race through the District of Columbia
primary voting on Tuesday. But the mood among Democrats was of moving
on — quickly. Even the one Democratic senator who had backed Sanders
over Clinton during the primary has already switched to Clinton.

“I think that is a spectacular, spectacular idea,” Jeff Merkley of
Oregon said in a phone interview when asked about the Warren vice
presidential buzz.

Not only would Warren bring solid progressive policy ideas to the
ticket, Merkley said, she also “would very much bring the energy that
Senator Sanders has generated through his campaign into a full unity
with Secretary Clinton.”

He stressed that it is important for Clinton and the Democratic Party
to embrace some of Sanders’ ideas, whether that be part of Clinton’s
policy stances or changes to the Democratic National Committee
platform or primary process, such as the elimination of so-called
superdelegates.

He was hardly a lone voice of love for a Warren ticket.

“She should be on the list” of vice presidential candidates, said
California Senator Barbara Boxer, an ardent Clinton supporter.

“Awesome,” said Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York.

“An electric, magical ticket,” said Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts.

Of course there are many others in contention for the vice
presidential slot, and one top Democratic aide said the enthusiasm for
Warren should be read as the establishment Democrats acknowledging the
power of the liberal branch of the party that Sanders has been
representing nationwide.

Still, while Sanders spent the last 24 hours planning and executing
carefully timed and stage-managed photo ops in Washington’s places of
power, Warren sparred in the trenches with Republicans.

She took on the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, on Wednesday
in a feisty floor debate over the Republicans blocking a confirmation
hearing for the vacancy on the Supreme Court. It’s a topic outside her
traditional portfolio of economic issues, evidence that she’s
spreading her wings for broader fights on behalf of Democrats.

“The view of Senate Republicans seems to be pretty simple,” Warren
thundered. “If government isn’t working for them, their rich friends,
or their rightwing allies, then Senate Republicans aren’t going to let
it work for anyone.”

On Thursday, before Warren endorsed Clinton on MSNBC, she delivered a
scathing speech at the American Constitution Society’s annual
convention that sought to tie Republican leaders in Congress to Trump.
She referred to Trump by name 74 times, according to her prepared
remarks.

“Donald Trump is a loud, nasty, thin-skinned fraud who has never
risked anything for anyone and serves nobody but himself,” Warren
said. “And that is just one of the many reasons why he will never be
president of the United States.”

Warren’s willingness to take on high-profile issues is also being
noticed by her potential rivals.

Virginia Senator Tim Kaine, a Clinton backer, gushed at the mention of
a possible Warren vice presidency. “I often say about those of us in
politics, we’re kind of divided into workhorses and show horses. There
are very few racehorses, and Elizabeth is one of them.”

Annie Linskey can be reached at [email protected]. Follow her on
Twitter @annielinskey.

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Peace Is Doable

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