Further on the point that "Draft Warren" is about issues.

CNN: Elizabeth Warren's supporters look for their next win
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/11/politics/elizabeth-warren-antonio-weiss-progressives/>


CNN Elizabeth Warren's populist supporters are finding inspiration from an
unlikely source: Antonio Weiss.

Weiss, the head of investment banking at Lazard and President Barack
Obama's pick for a top spot at the Treasury Department, was forced to
withdraw his nomination last month after facing an onslaught of public
opposition led by Warren, the popular liberal Massachusetts senator.

If this was a remarkable defeat for the Obama administration, it was a
moment of glowing achievement for some of Warren's fiercest backers,
including Wall Street reform advocates and progressive grassroots leaders
who aggressively criticized Weiss's work at Lazard.

Emboldened by their successful thwarting of his nomination and Warren's
growing clout, liberal activists are energized about their role in
Washington this year. Despite Democrats being relegated to minority status
in the House and Senate, these groups still think they can make a big
splash.

Visions of future political victories

They're preparing to publicly clash with the administration on future
presidential nominees and big-ticket items such as the Trans-Pacific
Partnership trade deal. They're also looking to pressure Obama to take a
tougher stance on expansion of overtime pay and developing stricter rules
for brokers on Wall Street.


By simultaneously mobilizing supporters from the ground up and seizing on
Warren's rise in national politics, the Massachusetts senator's backers are
determined to make Weiss just the first of many casualties.

"This was a really important part of us building momentum against the Wall
Street wing of the Democratic Party and really supporting the Warren wing,"
said Charles Chamberlain, executive director of Democracy for America.
"What was exciting about Antonio Weiss is we took our first victim."

READ: Elizabeth Warren is worth millions
<http://money.cnn.com/2015/01/08/news/economy/elizabeth-warren-wealth/>

The monthslong crusade against Weiss captured how progressive activists are
using Warren's star power to elevate their core issues. Warren is the
subject of persistent rumors that she'll run for president in 2016. She
insists she's not running for higher office, but her stature among
progressives is immense.

After Obama nominated Weiss, 48, to be Treasury's undersecretary for
domestic finance in November, groups such as MoveOn, Democracy for America
and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee quickly mobilized. They
blasted out emails to supporters, launched online petitions and took to
social media to oppose Weiss's nomination.

Their single most important tool for mobilizing mass support? Warren.

Progressive groups didn't just call on supporters to oppose Weiss; instead,
they insisted that protesting his nomination was a way of showing
solidarity with Warren.

"Stand with Elizabeth Warren and say no to a Wall Street banker for
Treasury undersecretary," read a MoveOn petition against Weiss's
nomination, which garnered more than 30,000 signatures.

Democracy for America urged its members to call the White House and say no
to the Weiss nomination -- not just because Weiss was too friendly with
Wall Street, but because blocking his nomination was an important mission
for Warren.

"Sen. Warren is leading the charge against the nomination of Antonio
Weiss," the group said. "She needs your help to stop him."

It wasn't a complete victory -- when he eventually withdrew his nomination
last month, Weiss was offered the role of adviser to Treasury Secretary
Jack Lew.

What they got: Validation

But for Warren's supporters, sinking Weiss's nomination was validation of
the progressive movement's sway in Washington. It was also proof of how
much Warren's popularity with voters can help maximize the progressive
wing's influence.

A Warren spokesperson declined to comment for this story.

With the 2016 presidential election looming, liberal activists are eager to
piggyback on the continuing buzz about a Warren White House bid and make
the senator a mascot for some of their top policy and legislative
priorities.

READ: Elizabeth Warren insists (4 times) she's not running for president
<http://www.cnn.com/2014/12/15/politics/warren-denies-president/>

For starters, they are prepared to sound the alarm if another presidential
nominee doesn't meet their approval. The Federal Reserve's Board of
Governors has one vacancy in need of a nomination, and it's unclear when
the administration plans to nominate someone new for the undersecretary for
domestic finance role.

If the administration were to handpick another nominee perceived as being
too close to Wall Street, financial reform groups can expect to have a
powerful ally on their side: community banks.

Cam Fine, the CEO of the Independent Community Bankers of America who
opposed Weiss's nomination, said his group's view is simple: "We don't want
all the nominees to be straight out of Wall Street."

"We're looking for nominees that have experience with midsized and smaller
institutions," Fine said. "The litmus test is: How well rounded are those
nominees?"

Progressive groups are also taking issue with one of the President's top
priorities for his final years in office: the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a
huge trade agreement proposal between the United States and 11 countries.

Groups such as MoveOn have opposed these talks, taking issue with what they
say are "secret" negotiations and the unfair advantages that large
corporations would reap from the pact.

Warren agrees.

"To protect consumers and to address sources of systemic financial risk,
Congress must maintain the flexibility to impose restrictions on harmful
financial products and on the conduct or structure of financial firms. We
would oppose including provisions in the TPP that would limit that
flexibility," the senator wrote in a letter to U.S. Trade Representative
Michael Froman in December.

Liberal activists also have their sights set on unilateral actions the
Obama administration could take and bypass the GOP-controlled Congress,
such as expanding overtime pay and creating stricter oversight of Wall
Street brokers. On both of these issues, they also have the support of
their favorite Democratic senator.

"Our members love her," said Anna Galland, executive director of civic
action at MoveOn.org.




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