Elizabeth Warren
Related: About this forumRobert Reich Says Elizabeth Warren Should Challenge Hillary Clinton
The Nation
3/6/2015
Former secretary of labor Robert Reich says Hillary Clinton should face a tough primary challenger and he knows who he would like to see mount a run against the presumed Democratic front-runner.
I wish that challenger would be Elizabeth Warren, Reich explained Friday, in a short statement that has energized supporters of a burgeoning movement to draft the senator from Massachusetts as a populist alternative to Clinton.
...Reich has always spoken well of Warren, with whom he shares many positions. They have worked together. And he has spoken about the prospect that she might might challenge Clinton. But this is more than just an expression of ideological sympathy, and more than punditry. This is a former Bill Clinton cabinet member saying, specifically, that he hopes Warren will run.
Coming as the current Clinton controversies are grabbing headlines, Reichs move is going to garner attention.
Reich knows this. He is a savvy veteran of the political fights of the past four decades (who has campaigned for many Democrats, advised many more and once sought the Democratic nod for governor of Massachusetts). He is an important figure on the left of the Democratic Party. And he has a followingindeed, there has been soft speculation about the prospect that Reich, himself, might be a presidential prospect.
With all of this is mind, heres how Reich frames his intervention in the current discussion about 2016:
"Ive been getting lots of calls from reporters wanting to know if Democrats should have a plan B if Hillarys candidacy implodes. I tell them (1) its still way too early (theres not even a plan A because she hasnt yet declared, and its more than a year and a half before Election Day anyway), (2) if she runs the odds of her imploding are very low; shes been through all this three times before (once as a candidate and twice as Bill Clintons de facto campaign manager) and will be a strong candidate, (3) but it would be good for the Democrats and the countryand good for her (it will make her an even stronger candidate)to have a tough primary challenger, and (4) I wish that challenger would be Elizabeth Warren."
http://www.thenation.com/blog/200713/robert-reich-says-elizabeth-warren-should-challenge-hillary-clinton
NoJusticeNoPeace
(5,018 posts)including and especially Hillary.
I would love to see it.
There are those who dont want to see a strong Democratic nominee...however
still_one
(96,551 posts)she doesn't want to run at this time
InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,558 posts)still_one
(96,551 posts)RiverLover
(7,830 posts)In the interest of being a "safe haven" for Warren supporters, Buh bye
InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,558 posts)As a strong Elizabeth supporter who believes in her as much as she believes in herself, there's no need to "bar the door" - unless, of course, that is the rule here or the consensus of the other room members.
RiverLover
(7,830 posts)I'm right there with ya, InAbLuEsTaTe!
InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,558 posts)it's just one step closer to a Warren candidacy. As Hillary would say: you can "bank" on it.
RiverLover
(7,830 posts)And we know she would challenge special interests!
*President Elizabeth Warren*
Robert Reich
3/3/15
The big unknown is whether the Democratic nominee will also take on the moneyed interests -- the large Wall Street banks, big corporations, and richest Americans -- which have been responsible for the largest upward redistribution of income and wealth in modern American history.
Part of this upward redistribution has involved excessive risk-taking on Wall Street. Such excesses padded the nests of executives and traders but required a tax-payer funded bailout when the bubble burst in 2008. It also has caused millions of working Americans to lose their jobs, savings, and homes.
Since then, the Street has been back to many of its old tricks. Its lobbyists are also busily rolling back the Dodd-Frank Act intended to prevent another crash.
The Democratic candidate could condemn this, and go further -- promising to resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act, once separating investment from commercial banking (until the Clinton administration joined with Republicans in repealing it in 1999).
The candidate could also call for busting up Wall Street's biggest banks and thereafter limiting their size; imposing jail sentences on top executives who break the law; cracking down on insider trading; and, for good measure, enacting a small tax on all financial transactions in order to reduce speculation.
Another part of America's upward redistribution has come in the form of "corporate welfare" -- tax breaks and subsidies benefiting particular companies and industries (oil and gas, hedge-fund and private-equity, pharmaceuticals, big agriculture) for no other reason than they have the political clout to get them.
It's also come in the guise of patents and trademarks that extend far beyond what's necessary for adequate returns on corporate investment -- resulting, for example, in drug prices that are higher in America than any other advanced nation.
It's taken the form of monopoly power, generating outsize profits for certain companies (Monsanto, Pfizer, Comcast, for example) along with high prices for consumers.
And it's come in the form of trade agreements that have greased the way for outsourcing American jobs abroad -- thereby exerting downward pressure on American wages.
Not surprisingly, corporate profits now account for a larger percent of the total economy than they have in more than eight decades; and wages, the smallest percent in more than six.
The candidate could demand an end to corporate welfare and excessive intellectual property protection, along with tougher antitrust enforcement against giant firms with unwarranted market power.
...The candidate could also propose true tax reform: higher corporate taxes, in order to finance investments in education and infrastructure; ...
She (or he) could likewise demand higher taxes on America's billionaires and multimillionaires ...
Not the least, taking on the moneyed interests would necessitate limiting their future political power. Here, the candidate could promise to appoint Supreme Court justices committed to reversing Citizens United, push for public financing of elections, and demand full disclosure of all private sources of campaign funding.
But will she (or he) do any of this? ...
still_one
(96,551 posts)Universe where she is running, but not this one
Dawgs
(14,755 posts)InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,558 posts)Response to RiverLover (Original post)
AtomicKitten This message was self-deleted by its author.