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merrily

(45,251 posts)
Sun May 3, 2015, 01:11 PM May 2015

The Virtual Candidate

The relationship between Senator Elizabeth Warren and Hillary Clinton, the Party’s most likely Presidential nominee, goes back to the second half of the Clinton Administration. Warren told me recently that the most dramatic policy fight of her life was one in which Bill and Hillary Clinton were intimately involved. She recalls it as the “ten-year war.” Between 1995 and 2005, Warren, a professor who had established herself as one of the country’s foremost experts on bankruptcy law, managed to turn an arcane issue of financial regulation into a major political issue.

In the late nineteen-nineties, Congress was trying to pass a bankruptcy bill that Warren felt was written, essentially, by the credit-card industry. For several years, through a growing network of allies in Washington, she helped liberals in Congress fight the bill, but at the end of the Clinton Administration the bill seemed on the verge of passage. Clinton’s economic team was divided, much as Democrats today are split over economic policy. His progressive aides opposed the bill; aides who were more sympathetic to the financial industry supported it. Warren targeted the one person in the White House who she believed could stop the legislation: the First Lady. They met alone for half an hour, and, according to Warren, Hillary stood up and declared, “Well, I’m convinced. It is our job to stop that awful bill. You help me and I’ll help you.” In the Administration’s closing weeks, Hillary persuaded Bill Clinton not to sign the legislation, effectively vetoing it.

But just a few months later, in 2001, Hillary was a senator from New York, the home of the financial industry, and she voted in favor of a version of the same bill. It passed, and George W. Bush signed it into law, ending Warren’s ten-year war with a crushing defeat. “There were a lot of people who voted for that bill who thought that there was going to be no political price to pay,” Warren told me.


http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/05/04/the-virtual-candidate

The article starts with Warren and the Clintons, transitions to a bit of Warren's life story, the circles back to Warren and the Clintons.

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The Virtual Candidate (Original Post) merrily May 2015 OP
Hope that she and Bernie can somehow work together to channel their specific talents and supporters libdem4life May 2015 #1
Thanks, Merrily...Bookmarking for later read... KoKo May 2015 #2
You're welcome, Koko. merrily May 2015 #3
 

libdem4life

(13,877 posts)
1. Hope that she and Bernie can somehow work together to channel their specific talents and supporters
Sun May 3, 2015, 01:18 PM
May 2015

into a Progressive Win. He's got the nation looking at him now as a Presidential Candidate, and she, who decided not to run, has already proven her ability to change the conversation. I sincerely hope we begin to see a real coalition...starting with two powerful Progressives.

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