Marking the end of the year and the one-year anniversary of the day she began her 2020 presidential campaign, Sen. Elizabeth Warren challenged voters to imagine a country that puts the needs and priorities of working people ahead of corporate profits in an hour-long speech in Boston.
The Massachusetts Democrat offered voters a message of optimism as the country heads toward the first Democratic primaries in the coming weeks while conveying the damage done to the country by decades of corruption and by the Republican Party under the Trump administration.
At the historic Old South Meeting House, Warren asked her supporters to imagine the opportunities that could await them in a country without skyrocketing levels of wealth inequality, a $1.5 trillion student debt crisis, and a for-profit healthcare system which bankrupts hundreds of thousands of Americans per year:
Watch the whole speech below:
Warren lambasted congressional Republicans as “fawning, spineless defenders” of Trump’s crimes, enabling the president’s attempt to bribe the Ukrainian government to investigate Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden, which led to Trump’s impeachment by the House earlier this month.
“It brought no one any joy, but the House Democrats upheld their sworn duty to the Constitution and impeached the president of the United States,” Warren said. “Soon I will return to the Senate to do my sworn duty as well. But unless some Senate Republicans choose truth over politics, Donald Trump will be emboldened to try to cheat his way through yet another election.”
With Trump as president, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) pledging to coordinate with the White House as the Senate begins its impeachment trial, and many centrist Democrats unwilling to enact bold structural reforms to the economy and political system, the senator said, “democracy hangs in the balance.”
“We fought back against a king and an empire to form a new republic. We fought back against the scourge of slavery even after it was written into our constitution,” Warren said. “Those moments in American history define us. And at each one of them, if our leaders had approached the moment thinking small, we would not have made it through.”
Warren’s call for Americans to look beyond not only the Trump White House but also the claims by her centrist primary opponents—who have called bold policy proposals by Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) unrealistic—and imagine a country in which “big, structural change” has taken hold won praise on social media.
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