Elizabeth Warren says pressure of running against ‘shadows of Martha and Hillary’ cost her presidential bid – Fox News

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warrenattributes her failed 2020 presidential bid to her stumbles on explaining how to pay for her signature healthcare plan and the role that gender, particularly her omnipotentfemale predecessors, played in the campaign.

The Massachusetts Democrat doesn't blame sexism directlyin her new book "Persist," but Warren suggestsher campaign was hamperedbythe failed political efforts of women before her.

"I had to run against the shadows of Martha and Hillary," Warren wrote in her new book, according to excerpts reviewed by the Washington Postin reference toMartha Coakley, who lost her MassachusettsSenate bid in 2010, and Hillary Clinton, who failed to beat Donald Trump in 2016.

PROGRESSIVES THINK BIDEN'S LATEST $1.8T FAMILIES PLAN ISN'T BIG ENOUGH

Warren suggestedDemocrats were fearful about nominating another woman who could lose to President Trump.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks with reporters while campaigning in Marshalltown, Iowa on Jan. 12, 2019. Warren comes out with a new book, "Persist" on May 4, 2021.

Warren drew energeticcrowds and plenty of buzz during her 2020 Democratic presidential run where she stayed hours after events taking selfies with enthusiastic fans and making pinkie promises with young girls to encourage them to dream big. ButWarren failed to finish better than third in any of the primary contests and dropped out of the race in March 2020, lamenting that the prospects for a history-making first female president were essentially gone.

WARREN DROPS OUT OF 2020 RACE, DECLINES TO MAKE ENDORSEMENT FOR NOW IN SANDERS-BIDEN SHOWDOWN

"One of the hardest parts of this is all those pinky promises and all those little girls who are gonna have to wait four more years," Warren said at the time,her voice cracking, referring to promises she makesabout women running for president. "That's gonna be hard. ... I take those pinky promises seriously."

Warren ran on a bold progressive vision for America, but backed back it up with policy chops and a litany of legislative plans. She and her campaign embraced a motto that "Warren has a plan for that."

But in her book, Warren acknowledges that she stumbled in explaining to Americans how she would pay for her "Medicare for All"plan, which allowed her rivals to pounceand weakened her argument that she had a plan for everything.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

"It can be risky to learn on the run, particularly if some of that learning is happening in public," Warren wrote, according to the Post.

Warren's "Persist" goes on sale in early May.

Read more:
Elizabeth Warren says pressure of running against 'shadows of Martha and Hillary' cost her presidential bid - Fox News

Related Posts

Comments are closed.