Monday, January 20, 2025

What can we do now?

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Warren for Senate

Danielle,

Today should be about honoring the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The heart and hope of the civil rights movement — Dr. King's dream shocked the conscience of our nation and challenged us to live up to our highest ideals.

That hope for a better America is Dr. King's legacy — and as heirs of that legacy today we are called upon to take a stand against racial and economic injustice.

That's what I'll be thinking about today. I'll be at the inauguration — I believe it's important to see it with my own eyes. This is a serious look-in-the-mirror moment for our country.

Donald Trump's swearing-in will initiate an era where our nation will be tested at every turn. It's also the starting block for what Democrats will need to do over the next four years to limit his damage and win back working people.

Look, if Trump's recent promises to bring down costs for working families and unrig our economy are legitimate, then I'll do anything it takes to see those promises follow through.

But I've seen this one before.

During Trump's 2016 run, he swore he would drain the swamp. He talked the talk of economic populism and rooting out corruption. That version of his presidency didn't come to pass.

In reality, he surrounded himself with the lobbyists and billionaires who run the swamp and feed off government favors. Trump and his circle collectively control billions of dollars of wealth. While running the government, they had the power to scratch each other's backs and turn those billions into hundreds of billions more.

In reality, the $2 trillion in tax breaks he passed was mostly sucked up by billionaires and giant corporations — and offered the very worst of trickle-down economics. Our tax code today allows the 1,000 billionaires in America to pay an average federal tax rate that's far less than the vast majority of Americans pay.

He turned the keys to our government over to a group of Wall Street insiders, billionaires, and CEOs.

All while giving a wink and a nod to right-wing extremists and white supremacists — his version of making America great.

He described the participants of a deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville as very fine people.

After a violent mob of domestic terrorists — incited by Trump — attacked the Capitol and tried to overturn the results of a presidential election that he lost, he called it a beautiful thing, a day of love.

He made one racist remark after another, and applied that rhetoric to racist policies — from the "total and complete" ban on Muslims entering the country to his ongoing effort to build a monument to hate on our southern border.

He did everything he could to 1) tip the economic scales toward billionaires and corporations and 2) stir up racial hatred in this country. Then he turned those two initiatives into a political strategy.

Donald Trump's central message is that if there's anything wrong in your life, if you're struggling to get by, you should blame "them" — and "them" means people who aren't the same color as you, weren't born where you were born, don't worship the same way you do, or don't live their lives the way you would.

So today, on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a day where we are called upon to uphold his legacy and take a stand against racial and economic injustice, we will inaugurate a man who is a walking antithesis of that legacy.

What can we do now?

There will be no shortage of horrifying initiatives over the next few years. But as the party out of power, there are still levers Democrats can pull to limit the damage of this administration — from Congressional oversight to the courts.

While we do that, we must earn back the trust of working people to start to chart a different direction for our country.

We do that by embracing bold economic policies that will make a considerable difference in the lives of working people. We know these ideas are popular. American voters showed up for Democratic economic policies last year — approving ballot initiatives to raise the minimum wage in Alaska and guarantee paid sick leave in Missouri, for example. We've got to keep championing those ideas and not shy away to avoid upsetting corporate billionaires.

For inspiration, think back to Franklin Roosevelt. When FDR said he would take on corporations and Wall Street, he didn't mince words. He called out the "privileged princes" and "economic royalty" running corporate America. And when the titans of commerce went after him with vicious attacks, he didn't back down. Instead he declared, "I welcome their hatred."

What did we get out of this approach? Social Security. Unemployment insurance. Abolition of child labor. Minimum wage. The right to join a union. Even the very existence of the weekend.

All we need today is that courage. Courage to stand up to billionaire and corporate donors. Courage to make the wealthiest and most powerful people in this country a little uncomfortable. Courage to shake off any instinct to show how eager we are to compromise and stand by a half-baked plan.

At every turn, Democrats need to expose the hypocrisy between what Trump says he'll do for working families, and what he actually does. Like how he made big promises on the campaign trail last year to make groceries less expensive, and then, after getting elected, he began to say it would actually be "hard" to bring down grocery prices.

And we need to be unwavering when it comes to standing up for immigrant families, trans people, patients seeking an abortion, and everyone else who will be targeted by this administration.

To everyone who is afraid of what happens next, I share your fears. But we need to remember that the political position we're in is not permanent.

Every step toward progress in American history came after the darkness of defeat. Abolitionists, suffragists, Dreamers, advocates for marriage equality, and marchers for civil rights behind Dr. King all faced impossible odds, but they persisted, and they won. What we do next is important, and I need you in this fight with me.

Thanks for being a part of this,

Elizabeth

 
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Saturday, January 11, 2025

The Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation and United Way of Greater Los Angeles need our support right now

We must do everything possible to look out for the communities that are in danger.
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Warren for Senate

The wildfire news out of Southern California is horrifying and heartbreaking, Danielle.

Unimaginable loss. Parents fighting to keep their kids safe from smoke. Children asking when they get to go home. Homes engulfed in flames. Lives lost — and memories vanished.

I'm grateful for the tireless work of firefighters, first responders, and community members who are looking out for their neighbors right now — making sure they have the food, supplies, and shelter that they need.

One of the best ways to help right now is to direct donations to people doing this work on the ground. Will you split a contribution between the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation and United Way of Greater Los Angeles right now? 100% of your donation will go directly to these organizations.

 

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The Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation fills in funding gaps to connect firefighters with the protective equipment and latest tools they need to do their jobs, while working to ensure firefighters' long-term health and safety.

And United Way of Greater Los Angeles is providing support to low-income individuals, people experiencing homelessness, small businesses, and community organizations affected by the wildfires.

Now, when it comes to crises like these, we must walk and chew gum at the same time. We must do everything possible right now to support the communities that are in danger. And we must face the fact that the climate crisis is causing these devastating disasters, and will put more and more people at risk of extreme weather events.

It isn't "politicization" to recognize that basic fact — greedy fossil fuel interests and climate deniers are the ones whose radical political agenda puts our people in danger.

Long term, I'll keep working to make sure we as a nation do more to fight climate change.

And right now, we must come together behind the people whose lives are being torn apart by these wildfires. Can you split a donation between the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation and United Way of Greater Los Angeles?

Thanks for being a part of this,

Elizabeth

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Tuesday, January 7, 2025

The worst symptom

Blaming Trump for all of our problems is not going to put the fire out.
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Warren for Senate

Danielle, it's important to remember that Trump not the cause of everything that's broken in America.

Don't get me wrong, he has certainly poured gasoline on the fire. But blaming Trump for all of our problems is not going to put the fire out.

There are systemic issues that led to someone like him getting elected in the first place. He is the worst symptom of a corrupt system that rewards the rich and powerful at the expense of everyone else.

This system has plagued us for years. It's a system where Reagan's trickle-down experiment failed — and is still failing — America's middle class.

A system that has made it harder and harder to start and join a union.

A system that says that companies donating exorbitant amounts of money to a political campaign is a form of "free speech."

A system where the government bailed out banks rather than homeowners after the 2008 financial crisis.

A system that allows a family to go bankrupt because they dared to receive medical care.

A system that allows minority rule in our government because of a racist and archaic filibuster rule.

Look, we must call out and tend to the root causes of the deep problems in our economy, our government, and our democracy — the problems that existed way before Donald Trump rode down that elevator in 2015.

That's what I'm focused on while we also fight back against whatever harms the Trump administration brings us over the next four years.

And the Democratic party must, must, must fight back with defiant action instead of just pushing back with great reluctance — while also connecting the dots between today's crises, yesterday's systemic causes, and the solutions we're championing.

It's going to take a lot of work to untangle this system — with political leaders fighting for the bold solutions and a strong grassroots movement calling for a better way forward. That's why it's so important for you to stay in this fight, Danielle.

If we can show the American people what it means for a government to actually work for working people — and draw contrasts between that and what the Trump Administration is actually doing — then we can lay a strong foundation for a new way forward.

If you're on board with this roadmap, then please pitch in $100 or anything you can to support our work ahead. I'm going to do everything I can in the Senate to fight back against the Trump administration and advocate for the Democratic party to focus on the bold solutions necessary to fixing our systemic challenges. Your support is what makes this possible.

 

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Thanks for being a part of this,

Elizabeth

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