At a time when the Obama administration is eager to highlight sunny economic news, Sen. Elizabeth Warren is focusing on those left in the shade.
The Massachusetts Democrat, who has become a superstar on the progressive left, focused on those left behind in the ongoing economic recovery Wednesday at a Raising Wages summit in Washington organized by the AFL-CIO.
“On many different statistical measures, the economy has improved and is continuing to improve. I think the president and his team deserve credit for the steps they’ve taken to get us here,” Warren said. But she quickly turned away from the good news: “Despite these cheery numbers, America’s middle class is in deep trouble.”
Speaking in Detroit Wednesday where he was touting the recovery of the auto industry, President Obama was not interested in dwelling on the negatives. “America’s resurgence is real. Don’t let anybody tell you otherwise,” the president said at a Ford plant outside the Michigan city. “One of my new years resolutions is to make sure more Americans…feels like they’re coming back. And there is no doubt…that America is coming back.”
At his year-end press conference last month, the president proudly declared, “on almost every measure, we are better off economically than we were when I took office.”
But one by one, Warren took each of those bright measures and showed their dark side.
“The stock market is soaring, and that’s great if you have a pension or money in a mutual fund,” she said. “But if you and your husband or wife … don’t have any money in stocks, how does a booming stock market help you?”
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She continued by asking how growing corporate profits and GDP help a Walmart worker. Or how low inflation rates will help someone who owes thousands at congressionally-set student loan rates. And so on.
“Sure, the rich are doing great. Giant corporations are doing great. Lobbyists are doing great. But we need an economy where everyone else who works hard gets a shot at doing great,” she continued.
Many Democrats remembering former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who died last week, will recognize the influence of Cuomo in Warren’s message. During his famous 1984 Democratic National Convention speech, Cuomo cut down Ronald Reagan’s glowing economic optimism by focusing on those left behind. Warren was taking a similar tact, but this time it’s a Democrat in the White House.
And while Warren praised Obama when she mentioned him by name, she took veiled shots at her own party, including Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton, who is considering a presidential run in 2016.









