Sen. Elizabeth Warren is not running for president, but might she in the future? She wouldn’t say when repeatedly pressed on NPR Monday morning. Instead, she just repeated the same present tense denial she’s uttered dozens of times this year: “I’m not running for president.”
It’s hardly the first time Warren, who became a progressive hero this week during a high-profile Senate showdown over Wall Street regulation, has dodged a question on 2016. Even as she and her staff insist the senator is not interested in running — and she distances herself from an effort to draft her into the race — Warren appears to be intentionally leaving some doubt hanging in the air. She may not want to run, but she would like voters to think there’s a chance.
“She’s never slammed the door shut,” said Ben Wikler of MoveOn.org, who is hopeful she will run and recently launched a campaign to draft Warren.
“As senator Warren has said many times, she is not running for president,” Warren spokesperson Lacey Rose told msnbc.
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In July, The Washington Post’s Ruth Marcus had an almost identical exchange with Warren as her NPR interview. The columnist pointedly asked the senator why she refuses to rule out a run in the future, but got only more present tense answers:
Why not simply declare that she will not run for president in 2016? “I am not running for president in 2016,” Warren responded. Yes, I pressed, but why not say, I am not running and I will not run ? … “The point is not to try to create any ambiguity,” Warren added. “I am not running. I think I am being definitive.”
CNN’s Gloria Borger made a similar foray in October, but got only the same answer in return:
BORGER: Why not think about running?
WARREN: I’m not running for president.
BORGER: Ok.
WARREN: I am not running for president.
I am not running for president.
BORGER: But if Hillary didn’t run, you might give it a shot?
WARREN: I am not running for president.
Warren raised 2016 speculation earlier this year when she published a book, a typical move for any politician considering a presidential run. And on the tour promoting the book, staffers pre-screened questions from the audience — but they left in inquiries about running for president, according to BuzzFeed.
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Meanwhile, anyone hoping to draft Warren into the presidential race will point to a quote Warren gave to People magazine in October, in which she went farther than before or since in raising the possibility of a White House bid. “If there’s any lesson I’ve learned in the last five years, it’s don’t be so sure about what lies ahead. There are amazing doors that could open,” Warren said.
Her office told reporters the quote changed nothing, but declined to provide a transcript of the interview. It’s unclear from People’s write-up whether Warren was responding to a question about 2016 or something else, and Warren’s staff didn’t seem eager to put that question to rest.
The Massachusetts senator has also played it coy when asked about Hillary Clinton, the presumed frontrunner for the Democratic nomination. When a Boston reporter asked Warren whether Clinton is the right choice for Democrats in 2016, the senator clearly did not want to answer:
REPORTER: Do you believe Hillary Clinton is still best choice for your party coming up for 2016?
WARREN: Hillary is terrific.
REPORTER: Is she still the best choice though?
WARREN: I’m sorry?









