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Blue Skies

Banned
Mar 27, 2019
9,224
Website
"She is a thinker, a policy wonk and a hard worker," the board wrote in its endorsement. "She remembers her own family's struggles to make ends meet and her own desperation as a working mother needing child care. She cares about people, and she will use her seemingly endless energy and passion to fight for them.


reminder:
Warren is not a career politician, and she is a former teacher then professor and lawyer. She helped start the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in the Obama administrations.
her FIRST public office was the Senate in 2012.
 
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Deleted member 2426

user requested account closure
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
2,988
User Banned (5 Days): Trolling, Thread Derailment, and Accumulated Infractions
Context of DMR endorsements:



Since 1988, only one candidate they have endorsed ended up winning the Iowa caucus, hence letting us know how much weight this endorsement actually has.

And Clinton 2016 was a TIE.

source.gif
 
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OP
OP
Blue Skies

Blue Skies

Banned
Mar 27, 2019
9,224
cnn:
Timeline:
1966-1968 - Warren attends George Washington University on a debate scholarship. She drops out after two years to get married.
Early 1970s - After graduating from college, Warren works as a speech pathologist at a New Jersey elementary school.
1977-1978 - Law lecturer at Rutgers School of Law.
1978-1983 - Assistant, and later associate professor at the University of Houston Law Center.
1983-1987 - Professor of law at the University of Texas Law School in Austin.
1987-1995 - Law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
1992-1993 - Visiting professor at Harvard Law School.
1995-2012 - Professor at Harvard Law School.
2007 - Warren writes an article outlining her idea for a federal agency designed to protect consumers from fraudulent or misleading financial products, like mortgages and credit cards.
November 14, 2008 - Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid appoints Warren to a Congressional oversight panel overseeing the $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program.
September 17, 2010 - President Barack Obama appoints Warren as assistant to the president and special adviser to the Treasury secretary in order to launch the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
July 2011 - Due to opposition from Republicans and some Democrats, Obama declines to nominate Warren as permanent director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
August 1, 2011 - Warren steps down as a special adviser to Obama.
September 14, 2011 - Warren announces she's running for the US Senate in Massachusetts.
September 5, 2012 - Warren speaks at the Democratic National Convention.
November 6, 2012 - Wins the race for Senate in Massachusetts, defeating incumbent Scott Brown.
April 22, 2014 - Warren's memoir, "A Fighting Chance," is published.
November 13, 2014 - Reid taps Warren to join his leadership team.
December 15, 2014 - In an interview with NPR's Steve Inskeep, Warren repeats four times that she is not running for president in 2016.
June 2, 2015 - Warren writes a scathing letter to Mary Jo White, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), saying "I am disappointed by the significant gap between the promises you made during and shortly after your confirmation and your performance as SEC Chair." In a statement released in 2013, Warren said that "the SEC needs to be a tough watchdog for the American people."
February 7, 2017 - During a debate on the nomination of Jeff Sessions as US attorney general. Senate Republicans vote to rebuke Warren as she reads a letter that Coretta Scott King wrote in 1986 criticizing Sessions.
April 18, 2017 - Her book "This Fight Is Our Fight" is published.
June 5, 2017 - FCTRY, a Brooklyn-based product design company, starts a Kickstarter campaign to fund the production of Warren action figures, and surpasses its goal within hours. FCTRY says it wants to partner with Emily's List, a non-profit that promotes getting pro-choice, Democratic women elected to office.
November 27, 2017 - At an event honoring Navajo code talkers, President Donald Trump references Warren by the nickname he gave her, Pocahontas. In an interview with MSNBC, Warren remarks, "It is deeply unfortunate that the President of the United States cannot even make it through a ceremony honoring these heroes without having to throw out a racial slur. Donald Trump does this over and over thinking somehow he is going to shut me up with it. It hasn't worked in the past, it isn't going to work out in the future."
October 15, 2018 - Warren releases results of a DNA test showing she has distant Native American ancestry, with analysis performed by Carlos Bustamante, a professor of genetics at Stanford University and adviser to Ancestry and 23 and Me. The Cherokee Nation issues a statement in response to the test, criticizing Warren for using DNA to claim tribal heritage.
November 6, 2018 - Is re-elected for a second term in the US Senate.
December 31, 2018 - Announces that she is forming a presidential exploratory committee.
January 31, 2019 - The Intercept reportsthat Warren reached out to Cherokee leaders and apologized in the wake of the DNA testing.
February 4, 2019 - Warren tells CNN she has apologized to Cherokee leaders for sparking "confusion" by her use of a DNA test to prove Native American ancestry, adding that she didn't mean to cause any "harm" to the tribe by citing her heritage "decades ago."

February 5, 2019 - The Washington Post reports Warren listed her race as "American Indian" on a State Bar of Texas registration card in 1986.
February 9, 2019 - Warren officially launches her 2020 presidential campaign at a rally in Lawrence, Massachusetts.
 

Volimar

volunteer forum janitor
Member
Oct 25, 2017
38,453
Context of DMR endorsements:



Only 1 correctly predicted victory since 1988 (Clinton 2016), which was ultimately more like a tie.

source.gif


Endorsements aren't predictions.

For the record, since 1996 when I became eligible to vote, my personally endorsed candidate won in 96, lost in 2000, lost in 2004, won in 2008, won in 2012, and lost in 2016. So I'm not exactly batting a thousand either.
 

danm999

Member
Oct 29, 2017
17,125
Sydney
Endorsing only one (1) candidate?

Lmao, ok Des Moines Register, very cute. Get back to us when you're ready to join the galaxy brain club of endorsing multiple candidates so nobody gets mad at you.
 

Volimar

volunteer forum janitor
Member
Oct 25, 2017
38,453
Was lazy and didn't phrase that properly.

Since 1988, only one candidate they have endorsed ended up winning the Iowa caucus, hence letting us know how much weight this endorsement actually has.

Better?


More accurate at least. I don't see why it matters how often they picked the winner. They're putting the weight of their publication behind a candidate, not predicting a win.
 
Oct 25, 2017
4,964
The senior U.S. senator from Massachusetts is not the radical some perceive her to be. She was a registered Republican until 1996. She is a capitalist. "I love what markets can do," she said. "They are what make us rich, they are what create opportunity."

Straight from the horses mouth!
 

Zelas

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
6,020

seat

Banned
Mar 14, 2018
756
More accurate at least. I don't see why it matters how often they picked the winner. They're putting the weight of their publication behind a candidate, not predicting a win.

It shows their endorsement carries little weight and may even be detrimental to the candidate since the candidates they endorse almost never win.
 

Deleted member 2426

user requested account closure
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
2,988
More accurate at least. I don't see why it matters how often they picked the winner. They're putting the weight of their publication behind a candidate, not predicting a win.

Sure, but there's some people who will argue that an endorsement means the candidate will gain in the polls, which can translate into a win. In 2016, Clinton actually went down in the polls after the endorsement (not saying it was thanks to the endorsement of course, but it didn't really change things for her positively)
 

Fat4all

Woke up, got a money tag, swears a lot
Member
Oct 25, 2017
92,758
here
everyone ignoring my rock solid 'des moines' joke straight from the 50s 😩
 

KtotheRoc

One Winged Slayer
Member
Oct 27, 2017
56,642
I like her a lot, but I don't know if she can pull herself out from her current position in the polls.
 

bluexy

Comics Enabler & Freelance Games Journalist
Verified
Oct 25, 2017
14,517
solid endorsement. would have been very easy for them to endorse Biden or Buttigieg given recent polling. happy to see Warren getting it instead, she's earned it.
 

papermoon

The Fallen
Oct 27, 2017
1,907
Website
"She is a thinker, a policy wonk and a hard worker," the board wrote in its endorsement. "She remembers her own family's struggles to make ends meet and her own desperation as a working mother needing child care. She cares about people, and she will use her seemingly endless energy and passion to fight for them.


reminder:
Warren is not a career politician, and she is a former teacher then professor and lawyer. She helped start the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in the Obama administrations.
her FIRST public office was the Senate in 2012.

What!? :D I did not expect them to endorse her.
Here's the text of the DMR endorsement.

But at this moment, our country needs more. We need a president who can work the levers of government to translate ideas into signed laws and effective regulations. We need a president committed to bringing our troops home from open-ended foreign entanglements. We need a president who understands that the American dream itself is at risk: the ideal that someone who works hard and plays by the rules can get ahead, and that their children will do even better. With Warren, the Oval Office will be occupied by someone who has made rebuilding the middle class her life's work.

These tall tasks will require resilience and courage in the face of inevitable attacks from the GOP — both during the campaign and while in office.

Warren has proven she is tough and fearless.
Warren's competence, respect for others and status as the nation's first female president would be a fitting response to the ignorance, sexism and xenophobia of the Trump Oval Office.

She is a thinker, a policy wonk and a hard worker. She remembers her own family's struggles to make ends meet and her own desperation as a working mother needing child care.

She cares about people, and she will use her seemingly endless energy and passion to fight for them.

At this moment, when the very fabric of American life is at stake, Elizabeth Warren is the president this nation needs.