Even though she has adamantly stated that she is “not running for president” it will only a matter of time before Elizabeth Warren’s ego gets the best of her (as it does with all elected officials), and she begins to espouse pro-presidential campaign rhetoric.
Give it time. Give it time.While the freshman senator said “I am not running for president” four times during an interview with NPR’s “Morning Edition,” political insiders argue that Warren’s use of the present tense leaves open the possibility she might launch a 2016 campaign.
Speculation about a White House run by Warren, whose populist, anti-Wall Street rhetoric has captured the interest of many disaffected Democrats, has been circulating for months in Washington and across the country.
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Completing this poll grants you access to Shark Tank updates free of charge. You may opt out at anytime. You also agree to this site's Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.“I am not running for president.”- Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass (Fox)
Look, when the left wing, of the Democrat Party left wing, aka 300 former Obama for President staffers, comes out and signs a letter asking her run for president in 2016, and then you factor in that special ego that every politician possess, and you know now that a possible run for president is on Warren’s mind.
Now throw in the recent MoveOn.org push to draft Warren for President in Iowa and New Hampshire, and you may very well see a drastic move away from Hillary Clinton in the Democrat Party, at least with those George W. Bush-hating, anti-war, pro-love, and pro-choice lefties.Usually when liberal-fringe grassroots organizations like MoveOn.org back a particular candidate, that candidate almost always becomes the Democrat Party nominee in their respective state or federal race.
Could we see an ideological slugfest in the 2016 presidential race between fringy-left winger Elizabeth Warren, and a conservative Republican candidate like Senator Ted Cruz, Rick Perry, Marco Rubio, or even Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker?
And then there is Jeb Bush. If Bush runs and wins the GOP presidential nomination, he will have a hard time getting out the conservative base to the polls in the general election, regardless of whether he faces Clinton on Warren.
We all saw the results of the 2012 presidential election, when millions of conservatives stayed home because Mitt Romney failed to inspire and connect with them.
At this point, Bush is facing that very same fate, and even though the latest poll has Romney and Jeb leading the pack of possible GOP presidential candidates, Bush still has a big problem with his base of support.Just for fun, who do you think is the most liberal? Take the poll