KOMMONSENTSJANE – WARREN FACES NEW SCRUTINY!

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Warren, Sanders allies scramble to find her an exit ramp.

DETROIT —Top surrogates and allies of Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders are discussing ways for their two camps to unite and push a common liberal agenda, with the expectation that Warren is likely to leave the presidential campaign soon, according to two people familiar with the talks.

The conversations, which are in an early phase, largely involve members of Congress who back Sanders (I-Vt.) reaching out to those in Warren’s camp to explore the prospect that Warren (D-Mass.) might endorse him. They are also appealing to Warren’s supporters to switch their allegiance to Sanders, according two people with direct knowledge of the conversations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss delicate discussions that are supposed to be confidential.
Warren associates and the camp of former vice president Joe Biden also had talks about a potential endorsement if she drops out, according to two people familiar with the conversations.

The whirlwind of activity reflects the rapid changes in a Democratic primary that is still very much in transition. As late as Tuesday, many Warren allies believed she would stay in the race until the Democratic convention, despite her poor showing to date in the primaries, in hopes of retaining her clout and influencing the eventual nominee.

But after Warren’s bleak performance in the Super Tuesday primaries, her associates, as well as those of Sanders and Biden, say she is now looking for the best way to step aside. There is no certainty she will endorse Sanders or anyone else, but the talks reflect the growing pressure on the senator from Massachusetts to withdraw.
Warren campaign manager Roger Lau suggested Wednesday she was considering that. “Last night, we fell well short of viability goals and projections, and we are disappointed in the results,” he wrote to campaign staffers in a note obtained by The Washington Post. “We are going to announce shortly that Elizabeth is talking to the team to assess the path forward.”

Warren and Sanders spoke by phone Wednesday, Sanders told reporters in Vermont. “She has not made any decisions as of this point,” he said. “It is important for all of us, certainly me, who has known Elizabeth Warren for many, many years, to respect the time and the space she needs to make a decision.”

“She has run a strong campaign,” Sanders said. “She will make her own decision in her own time.”

Liberal groups that endorsed Sanders are now planning a conference call for Thursday, in part to discuss the impact of Warren’s candidacy on the race and the potential effect of a withdrawal.

Winning the backing of Warren, who began the race as a leader of the party’s liberal wing but later positioned herself as a uniter, would be a coup for either Sanders or Biden.

For Sanders, it could help unify the liberal faction and signal that he is very much still in the race; for Biden, it would extend the recent rush of party leaders who have rallied around him.

Warren’s status is a major wild card in a primary that appears to be settling into a protracted battle between Biden and Sanders. Other candidates with no clear path to the nomination have dropped out, but her aides say privately they had hoped Warren would stay in until the next Democratic debate, on March 15.

Warren may be the only female candidate to qualify for that debate, and her departure would leave Democrats essentially deciding between two white men in their late 70s — after the party’s last two presidential nominees were a black man and a white woman.

Her debate skills have been a high point of her campaign, showcasing her mastery of policy and her intellectual deftness — particularly in the Las Vegas debate, when she verbally disassembled former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg, arguably ending his campaign.

And despite a string of disappointing finishes in the early primary states, Warren continued to draw thousands of people to her rallies, including recent events in Seattle, Denver, Houston and Detroit.

Money, too, has continued to flow. Her campaign raised $29 million in February, compared with Biden’s $18 million haul for that month. Warren also has the support of a super PAC that’s been airing $14 million worth of TV ads for her.

But Tuesday’s results, which were significantly worse than her campaign had projected, may have changed the equation. Early returns showed her capturing just 28 of the 1,338 delegates at stake, although that number could grow as California continues to tabulate its numbers.

She finished third in her home state of Massachusetts and fourth in Oklahoma, where she grew up. She reached the 15 percent statewide threshold, which is necessary to win significant numbers of delegates, in only five of the 14 states that voted Tuesday.

On Tuesday, when Warren voted in her home precinct — at an elementary school in Cambridge — young students dropped red and white rose petals from their second-floor window as she walked by. They pressed against windows to catch a glimpse of her, and she waved at them after voting.

But Warren has also been facing mounting pressure from liberal activists and Sanders supporters to depart the race. They argue that she is hurting the senator from Vermont by dividing the party’s liberal faction, while Democratic centrists have coalesced behind Biden. Sanders also fell below expectations Tuesday, as Biden rolled up big margins.

As it became clearer Wednesday that Warren was seriously considering leaving the race, liberal groups became increasingly magnanimous.

And in the end:

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kommonsentsjane

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About kommonsentsjane

Enjoys sports and all kinds of music, especially dance music. Playing the keyboard and piano are favorites. Family and friends are very important.
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