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Elizabeth Warren

Monday, April 15, 2013

Lots of Hybrid Owners and Democrat Voters in Needham

Needham voted for Elizabeth Warren and owns more hybrid cars than the state average.

Needham is green and blue: That’s what we found when we compared data from the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles to the vote in the 2012 U.S. Senate race. You can see the results in the map above: Large circles suggest towns with more hybrid ownership per capita, and the red/blue color suggests which way those towns voted last year. In Needham, 29.3 of every 1,000 vehicles is a hybrid, compared to the state average of 18. Patch’s research suggests the state has a good number of what might be called “green Republican” communities. More than 40 percent of the communities where Republican Scott Brown carried the vote have an above average numbers of hybrids. The data is a nice rebuttal to the national trends of hybrid/GOP separation: …

Friday, January 4, 2013

Warren Sworn Into Senate, Says She'll Work With 'Anyone Who Will Fight for America's Families'

After her Thursday morning swearing-in ceremony, Warren told reporters she'd "work her tail off" in Washington.

  Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, who was sworn in to office on Thursday, told reporters she plans to "work her tail off" and will work with "anyone who will fight for America's families" in Washington D.C. "I am honored to have the opportunity to serve as your Senator, and I'll never stop fighting for you," she said via Twitter on Thursday morning after she was sworn in by Vice President Joe Biden in Washington D.C. Warren told reporters she was "delighted" by her committee assignments.  "I'm going to be on the Banking Committee which is something I really wanted to do," Warren told Fox25. "And I'm going to be on the HELP Committee which means we deal with health, education, labor, pensions… really the economics of working families…

FedUp

10:48 pm on Saturday, January 5, 2013

"Our spending should reflect our values," I guess that is why she flew first class to Washington for her swearing in. She is only "one of the people" when she is looking for votes. Then again, even if a cardboard box had a "D" on it, it would have been elected. Sad but very true.   more ›

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Elizabeth Warren Reportedly Chosen For Seat On Key Senate Banking Committee

Incoming Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren will take office in January.

Massachusetts Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren has been chosen for a seat on the Senate's Banking Committee, according to the Huffington Post, which cited several sources.  Warren, a Democrat who helped create the federal government's Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, defeated incumbent Republican Senator Scott Brown in the November election. Prior to being elected, Warren worked as a consumer advocated and was considered to become the head of the CFPB.  What do you think of Warren being chosen for the Banking Committee? Share your comments in the box below.

roger weinreb

3:14 pm on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Nice to have friends in high places.   more ›

Monday, November 19, 2012

Warren Takes Aim at Filibusters

The senator-elect said voters “want fewer closed-door roadblocks and more public votes on legislation that could improve their lives.”

Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren said she and other newly elected senators will work to reform the filibuster process on day one. Warren, in a blog post on the Huffington Post, said the current filibuster system impedes open debate and paralyzes progress. She said she saw it firsthand at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and heard from voters during the campaign that they “want fewer closed-door roadblocks and more public votes on legislation that could improve their lives.” Warren wrote: On the first day of the new session in January, the senators will have a unique opportunity to change the filibuster rule with a majority vote, rather than the normal two-thirds vote. The change can be modest: If someone objects to a bill or a …

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

TELL US: What Should Scott Brown Do Next?

U.S. Senator Scott Brown will leave office in January. What should he do next?

U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, a Republican, was defeated Tuesday by first time candidate Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat. Warren will take office as the state's junior senator in January. She'll replace Brown, who was elected in a special election in January 2010 when he defeated Democrat Martha Coakley. In his concession speech on Tuesday night, Brown told his supporters that "defeat is only temporary." As soon as the race was called, analysts began suggesting Brown may run for Massachusetts governor in 2014 or would seek the state's other U.S. Senate seat if Senator John Kerry is named Secretary of State under President Barack Obama in his second term. What should Brown do next? Tell us in the comments.

Lar01

11:04 am on Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Well, although this didn't ask about the President, since Katie brought it up, Scott Brown has far more experience than Mr. Obama had prior to running for President. That said, I hope that he runs for Senate again, calls himself an Independent (since someone above was right; Brown is neither Republican nor Democrat), and that someone more in the mold of Bill Weld runs for Governor. In my opinion…   more ›

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Elizabeth Warren Wins U.S. Senate Seat in Massachusetts

Democrat Elizabeth Warren beat incumbent candidate Scott Brown in the Massachusetts U.S. Senate race.

Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren has beaten incumbent Republican candidate Scott Brown for a seat on the U.S. Senate, according to the Associated Press. Warren is won by a margin of eight percentage points, 54 percent to 46 percent, making her the first female senator elected in Massachusetts.  An estatic Warren addressed a crowd of hundreds of excited supporters at the Copley Fairmont Plaza hotel in Boston on Tuesday night. "We did what everyone thought was impossible," she said. "We taught a scrappy, first-time candidate how to win." "You took on the powerful Wall Street banks and let them know that you want a Senator out there fighting for the middle class all of the time," she said. "And despite the odds, you elected the first …

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TMHSGrad

10:16 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012

Typical liberal - always having to tell people how they should live their lives.   more ›

Massachusetts Election Results 2012

How might the U.S. Senate race between Scott Brown and Elizabeth Warren affect the presidential race—and vice-versa? Find out what local politicos think, and check here late for election results. Connect with us on Twitter at #PatchElections.

Check back at your local Patch all day for live election updates. While Massachusetts is expected to go to Barack Obama over Mitt Romney in the race for President of the United States, influential Massachusetts political insiders have varying opinions on how the U.S. Senate race between Scott Brown and Elizabeth Warren will affect the presidential race, and vice versa. According to results from the Blue Commonwealth and Red Commonwealth surveys sent out last week and compiled today, Monday, 60 percent of the 23 local Republicans who responded think that the Brown-Warren race will result a modest increase in votes for Romney, while 40 percent of the 20 local Democrats who responded think the U.S. Senate race will increase Obama's total of …

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Avon Barksdale

4:27 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012

I only wish that "Lunt" were one of them.   more ›

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Warren Up in Polls, Herald Endorses Brown: Who's Winning?

Who do you think has the momentum coming into these final days of the election campaign?

Democrat Elizabeth Warren is up by five points over incumbent Republican Sen. Scott Brown in the latest WBUR/MassINC poll of the U.S. Senate race in Massachusetts. That's a near-total reversal of the last WBUR poll, which on Oct. 9 (right after the first presidential debate) had Brown up by four points. In fact, Warren has been trending upward in most recent polling. The New York Times' FiveThirtyEight blog has Warren up by four in an average of recent polls. The blog, which uses advanced statistical modeling akin to baseball sabermetrics (think Moneyball) gives Warren an 89 percent chance of winning the election. But Brown's got some significant energy on his side as well. He's been barnstorming the state with political luminaries like …

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Sonny Beaches

3:17 pm on Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Patrick H can you say misogynist ?   more ›

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Who Won Latest Debate: Scott Brown or Elizabeth Warren?

Held in Springfield, this debate focused more on issues, less on personal attacks.

  Vital issues core to this race for the U.S. Senate — taxes, healthcare, soaring higher education costs, abortion, insurance coverage of contraception — were the focus of last night's debate between Sen. Scott Brown and challenger Elizabeth Warren. And, of course, there were different views of which candidate accomplished the most in this penultimate debate. The final debate between them is scheduled for Oct. 30. Who do you think 'won' last night's debate? Tell us in the comments section below.

Carolyn A. Gritter

1:51 pm on Saturday, October 13, 2012

Mr. Napoli: When George W. Bush took office in 2001, the average price of regular gas was $1.45 a gallon. By June 2008, the price per gallon had risen to $4.05. By the end of his presidency, prices had fallen to $1.69, as prices fell with the tanking global economy. Surely you can agree that a global financial crisis is too high a price to pay for cheap gas. Still think oil-friendly presidents …   more ›

Monday, October 8, 2012

Letter: Needham Family Shares Reasons They Support Elizabeth Warren

This letter was submitted by a Needham resident.

Our family supports Elizabeth Warren for the U.S. Senate. And here are some of the reasons why. We admire how she took action on the unexpected findings of her research on the causes of bankruptcy in American families, founding the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has already begun to protect Americans from powerful credit card companies engaging in predatory business practices. Her support of women’s health issues has been clear, strong, and reliable, not equivocated with qualifiers and maybes. We can depend on her to be a champion of women’s access to health care and to autonomy over their own bodies. We cannot imagine her agreeing to sign something like the Grover Norquist Pledge when all the possible options for dealing with…

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