After finishing third in Iowa, the Massachusetts senator can ill afford another setback in the New Hampshire primary
The rich, brainy city of Cambridge, Mass., reflects Elizabeth Warren’s have-a-plan approach as well as inequality issues at the center of her campaign.Advertisement
Like Warren, Sanders has campaigned as a scourge of corporate America and called for higher taxes on the country’s wealthy to pay for expanded healthcare, increased education funding and other social benefits. “He sticks to his guns,” said the 44-year-old high school science teacher, who voted for Sanders the last time over Hillary Clinton.
“I lean toward Elizabeth Warren,” McNulty said, but worries that “what would be considered forthright in a man is ‘pushy’ in a woman.”Whatever her fate, Warren has campaigned across New Hampshire in the last days of the primary contest with unremitting zeal. Unlike, or even mentioned them by name in her remarks, calling instead for the party unity that seems more elusive by the day.
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