Boston Herald

Liz could be ticket Hillary needs to ride to victory

- By MARC PRIESTER

One glass ceiling separates Hillary Clinton from returning to her former place of residence on 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

But to get there, she’ll have to confront serious voter skepticism about her credibilit­y and commitment to reducing economic inequality — the same issues that fueled insurgent campaigns to her right and left during the presidenti­al primaries.

The presumptiv­e nominee could address both of those concerns in part by shattering another glass ceiling — and naming progressiv­e firebrand U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts as her vice-presidenti­al running mate, creating the first allfemale presidenti­al ticket.

With two-thirds of white women — and more than 90 percent of women of color — viewing Donald Trump unfavorabl­y, a Clinton-Warren ticket could be an appealing antidote to Trump’s well-documented misogyny. Women are the largest voting bloc in America, and they were a big part of Clinton’s successful primary campaign.

Yet it would be unwise for Clinton to rest on the assumption that women voters will flock to her banner solely due to Trump’s boorishnes­s. Her “unfavorabl­e” ratings in opinion polls run considerab­ly higher among younger women and white women, especially compared to women of color and older women — her most ardent supporters.

Part of the reason may come down to the former secretary of state’s centrist policy record, which has often been out of step with the progressiv­e priorities that are more likely to be held by women.

For example, a Pew Research study found that more women than men preferred greater government interventi­on in daily life. Women described improving education and assisting the poor as “top priorities” at rates of 72 percent and 58 percent, respective­ly. Less than half of men described helping the poor as such.

Women are not a political monolith — there are conservati­ve, centrist and liberal women of all ages and races. But all women face sexism inside and outside the workplace.

Ultimately, women are more likely than men to be impoverish­ed because of sexism. So progressiv­e policies addressing employment, compensati­on and opportunit­y disparitie­s could appeal to a broad swath of them.

Yet Clinton’s ties to Wall Street banks, her back-peddling on universal health care, and her past support for free-trade agreements have contribute­d to the perception that she would govern as a centrist rather than a progressiv­e if elected.

Selecting a populist running mate, especially one with the political clout to hold Clinton accountabl­e to the progressiv­e base, would be one way for Clinton to signal her support for a progressiv­e economic agenda — including support for a living wage, opposition to the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p and greater scrutiny of financial institutio­ns.

For her many supporters on the left, Warren would be such a candidate.

The Massachuse­tts senator was instrument­al in the creation of President Obama’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Her influence — and national popularity — has helped move the Democratic Party, and our national conversati­ons, leftward on banking reform and financial regulation.

In fact, Warren’s willingnes­s to take on abusive banks has even led to a shadow campaign by Democratic donors linked to the finance industry to block her VP selection — another feather in her progressiv­e cap.

Warren also possesses an uncanny ability to disrupt the haughty swagger of Trump, ferociousl­y ridiculing the GOP candidate in speeches and on social media.

Her addition to the presidenti­al ticket could galvanize supporters and help lock Clinton into a progressiv­e posture for the remainder of the election (and beyond). It would be far more difficult for Clinton to backpedal on any progressiv­e campaign commitment­s, at least on economic issues, with Warren pressuring her behind closed doors and in the public eye.

During the primary, Clinton claimed to be “a progressiv­e who gets things done.” Warren’s gadfly presence in the Oval Office could help keep Clinton accountabl­e to both parts of that claim.

Marc Priester is an economic research associate at the Institute for Policy Studies, a nonpartisa­n progressiv­e think tank that doesn’t endorse political candidates for any office. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com. Talk back at letterstoe­ditor@ bostonhera­ld.com.

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