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Will Warren’s rage against the rich win over 2020 voters? O

‘Native Indian’ controvers­y around Democrat’s identity still lingers

- BY JOSH WOOD

n a cold, blustery January day in 1912, immigrant women walked out of the Everett Mill in the Massachuse­tts factory town of Lawrence demanding higher wages and better working conditions. Mill owners and city government responded in a swift and heavy-handed manner; local militias and police forces were called to the streets. Protesters died. Many more were arrested.

On a cold, blustery February day 117 years later, the Massachuse­tts senator Elizabeth Warren stood in front of Everett Mill to announce her candidacy for president of the United States, channellin­g the spirit of those women as she told her supporters that they were in a fight for their lives against a rigged system that favours the rich and powerful.

“These workers — led by women — didn’t have much. Not even a common language. Neverthele­ss, they persisted,” she said. “The story of Lawrence is about how real change happens in America. It’s a story about power — our power — when we fight together.”

For Warren, who grew up in an economical­ly struggling Oklahoma household and who first rose to mainstream prominence by handing out practical financial advice to American families, the word “fight” is central to her platform and political ethos — it was a word peppered throughout her speech.

But on Saturday, she made clear that hers was not just a fight against President Donald Trump, but against a system she described as one where the rich, privileged and powerful oppress the rest of the country.

“The man in the White House is not the cause of what is broken, he is just the latest — and most extreme — symptom of what’s gone wrong in America, a product of a rigged system that props up the rich and the powerful and kicks dirt on everyone else,” she said. “So once he’s gone, we can’t pretend that all of this never happened.”

Sebastian Brown, 31, moved to Lawrence five years ago. While he had yet to choose a candidate to support, he was excited by Warren’s message and was happy Warren chose the town as the site of her announceme­nt.

“This is a working class city. And I think her — and Bernie [Sanders] — are running on platforms that speak to the working class and how they’re being [exploited] by the rich and powerful,” he said. “And I think she’s a great messenger for it.”

Repeated apologies

While there was optimism about Warren’s candidacy at her rally, she enters an already crowded Democratic field amid renewed controvers­y over her past identifica­tion as Native American. For years now — since even before he was president — Trump has needled Warren on the issue, calling her “Pocahontas”. He and others accuse Warren of falsely presenting herself as Native American to gain unfair advantages.

The controvers­y was reignited last week when the Washington Post published Warren’s 1986 registrati­on card for the Texas State Bar. In it, she listed “American Indian” as her race.

Warren has now apologised repeatedly for identifyin­g as Native American, saying in recent days that she “should have been more mindful of the distinctio­n with tribal citizenshi­p and tribal sovereignt­y”.

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