Houston Chronicle

Clinton, Warren join forces

Senator puts charge into campaign event with pointed attack

- By Michael A. Memoli

Elizabeth Warren’s endorsemen­t of Hillary Clinton symbolical­ly unifies Democrats behind the presumptiv­e nominee and gives voters a preview of what could be a historic joint ticket.

CINCINNATI — Hillary Clinton had Elizabeth Warren’s endorsemen­t. Monday, Clinton sought to channel some of Warren’s energy.

The first combined campaign appearance of the party’s presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee and one of its most ardent progressiv­e voices at this city’s restored Art Deco train station proved electric, producing a deafening roar as they took the stage before a capacity crowd of more than 2,000. Clinton lauded the “terrific” and “formidable” Warren for articulati­ng what’s at stake in the campaign against Donald Trump.

“She exposes him for what he is — temperamen­tally unfit and unqualifie­d to be president of the United States,” Clinton said. “And I must say, I do just love to see how she gets under Donald Trump’s thin skin.”

Whether Warren, considered a vice-presidenti­al contender, ends up on the ticket, she has mastered one aspect of the job: attack dog.

She eviscerate­d Trump as a “thin-skinned bully who’s driven by greed and hate,” and even went after his most famous accessory.

“You want to see goofy? Look at him in that hat,” she said, pushing back on Trump’s Twitter habit of describing her as “goofy.”

Warren said Trump’s response to the economic tumult triggered by Britain’s vote to leave the European Union — he suggested it would benefit Trump enterprise­s such as his golf course in Scotland — was consistent with a career of exploiting poor and working-class Americans for personal gain.

“What kind of a man roots for people to lose their jobs, to lose their homes, to lose their life’s savings?” she said. “I will tell you what kind of a man — a small, insecure money-grubber who fights for no one but himself.”

Warren provided an invaluable boost to Clinton’s campaign with a full-throated endorsemen­t

just days after Clinton secured the Democratic nomination, within hours of President Barack Obama doing the same though Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders had not yet — and still has not — exited the race.

Democrats say party unity is far less of a concern for them than it is for Republican­s, as some GOP elected officials offer only pro-forma statements of support for Trump. But it was clear Monday that they see work to do.

Speaking before Warren and Clinton, Ohio state Rep. Alicia Reece, a member of the Democratic National Committee’s platform drafting panel, warned that Trump’s only path to the White House was to stoke division.

“It’s time for the Democratic Party to unite!” she said.

Michelle Robenalt of Cincinnati waited in line for more than an hour on a steamy Monday morning — to see Warren, not Clinton, she said.

A Sanders supporter “from the beginning,” Robenalt said Warren’s voice carried weight with her and could help move her closer to Clinton.

“I would never vote for Trump,” she said, noting she and her husband had been active volunteers and supporters of Obama’s two campaigns. “I will vote for the Democratic candidate. It’s more how hard will I work and spend time and money behind her versus what I would have been willing to do for Bernie.”

Voter attitudes like Robenalt’s made Warren’s enthusiast­ic embrace of Clinton all the more important.

“Hillary has brains, she has guts, she has thick skin and steady hands,” Warren said. “But most of all, she has a good heart. And that’s what America needs, and that’s why I’m with her.”

 ?? Melina Mara / Washington Post ?? Hillary Clinton draws some energy from the “formidable” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., during a rally Monday at the Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal.
Melina Mara / Washington Post Hillary Clinton draws some energy from the “formidable” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., during a rally Monday at the Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal.

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