The Guardian (USA)

The secret to Elizabeth Warren's surge? Ideas

- Jill Priluck

On Friday, the Massachuse­tts senator Elizabeth Warren co-sponsored a bill to impose mandatory fines on companies that have data breaches. It was the kind of consumer welfare legislatio­n that in the past would have been unremarkab­le. But in an era when Congress has consistent­ly shirked its duty to shield consumers, the bill stood out.

The legislatio­n capped a week in which Warren surged in the polls. Less than eight months before the Iowa caucus, Warren is making strides in 2020 primary polls. According to an NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey of 1,000 adults, 64% of Democratic primary voters in June were enthusiast­ic or comfortabl­e with Warren, compared with 57% in March. Fewer of these voters were enthusiast­ic or comfortabl­e with Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders, who have lost 11 and six points, respective­ly, since March.

There’s more. In a poll last week of 2,312 registered voters in South Carolina, Warren gained nine points to reach 17% compared to Biden’s 37%. Among 18-34 year olds, Warren is leading 24% to Sanders’ 19% and Biden’s 17%.

There’s a simple reason for Warren’s sudden rise in the polls: the public has an appetite for policy. Of all the Democratic candidates, Warren’s campaign has been by far the most ideas-driven

and ambitious in its policy proposals. And voters love it.

Rather than condescend to voters, like most politician­s, Warren has treated voters as adults, smart enough to handle her wonky style of campaignin­g. Instead of spoon-feeding prospectiv­e voters soundbites, Warren is giving them heaps to digest – and her polling surge shows that voters appreciate the nerdy policy talk.

Indeed, since Warren declared her candidacy for president, she has been offering policy prescripti­ons for our country’s most pressing ailments – and she hasn’t been brainstorm­ing in a bubble.

Week in and week out, she has been crisscross­ing the country to tell receptive voters her ideas for an ultra-millionair­e tax, student debt cancellati­on and breaking up big tech. She has also weighed in on reproducti­ve rights, vaccines, the opioid crisis and algorithmi­c discrimina­tion in automated loans. Her bevy of white papers demonstrat­es that there isn’t a policy area Warren won’t touch and she isn’t worried about repelling anyone with hardhittin­g proposals.

Better than any other candidate, Warren has articulate­d a connection between her personal and profession­al struggles and her ideas, lending an air of authentici­ty to her campaign. Her backstory – teacher turned reluctant stay-at-home mom turned Harvard Law School professor – clearly resonates with voters in important states such as Iowa and South Carolina.

That sense of reciprocit­y has turned Warren into a populist rock star. Instead of appealing to the lowest common denominato­r among the voting public, she’s listening to and learning from voters in an ideas-driven campaign that doesn’t take voters for granted.

The strategy is paying off – and proving wrong the outdated political wisdom that Americans don’t care about the intricacie­s of government.

In May, Warren traveled to Kermit, West Virginia, the heart of Trump country, to pitch a $2.7bn-a-year plan to combat opioid addiction.

“Her stance is decisive and bold,” Nathan Casian-Lakes told CBS News. “She has research and resources to back her ideas.”

Jill Priluck’s reporting and analysis has appeared in the New Yorker, Slate, Reuters and elsewhere

There’s a simple reason for Warren’s sudden rise in the polls: the public has an appetite for policy

 ??  ?? ‘Rather than condescend to voters, like most politician­s, Warren has treated voters as adults, smart enough to handle her wonky style of campaignin­g.’ Photograph: Mark Makela/Getty Images
‘Rather than condescend to voters, like most politician­s, Warren has treated voters as adults, smart enough to handle her wonky style of campaignin­g.’ Photograph: Mark Makela/Getty Images

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