TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「@elizabethwarren has set herself apart in a crowded Democratic field by offering more than a dozen complex policy proposals designed to address an array of problems, from unaffordable housing and child care to the burden of student debt. Her anticorruption initiative would target the Washington swamp, and her anti­trust measures would transform Silicon Valley. On May 8 she unveiled a $100 billion plan to fight the opioid crisis. This flurry of white papers, often rendered in fine detail, appears to suggest a technocratic approach to governing. But in fact, her ­vision, taken as a whole, is closer to a populist political revolution, writes @sweetwards. Warren trails front runner Joe Biden. She doesn’t have the die-hard base that Bernie Sanders built in 2016, and her campaign may be haunted by the specter of Hillary Clinton’s failure. But the first votes in the 2020 primaries will not be cast for nine months. So, Warren, 69, is committed to running what she describes as “a different kind of campaign”—­offering a more unapologetically liberal agenda than any presidential candidate in recent memory. “I want to fix the systems in this country so they work for Americans, not just for giant corporations or Big Pharma or the Goldman Sachs guys,” she says. “That’s not just my political career. That my whole life’s work.” Read this week's cover story at the link in bio. Photograph by @kristaschlueter for TIME」5月9日 21時14分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 5月9日 21時14分


@elizabethwarren has set herself apart in a crowded Democratic field by offering more than a dozen complex policy proposals designed to address an array of problems, from unaffordable housing and child care to the burden of student debt. Her anticorruption initiative would target the Washington swamp, and her anti­trust measures would transform Silicon Valley. On May 8 she unveiled a $100 billion plan to fight the opioid crisis. This flurry of white papers, often rendered in fine detail, appears to suggest a technocratic approach to governing. But in fact, her ­vision, taken as a whole, is closer to a populist political revolution, writes @sweetwards. Warren trails front runner Joe Biden. She doesn’t have the die-hard base that Bernie Sanders built in 2016, and her campaign may be haunted by the specter of Hillary Clinton’s failure. But the first votes in the 2020 primaries will not be cast for nine months. So, Warren, 69, is committed to running what she describes as “a different kind of campaign”—­offering a more unapologetically liberal agenda than any presidential candidate in recent memory. “I want to fix the systems in this country so they work for Americans, not just for giant corporations or Big Pharma or the Goldman Sachs guys,” she says. “That’s not just my political career. That my whole life’s work.” Read this week's cover story at the link in bio. Photograph by @kristaschlueter for TIME


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