Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Robert David SullivanFebruary 10, 2015
Some Democrats in Iowa are eager for the chance to be disappointed and disillusioned by a Warren presidency.

The Washington Post’s Robert Costa has a great report from Iowa that undercuts its own headline: “Democrats suffering from Clinton fatigue say they’re ready for Warren.” Costa talks with 13 Democrats gathered at the Ames Public Library in support of Elizabeth Warren, the Democratic senator from Massachusetts who has not expressed interest in running for president.

The story begins with some grousing about the dynastic aspect of Hillary Clinton running for president (“I’m utterly tired, tired of the Clintons”), but then it swerves into a poignant look at disenchantment with President Barack Obama. One 74-year-old recalls attending Obama rallies in 2008 and, “raising his arms in exasperation,” asks, “What happened?”

A 57-year-old botanist has the answer: “Should have done single-payer health care, should have done socialized medicine, should have taken on the banks.”

Should have “done” socialized medicine. The Clinton campaign must be praying that this naïvete is typical of the draft-Warren movement. If the typical supporter of another potential challenger from the left, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, also believes that Obama could have gotten something closer to single-payer health care through Congress, Clinton can rest easy about swatting away opposition in Iowa and New Hampshire. She may even plead for Vice President Joe Biden to run so she’ll get some halfway-challenging debate practice.

There is a defensible argument that Obama—a keen thinker, skilled orator, and someone with the inclination to work with members of the opposite party to build a consensus—would have better served the country by staying in the Senate for a couple of decades, building popular support for such ideas as universal health care and free community colleges, instead of further polarizing the country as president. But by the same reasoning, Warren and Sanders should stay put in the Senate.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

A man carries a wounded girl after an explosion in downtown Tehran amid Israel's three-day campaign of strikes against Iran, Sunday, June 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Morteza Zangene/ISNA)
In judging the morality of an act of war, an easy ask is always: “Was the belligerent party left with no other recourse?” That does not appear to be true in this case.
Kevin ClarkeJune 17, 2025
The patron saint of 'America' is Edmund Campion, S.J.—for several different reasons.
James T. KeaneJune 17, 2025
“The many actions of protest throughout the country reflect the moral sentiments of many Americans that enforcement alone cannot be the solution to addressing our nation’s immigration challenges,” Archbishop Timothy Broglio said in a June 16 statement.
Pope Leo XIV will bring back the tradition of the pope spending two weeks of the summer at Castel Gandolfo, the papal summer residence.