This Is Not The America We Were Promised
Do We Really Believe the Biden Camp Never Responded to This Offer From...
Do We Have Another Instance Where the Secret Service Can't Get Its Story...
The True Threat To Democracy Is Democrats, All Of Them
Viewers Debate If They Should Keep Watching David Muir, and PBS...Questions Election Integ...
Words and Deeds
Joe Biden, 20 Years Ago, Blocked the Potential First Black Female on the...
'Candygram for Hezbollah, Candygram for Hezbollah….'
Trump's Republican Party Is the 'Big Tent' Party
The Real Relationship Between Trump-Style Tariffs and Economic Growth
We Are Letting Others Control Our Devices and Thus Our Lives
Epistemology Politicized
Leaving the Left: A Black Woman’s Escape from the Progressive Abyss
Virginia Democrat Silent As Biden-Harris Border Crisis Creeps Into State
What Did 'Broadband Czar' Harris Do With the $40 Billion Appropriated for Internet?
Tipsheet

Warren: Yeah, “We Ended Up With a Little Bit of Debt”

As the Boston Globe points out, it’s not uncommon for candidates running for high federal office to finish their campaigns in the red. But come on:

Elizabeth Warren – who knows a thing or two about debt and bankruptcy – disclosed today that she has a surprising debt of her own to pay down.

Even after raising a whopping $42 million for her Senate race this year - more than any other congressional candidate in the country – the senator-elect from Massachusetts told her supporters that her campaign does not have enough cash to pay its bills.

In an e-mail, the Harvard Law professor - considered one of the nation’s preeminent scholars of American debt - asked for donations to help her wash away the red ink.

Warren did not say how much debt she needs to pay down, but blamed the shortfall in part on the thousands of volunteers who flocked to her campaign, saying “that meant even more last-minute coffee and pizza.”

“One of the results of our embarrassment of riches was, well I’ll come out and say it - we ended up with a little bit of debt,” Warren wrote. “Everyone, we need a little more money to pay off our final bills. Can you help one more time?”

It is not unusual for campaigns – even successful, well-funded campaigns – to end in debt. But the disclosure is notable for Warren because she raised such staggering sums in her race against Senator Scott Brown and has spent her career studying the roots of debt in American families and businesses.

“I know this was the most expensive Senate race in the country,” Warren wrote. “And I know that we’ve sent you a bazillion e-mails asking for money over the past year. I’m sure you expected them to all end once the votes were counted - and yes, that’s what I thought too. Right now, I’d rather be writing about filibuster reform and banking regulation . But we still have a little more to do to wrap things up. Can you help one more time to finish 2012 strong?”

Advertisement

In other words, Ms. Warren burned through $42 million over the course of the last election cycle, and now finds herself in the uncomfortable position of harassing supporters for even more money. Typical. I can’t wait to see how she handles taxpayer dollars over the next six (interminable) years, even though I have a pretty good idea what that money will be going towards.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement