Current:Home > MarketsMassachusetts Democrat Elizabeth Warren seeks third term in US Senate against challenger John Deaton -EverVision Finance
Massachusetts Democrat Elizabeth Warren seeks third term in US Senate against challenger John Deaton
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-08 02:54:27
Follow live: Updates from AP’s coverage of the presidential election.
BOSTON (AP) — Democratic U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren is hoping to brush back a challenge from Republican John Deaton on Tuesday as she seeks a third term representing Massachusetts.
Deaton, an attorney who moved to the state from Rhode Island earlier this year, tried to portray the former Harvard Law School professor as out of touch with ordinary Bay State residents.
Warren cast herself as a champion for an embattled middle class and a critic of regulations benefitting the wealthy. Warren has remained popular in the state despite coming in third in Massachusetts in her 2020 bid for president.
Warren first burst onto the national scene during the 2008 financial crisis with calls for tougher consumer safeguards, resulting in the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. She has gone on to become one of her party’s most prominent liberal voices.
“I first ran for the Senate because I saw how the system is rigged for the rich and the powerful and against everyone else and I won because Massachusetts voters know it too,” Warren said in a recent campaign ad.
In 2012, Warren defeated Republican Scott Brown, who was elected after the death of longtime Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy to serve out the last two years of his term. Six years later, she easily defeated Republican challenger Geoff Diehl.
During the campaign, Deaton likened himself to former popular moderate Republican Massachusetts governors like Bill Weld and Charlie Baker, and said he did not support former President Donald Trump’s bid for a second term.
Although the candidates have taken similar stands on some issues, they tried to sharply distinguish themselves from each other.
Both expressed sympathy for migrants entering the country but faulted each other for not doing enough to confront the country’s border crisis during a debate on WBZ-TV.
Warren said the country needs comprehensive immigration reform and said Republicans, led by Trump, have blocked progress.
“The Republican playbook is one that Donald Trump has perfected,” she said.
Deaton said Warren should have confronted the issue more directly while in office, noting that she voted against a bipartisan border bill that failed.
“It would have brought relief, it wasn’t perfect, ” Deaton said.
Warren has said the bill was already doomed and she voted against it to show she wanted changes.
Both also said they support abortion rights. Deaton criticized Warren and other Democrats for not immediately pushing to write Roe v. Wade into law after the Supreme Court overturned the earlier ruling guaranteeing abortion rights.
“They didn’t want to settle the abortion issue. They wanted it divisive. They wanted it as an election issue,” Deaton said.
Warren said it was a matter of trust. She said Deaton had said he would have voted for Neil Gorsuch, one of the justices who overturned Roe.
Warren’s popularity failed to translate when she ran for the White House in 2020. After a relatively strong start, Warren’s presidential hopes faded in part under withering criticism from Trump who taunted her over her claims of Native American heritage.
She ultimately finished third in Massachusetts, behind Joe Biden and Vermont independent U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders.
veryGood! (7568)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Wasabi, beloved on sushi, linked to really substantial boost in memory, Japanese study finds
- RHOC Alum Alexis Bellino Is Dating Shannon Beador's Ex John Janssen
- DeSantis wants to cut 1,000 jobs, but asks for $1 million to sue over Florida State’s football snub
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- A bedbug hoax is targeting foreign visitors in Athens. Now the Greek police have been called in
- Liz Cheney, focused on stopping Trump, hasn't ruled out 3rd-party presidential run
- Peruvian constitutional court orders release of former President Alberto Fujimori
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Mexican gray wolf at California zoo is recovering after leg amputation: 'Huge success story'
Ranking
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Memorials to victims of Maine’s deadliest mass shootings to be displayed at museum
- Two separate earthquakes, magnitudes 5.1 and 3.5, hit Hawaii, California; no tsunami warning
- NFL mock draft 2024: Patriots in position for QB Drake Maye, Jayden Daniels lands in Round 1
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Why Savannah Chrisley Hasn’t Visited Her Parents Todd and Julie in Prison in Weeks
- Gold Bars found in Sen. Bob Menendez's New Jersey home linked to 2013 robbery, NBC reports
- Bridgeport mayor says supporters broke law by mishandling ballots but he had nothing to do with it
Recommendation
Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
NFL mock draft 2024: Patriots in position for QB Drake Maye, Jayden Daniels lands in Round 1
Complaint seeks to halt signature gathering by group aiming to repeal Alaska’s ranked voting system
Open Society Foundations commit $50M to women and youth groups’ work on democracy
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Vice President Harris breaks nearly 200-year-old record for Senate tiebreaker votes, casts her 32nd
MLB Winter Meetings: Live free agency updates, trade rumors, Shohei Ohtani news
Tyler Goodson, Alabama man who shot to fame with S-Town podcast, killed by police during standoff, authorities say