Elizabeth Warren CNN town hall

By Veronica Rocha and Brian Ries, CNN

Updated 11:11 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019
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10:30 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren: College admissions scandal highlights wealthy Americans playing by a different set of rules

Sen. Elizabeth Warren touched tonight on the college admissions scandal, which she said "just shows one more time that some folks who are rich just think they don't have to play by the same set of rules as anyone else.

Here's her full answer:

"You know, this scandal just shows one more time that some folks who are rich just think they don't have to play by the same set of rules as anyone else and that they can use their money to do whatever it is in terms of buying influence. We have to put a stop to that, and it's not just -- it's everywhere now. We're here talking about a presidential primary. It's everywhere in Washington."

Some background: Federal prosecutors say 50 people took part in a scheme that involved either cheating on standardized tests or bribing college coaches and school officials to accept students as college athletes -- even if the student had never played that sport.

Actresses Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman are among the dozens of parents facing federal charges. Others charged include nine coaches at elite schools; two SAT/ACT administrators; an exam proctor; a college administrator; and a CEO who admitted he wanted to help the wealthiest families get their kids into elite colleges.

Watch the moment:

10:23 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren: Mueller investigation must be protected and his report made public

Asked about her position on the impeachment of President Trump, Sen. Elizabeth Warren didn't directly answer. Instead, she talked about protecting special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election, making sure his report is made public and then deciding, as a country, what we should do about it.

She said:

"So we have a report that is due from the special prosecutor any day now. Understand that that investigation from Mr. Mueller has produced already -- I believe it's 34 indictments or guilty pleas. This is a serious investigation. We need to protect him in finishing that report, and then that report needs to be made public to the American people. When we get it, we will know what to do with it."
10:03 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

In emotional story, Warren describes how her parents' financial struggles formed her beliefs

Elizabeth Warren said her childhood and parents' struggle were like millions of Americans.

Her father had a serious heart attack and was unable to get back to work, so her 50-year-old mother was forced to take on a minimum wage job to support the family, she said.

Things were tough, and they lost the family station wagon. Warren recalled her mother "saying we will not lose this house."

"She was 50-years-old. She had never worked outside the home. She was truly terrified," she said.

Warren's mother, she said, managed to save their family home with her minimum wage job.

"For a long time I used to think that was just a story about my mother. How when you get scared you reach down and you find what you have to find and you bring it and then years later I came to understand that it's the story of millions of Americans who, it doesn't matter if you're scared, when you got to do something to take care of the people you love, you reach down and you find it and you pull it up," she said.

10:00 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren calls for abolishing the Electoral College and moving to a national popular vote

From CNN's Gregory Krieg:

Sen. Elizabeth Warren for the first time on Monday night said that she would back a plan to do away with the Electoral College.

The process, she said, effectively disenfranchises voters in states dominated by one of the two parties.

“Come a general election, presidential candidates don’t come to places like Mississippi, they also don’t come to places like California or Massachusetts, because we’re not the battleground states,” Warren said, as members in the audience clapped and nodded their heads.

In 2016, Hillary Clinton defeated President Donald Trump by nearly 3 million votes by running up big leads in Democratic strongholds. But she narrowly lost swing states like Wisconsin, Michigan and Florida, which handed Trump a clear victory on the electoral map.

“My view is that every vote matters,” Warren said as the applause in Jackson began to build into an ovation, “and the way we can make that happen is that we can have national voting and that means get rid of the electoral college -- and every vote counts.”

10:00 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Here's what Warren said when she was asked about her heritage assertions

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren was asked tonight about her longstanding assertions of having Native American heritage, specifically if it "was tone deaf and indicative of a lack of presidential tact."

Warren responded that she grew up in Oklahoma, and "learned about my family from my family."

"Based on that," Warren said, "that's who I am."

But she then added that she's been to nearly three dozen town halls -- and people she speaks with care more, she suggested, "about what's happening to their lives every single day and what touches them like housing and education and health care.

Sh"e added, "That's why I'm in this fight and I'm going to stay in this fight and I te'll l you this. I'm going to fight it from the heart every inch of the way. I'll do my best."

About those heritage claims: Her assertions have dogged her political career and provided fodder for attacks from President Trump. Her use of DNA testing to confirm her limited Native roots last year was met with fierce criticism from some Native American groups.

Before Warren announced her presidential bid in January, she had been also weighed down by new questions over her past claims to Native American heritage. The Washington Post reported that Warren wrote in 1986 that her race was "American Indian" in a Texas state bar registration card, adding to the list of instances in which the senator self-identified this way.

The disclosure prompted yet another public apology from Warren.

9:52 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren on housing: "Having a decent and safe place to live should be a basic human right"

From CNN's Gregory Krieg:

Sen. Elizabeth Warren talked up her proposal to radically reinvest in public housing while addressing past predatory lending and selling practices that kept African-American families out of homes.

“In the same way that we think about health care, as a basic human right, having a decent and safe place to live should be a basic human right,” Warren said.

Last week, she introduced a proposal inspired by her own legislation, the American Housing and Economic Mobility Act.

Among its provisions are proposals that would reduce rent and more strictly regulate leasing companies.

Warren, as she has on the stump now for months, also dug into the racial wealth gap that’s was exacerbated by federal policies commonly described as “redlining.”

“This bill tackles that head on,” she said. “And it says for people who are living in formerly redlined areas there are going to be some special assistance for first-time home buyers, for people who got cheated in the run-up to the housing crash and lost their homes. Some special assistance for folks to get that first home” and begin building generational wealth.

9:41 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren on the socialist label: "I'm a supporter of markets with rules"

Elizabeth Warren recently said that she is not a Democratic Socialist and insisted she was a capitalist.

Tonight, she doubled down. "I'm a supporter of markets with rules," Warren said at the CNN town hall.

"I believe in markets and I believe in the value that we get out of markets. But it has to be markets with rules. Market without rules is theft. But a market with rules, a market with rules," she said.

There is heated debate over whether Democratic candidates who identify as socialists (or democratic socialists or social democrats, etc.) risk alienating voters outside certain deep blue regions.

9:39 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren talks through "different pathways" towards Medicare for All

From CNN's Liz Stark

Asked about “Medicare for All” at CNN’s town hall Monday night, Sen. Elizabeth Warren suggested that she was open to multiple paths to universal coverage.

“When we talk about Medicare for All, there are a lot of different pathways. What we’re all looking for is the lowest cost way to make sure that everybody gets covered,” Warren said.

The Massachusetts senator then voiced several ways to achieve universal coverage:

  • Lowering the age: “Some folks are talking about, let’s start lowering the age. Maybe bringing it down to 60, 55, 50. That helps cover people who are most at risk.”
  • Increasing the age: “Some people say do it the other way. Let’s bring it up from -- everybody under 30 gets covered by Medicare.”
  • Employer buy-in: “Others say let employers be able to buy into the Medicare plans.”
  • Employee buy-in: “Others say let’s let employees buy into the Medicare plans.”
  • Expanding Medicaid: “I’ve also co-sponsored other bills including expanding Medicaid as another approach that we use.”

“For me what’s key is we get everybody at the table on this,” Warren emphasized.

She later added: “But what’s really important to me about this is we never lose sight of what the center is. Because the center is about making sure that every single person in this country gets the coverage they need and that it’s at a price that they can afford.”

9:32 p.m. ET, March 18, 2019

Warren calls for immigration system "consistent with our values"

Sen. Elizabeth Warren was asked what she would do to "control the influx of migrants" by a town hall attendee who said she didn't feel a border wall would do it.

Warren responded:

"Let me just start where I think of our whole immigration policy, and that is, we need to have policies on immigration that are consistent with our values. We are a country that is built on our differences. That is our strength. Not our weakness."

She talked about a visit to an immigration facility near the border -- "Think of a big Amazon warehouse, only dirty and smelled bad" -- where she saw men, women and children in cages.

"That's not who we are," Warren said. "That is not the country we want to be. And an immigration system that is administered so it's not able to tell the difference between a criminal, a terrorist and a 12-year-old little girl is an immigration system that is not only not keeping us safer, it does not reflect our values."