Warren-Sanders clash was inevitable as voting gets closer
WASHINGTON — As long as they are rivals, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders couldn’t stay friends forever.
The White House hopefuls and longtime allies have spent the past year throwing red meat to the party’s progressive base with calls for massive structural reforms to the nation’s political and economic life. The differences that existed — how quickly to transition to government-funded health care, how broadly to apply a wealth tax — were generally around the margins.
But as their he said-she said feud over whether Sanders told Warren a woman could not be elected president shows, the friendship ends as the voting begins. With the first votes of the Democratic primary just weeks away, the pair is not simply running against the rest of the field — Warren and Sanders are running against each other. And with that comes an urgent need to draw a contrast.
“Friends have fights,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the 1.7 million-member American Federation of Teachers. “Running for months and months, and with the proximity of Iowa, it’s not a surprise that there are nerves fraying.”