Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren announced an anti-corruption plan Monday, which includes requiring lawmakers to disclose their tax returns and banning fundraising activities hosted by lobbyists.

The senator from Massachusetts has highlighted her plans to "end Washington corruption" throughout her campaign, calling the Trump administration "the most corrupt of our lifetimes."

Warren is seeking to fix criminal laws to hold officials accountable, end lobbying, strengthen public integrity rules for officials to end conflicts of interest and "shut the revolving door between government and industry."

"My plan lays out the most sweeping set of anti-corruption reforms since Watergate – nearly one hundred proposals," Warren said . "The goal is simple: Take power away from the wealthy and the well-connected and put it back where it belongs – in the hands of the people."

Warren plans to enact conflict of interest laws that apply to the president and vice president, requiring them to place their businesses into a blind trust to be sold off.

"No more payoffs. No more bribes from foreign governments. No more self-dealing," Warren stated.

Additionally, anyone running for or serving in federal elected office would be required to publicly release their tax returns, "so nothing like Donald Trump's refusal to disclose his taxes can ever happen again." Government officials would not be allowed to trade individual stocks while in the office and lobbyists would not be allowed to hold government jobs.

Warren's plan would also "end lobbying as we know it," making it illegal for elected officials and government appointees to ever become lobbyists and restricting lobbyists from donating to or fundraising for political candidates.