Despite her heavy anti-Trump rhetoric, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren said yesterday she plans to root her re-election campaign in a “pro-working people” message, echoing the populist tone she rode to the Senate more than four years ago.

Warren has emerged as one of the most vocal Donald Trump foils in Washington, sparring with the president-elect on Twitter during the campaign and already making a YouTube-ready clip needling Ben Carson, Trump’s pick to lead the Department of Housing and Urban Development, during a confirmation hearing this week.

But amid a press conference touting the Obama administration’s decision to forgive millions in student loans — comfortable territory for the Cambridge Democrat — she said she doesn’t intend to restart her campaign as a solely anti-Trump effort.

“My plan is to run this as a pro-working people of America campaign,” Warren told reporters, motioning to former students who were part of a group getting $30 million in loans forgiven. “That’s what this is all about. I am here today because for four years now, I’ve been fighting for people who are trying to get an education.”

Warren, who announced her re-election intentions last week, did note she’ll continue to bring the heat on Trump. Referencing Betsy DeVos, Trump’s pick to lead the Department of Education who’ll face her own confirmation hearing next week, the senator said she’s “going to hold the next secretary of education accountable.”

“We’re going to keep fighting for loan cancellations,” Warren said.

“I realistically expect this loan forgiveness program to continue because millions of people across the country depend on it,” she added later.

“Throwing young money on the private market so banks can make as much money as they can manage to squeeze out of every student who is trying to get an education … is not the future of this country.”