Clinton took the stage with the progressive senator from Massachusetts, a show of Democratic unity as Republicans remain reluctant to embrace Donald Trump

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Hillary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren used their first joint appearance on the campaign trail to make a decidedly populist appeal to voters in the battleground state of Ohio, and to cast Donald Trump as a narcissist less concerned with working-class Americans than his own profitability.

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Before a raucous crowd of nearly 2,000, cheers reverberating across the half-dome of Cincinnati’s historic Union Terminal, Clinton took the stage with the senator from Massachusetts, a hero to many progressive voters. As Republicans remain reluctant to embrace Trump, it was a show of Democratic unity.

Warren laid into the presumptive GOP nominee, characterizing him with a now familiar line as a “small, insecure money-grubber who fights for no one but himself”.

“I’m here today because I’m with her,” she said, as Clinton stood by her side. “She doesn’t whine. She doesn’t run to Twitter to call her opponents fat pigs or dummies.

“Hillary Clinton will be the next president of the United States because she knows what it takes to beat a thin-skinned bully who is driven by greed and hate.”

Warren played an instrumental role in the formation of the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau. Clinton said: “No one works harder to make sure Wall Street never – never – wrecks Main Street again.”

Referring to Warren’s forceful speaking style, she added: “Some of the best TV since Elizabeth came to the Senate has been on C-Span.”

She knows what it takes to beat a thin-skinned bully who is driven by greed and hate Elizabeth Warren

Though Clinton also took aim at Trump, she focused her remarks on the economy. Detailing proposals to lift working- and middle-class incomes, she touted plans to raise the minimum wage, rein in big banks and corporations, make college debt-free, and invest in infrastructure and manufacturing.

Warren has criticized Clinton for her close ties to Wall Street and did not offer an endorsement until the Democratic primary was over. But there was no sign of any tension in Cincinnati, as she reacted enthusiastically to almost every line in Clinton’s speech – pumping her fist in the air and even jumping up and down, hands clasped.

In return, Clinton showered praise on Warren, delighting in the ease with which she has rankled Trump by giving him a taste of his own medicine in scathing speeches and attacks delivered on Twitter.

“I must say I do just love to see how she gets under Donald Trump’s thin skin,” Clinton said. “She exposes him for what he is: temperamentally unfit and totally unqualified to be president of the United States.”

Some hoped the sight of Clinton and Warren locking hands before a sign that read “Stronger Together” was a preview of the Democratic ticket this fall. Although it remains unlikely that Warren will be Clinton’s vice-presidential pick, she has been featured on a short list of contenders. In the crowd, someone held up a sign that read “Girl Power”.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Hillary Clinton stands alongside Elizabeth Warren at a campaign rally in Cincinnati. Photograph: Aaron Josefczyk/Reuters

Earlier in June, Warren endorsed Clinton and paid a visit to the campaign’s Brooklyn headquarters. The senator is viewed as an asset who can help galvanize progressive voters – particularly those who supported Bernie Sanders in the primary.

Polling has shown that Sanders supporters are slowly warming to Clinton but are not yet prepared to back her overwhelmingly. An NBC News-Wall Street Journal survey found roughly 45% of Sanders supporters now hold a favorable view of Clinton. A Bloomberg Politics poll found that 55% of those who voted for Sanders planned to support Clinton.

The enthusiasm in Cincinnati was many ways redolent of a Sanders rally, the crowd’s roars often filling the room.

Warren and Clinton zeroed in on Trump’s response to Britain’s vote in favor of leaving the European Union. In a bizarre press conference in Scotland on Friday, Trump appeared to savour the moment, claiming the economic fallout from “Brexit” could boost business at his Turnberry golf resort.

“What kind of a man roots for people to lose their jobs, to lose their homes, to lose their life savings?” Warren said.

Clinton said Trump “tried to turn a global economic challenge into an infomercial”.

For Clinton, the rally was also an opportunity to assure liberals she would not abandon a progressive platform simply because the Democratic nomination has been secured.

“I got into this race because I wanted to even the odds for people who have the odds stacked against them,” she said. “This is not a time for half-measures. To build an economy that works for everyone, not just those at the top, we have got to go big and we have got to go bold.”

The message is likely to resonate in Ohio, where working-class voters hold an outsized influence. Trump, however, has also capitalized on anger among the economically disenfranchised.

Responding to the Clinton-Warren event on Monday, he referred to Warren as a “sellout” and continued to deride her as “Pocahontas”, in reference to her claim of Native American heritage.

“Elizabeth Warren is a total fraud,” Trump told NBC. “She made up her heritage … I think she’s a racist.

“I would love to compete with her,” he added, vowing to “speak very openly about her” if she was selected as Clinton’s VP.

Trump’s campaign also distributed a press release that pointed to Warren’s previous criticisms of Clinton, such as the acceptance of contributions from Wall Street which Warren discussed in a 2003 book, The Two-Income Trap.

The Trump campaign also noted that Warren is a fierce opponent of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the 12-nation trade deal that Clinton first supported and then opposed. Trump has made opposition to free-trade agreements a central tenet of his campaign.



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In Cincinnati, members of the crowd said Trump was seizing on xenophobia and racism by exploiting people’s fears over immigration.

“I cannot support someone that is in my opinion racist and bigoted,” said Lori Farmer, a registered Republican from Cincinnati who said she would vote for Clinton.

“I think she’s experienced, I think that she’s even-tempered, and I think that she stands for inclusion.”

Joe Sandman, also a Cincinnati native, said he was concerned Trump was “appealing to racism and anger”.

“That’s a very powerful emotion and it might bring people out to the polls,” he said. “But I have confidence in our American people, that they’ll look at all the ridiculous and dangerous things he said and say, ‘This man is not equipped to be president.’”

Later on Monday afternoon, Clinton traveled to Chicago to deliver the keynote address at the International Women’s Luncheon before Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow PUSH Coalition.



During her remarks, Clinton conceded that she had “work to do” to earn the trust of voters who persistently rate her as dishonest and untrustworthy while blaming “political opponents and conspiracy theorists” for perpetuating the “nonsense” attacks that have dogged her over the course of her more than 25 years in public life.



“A lot of people tell pollsters they don’t trust me,” Clinton said. “Now, I don’t like hearing that.”



She continued: “You hear 25 years’ worth of wild accusations, anyone would start to wonder. And it certainly is true, I’ve made mistakes. I don’t know anyone who hasn’t, so I understand people having questions.”

While Clinton pledged to work to improve voters’ trust, she also drew a distinction between her and Trump.

“The reason that I sometimes sound careful with my words is not that I’m hiding something, it’s just that I’m careful with my words,” she said, to laughter from the audience. “I believe what you say actually matters. I think that’s true in life and it’s especially true if you’re president.”