As you’ve likely heard by now, last night in Nevada Senator Elizabeth Warren beat Mike Bloomberg to death with his own words. While Warren went after the former mayor and billionaire with the surgical precision of a trained assassin able to slip into one’s home undetected, inject the target with a deadly syringe while they’re watching Jeopardy! and be out of there in two minutes flat, this particular murder was much more along the lines of tie a guy to a chair in an abandoned warehouse and take shots at him with a tire iron until his face is unrecognizable—which, of course, Bloomberg spent hundreds of millions of his own money to make happen.

Kicking off the night, Warren told the moderators and audience: “I’d like to talk about who we’re running against, a billionaire who calls women ‘fat broads’ and ‘horse-faced lesbians.’ And no, I’m not talking about Donald Trump, I’m talking about Mayor Bloomberg. Democrats aren’t going to win if we have a nominee who has a history of hiding his tax returns, of harassing women, and of supporting racist policies like redlining and stop and frisk…. Understand this: Democrats take a huge risk if we just substitute one arrogant billionaire for another.” Later, when Bloomberg tried to claim that despite a long history of misogynistic comments and sexual harassment complaints from employees, he’s hired and championed tons of women, Warren shot back, “I hope you’ve heard what his defense was. ‘I’ve been nice to some women.’” And when he attempted to claim that the nondisclosure agreements that many of these individuals signed were “consensually” agreed upon by two parties who simply wanted to keep the details “quiet“—which anyone paying attention to the #MeToo movement knows is typically not the case—she truly went in for the kill. “That just doesn’t cut it,” Warren said. “The mayor has to stand on his record, and what we need to know is exactly what’s lurking out there…. The question is, are the women bound by being muzzled by you?… This is not just a question of the mayor’s character, this is also a question about electability. We are not gonna beat Donald Trump with a man who has who knows how many nondisclosure agreements, and the drip, drip, drip of stories of women saying they have been harassed and discriminated against.”

Elsewhere, Warren took Bloomberg to task for his previous support of stop and frisk, for which he offered highly misleading explanations about why it stopped in NYC, as well as his 2008 claim that the financial crisis was caused by the “redlining” pressure on banks to make risky loans to homeowners of color (he now says that the blame lies with Wall Street). “When Mayor Bloomberg was busy blaming African Americans and Latinos for the housing crash of 2008, I was right here in Las Vegas, just a few blocks down the street holding hearings on the banks that were taking away homes from millions of families,” Warren said.

While the other candidates all went after Bloomberg as well, it was Warren’s masterful performance that stuck out and, apparently, paid off—big time: