Days after announcing another step towards a 2020 presidential run, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren said she plans to head to Iowa and hopes to make her way to the neighboring state of New Hampshire.

This weekend the Cambridge Democrat will be in Des Moines, Sioux City, Storm Lake and Council Bluffs. Iowa and New Hampshire are two top destinations for presidential aspirants.

Asked about her plans, Warren said, “It’s to get out there and talk to people about what’s happening in this country. Washington works great for the wealthy and the well-connected. It needs to work for everyone else.”

Warren, who won a second six-year term in November, pointed to the decline of the American middle class as one of the reasons she ran for US Senate in Massachusetts.

“And that’s what this national campaign is all about as well,” she said.

“I am in this fight because I believe government is working for the rich and the powerful,” she added. “I believe that Washington is corrupt. I see it firsthand. That’s what pulls me in, that’s why I’m in this fight.”

Reporters also asked Warren about a live video she posted on Instagram on Monday, the same day she announced her presidential exploratory committee.

In the video, she cracks open a beer inside her kitchen and talks about her exploratory committee. “I drink Michelob Ultra, the club soda of beers,” Warren said Wednesday, when asked for the brand.

“It’s one more way to be able just to invite people into your home,” she said of Instagram’s live video feature. “I wish I could just open the door and have lots of folks in but this is a way to do it, so that we get a chance talk about what’s going on.”

Warren said she hopes her Iowa trip will also be a “conversation.”

“One of the wonderful things about being able to get out and listen to people, to hear from people, to talk to people about the things that matter most in their lives,” she said. “I think that this is a moment in America where people really want to get the focus back on the things that touch their lives. About things like student loans and what it costs to get a prescription filled and how Social Security needs to be strengthened.”