HOLYOKE - At a town hall hosted by Elizabeth Warren at Holyoke City Hall Saturday an audience member asked the U.S. Senator what her plans for the 2020 Presidential race were.

"It is time for women to go to Washington and fix our broken government and that includes a woman at the top," Warren said to the shocked and exuberant audience of hundreds.

"After November 6th, I will take a hard look at running for President," said Warren, to uproarious applause.

The Senator, who has long been considered a possible contender for the upcoming election, teased the possibility during a brief question and answer session at Saturday's event.

While not a definitive announcement, the remark was perhaps the most direct answer Warren has given to the oft asked question. When asked at a similar town hall in Boston in April if she was running in the next election, Warren denied that she was.

Since then, however, political commentators have noted how Warren increasingly resembles a politician readying herself for a Presidential run. As she has traveled to different parts of the country amassing diverse constituencies, many have interpreted the Senator's moves as preparations for the race.

At the Massachusetts Democratic Party's 2018 convention in Worcester, Warren made what some considered a coy remark about her intentions for the future: "I came here tonight to make you a promise: I'm just getting started," she told delegates and party activists.

Warren has also been increasingly critical of current President Donald Trump, taking numerous opportunities to criticize his policies and behavior.

At Saturday's event, Warren offered renewed criticism of the current POTUS.

"Donald Trump is taking this country in the wrong direction," Warren said, taking direct aim at the current President. "Working people have been taking one punch to the gut after another--and I am worried down to my bones about what Donald Trump is doing to our democracy."

The rest of Saturday's town hall saw Warren touch on many of her consistent themes such as the plight of American working class and income inequality, while also discussing recent incidents like the sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

Of Kavanaugh, Warren said that she felt Dr. Christine Blasey Ford's claims were "credible" and that the Supreme Court nominee had acted disrespectful towards her.

Warren also said that she was fighting to win political power for Democrats. "I am in this fight all the way," she said. "I am in this fight to take back the House, to take back the Senate, to put Democrats in charge."

Warren is currently running for re-election in the midterm, where she faces at least three GOP challengers in November: State Rep. Geoff Diehl, the Massachusetts Republican Party's endorsed candidate; longtime political operative Beth Lindstrom; and Winchester businessman John Kingston.