U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren insisted she has not lost faith in the Obama administration over the Obamagate scandals — one of several Obama allies to speak in his defense yesterday amid the ongoing crisis over the IRS’ targeting of Tea Party groups, the Justice Department’s sweeping subpoena of The Associated Press’ phone records, and questions about the handling of the Benghazi attacks.

“No,” Warren said firmly, when asked if her faith in the administration has been shaken.

Warren said she remains confident that the president’s legislative agenda is still on track.

“Immigration reform is still heading in the right direction,” Warren said. “I’m very hopeful that we’re going to get comprehensive immigration reform, which is what this country needs. I’ll be out there fighting for it, and lots of other people will be, too.”

Warren, who said in a statement last week that she supported the proposal by U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) for an “audit” of the Internal Revenue Service, spoke to reporters after delivering the commencement address at Framingham State University.

“What the IRS did was wrong. There’s no moving around the edges on that. It was wrong. It needs to be investigated fully. We need to understand what happened. And we need to make sure to make whatever changes necessary to make sure it never happens again,” said Warren, who was a consumer finance adviser to Obama and was considered for an administration post before she was elected.

When asked whether she believes that the president had no knowledge of what has happened, Warren said, “We’ll find out. That’s what investigations are for.”

Other Democrats, including U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, have called for firings, while U.S. Rep. James McGovern said Democrats are concerned about elections.

At Boston University, a leading Hollywood ally of Obama, actor Morgan Freeman, who narrated a campaign ad for the president last year, also said he has not lost faith.

“Oh heavens no, no. (Lost) faith? In him? Absolutely not,” Freeman, 75, said after receiving an honorary doctorate. “I don’t think he’s lost the American public.”

In Washington, D.C., White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said yesterday Obama only learned of the IRS actions from news reports, and accused Republicans of trying to “drag Washington into a swamp of partisan fishing expeditions.” He called attacks on the president “offensive.”

Republican critics said the scandals reflect a president out of touch and a White House out of control during the 2012 election season. U.S. Senate Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell said the IRS case reflected a “culture of intimidation” in the administration. But he acknowledged there is no evidence yet the White House was involved.

Herald wire services contributed to this story.