https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/elect...Jrs?li=BBnb7Kz
Chase Williams grinned broadly as he stood for a photo next to Sen.  Elizabeth Warren, chatting briefly with the senator from Massachusetts  before moving on so someone else could have their turn. 
It was the kind of moment that has become a  ubiquitous part of Warren’s presidential campaign and its long “selfie  lines,” where supporters wait for hours to pose with her at no charge. 
   
 But this shot, taken in October 2017, was at an entirely different  kind of event: an exclusive “backstage” reception that took place in the  vault of a former Cleveland bank. And that was the day’s low-rent  affair — donors who agreed to pay more attended an even more exclusive  shindig with Warren that day, according to two people familiar with her  schedule. 
The  events were part of a high-dollar fundraising program that Warren had  embraced her entire political career, from her first Senate run in 2011  through her reelection last year. Warren was so successful at it that  she was able to transfer $10 million of her Senate cash to help launch  her presidential bid. 
But in the past year Warren has undergone a  transformation, moving from one of the Democratic Party’s biggest draws  at high-dollar fundraisers to a presidential candidate who has sworn  them off as sinister attempts to sell access. 
In a debate last  week, Warren criticized rival Pete Buttigieg for having an exclusive  fundraiser in a crystal-filled wine cave in Napa Valley, prompting the  South Bend, Ind., mayor to respond that she shouldn’t issue “purity  tests you cannot yourself pass.” 
Williams, who supports Buttigieg in the presidential race, said Warren’s position was “disingenuous.” 
“I  am frustrated because she said, ‘I don’t do this. This isn’t something I  do.’ And two years ago she very much did do that, and I was in the  room,” said Williams, who had a photo taken after writing a $500 check. 
Other  notable Warren events from her Senate runs include a private luncheon  held for donors at Boulevard, a San Francisco restaurant where the wine 
list tops out with a $3,800 bottle of a pinot noir from Burgundy and diners can eat in a “wine vault.” 
The  October 2017 event was to thank her big givers and seek their help for  Warren’s 2018 reelection, according to an invitation obtained by The  Washington Post, which outlined the requirement that attendees pay at  least $1,000 a head to attend. 
Warren appeared in June 2012 at an  exclusive reception with Kevin Ryan, a New York tech investor who held  an event for Buttigieg earlier this month that attracted protesters who  sought to tag the candidate as #WallStreetPete. 
There was also  “an evening of music and conversation with Grammy Award Winning  Singer-Songwriter Melissa Etheridge” at City Winery in Boston in June  2018 where those who gave more than $1,000 to Warren received a  “souvenir wine bottle,” an event first reported by the Associated Press.  
Warren’s campaign acknowledged the misstep for an April 2012  evening reception with a host committee that included Linda Fairstein,  the former Manhattan district attorney who prosecuted five black and  Latino teenagers on charges of raping a jogger in Central Park in 1989.  The teens became known as the Central Park Five and went to prison but  were later exonerated in a case that highlighted deep racial disparities  in the criminal justice system. 
“This was in 2012 but it was  wrong,” Warren spokeswoman Gabrielle Farrell said of the fundraiser.  “Linda’s record is troubling . . . part of our deciding to run our  presidential campaign the way we are is the decision to say Elizabeth is  not going to give special access to high-dollar donors through  closed-door fundraisers.” 
Warren’s new position is part of an  attempt to tap into the zeitgeist of the party’s left wing, where  activists and voters believe wealthy individuals and companies have far  too much influence in American life and over American institutions. But  party strategists say Warren’s approach could be damaging for her, as  well as her opponents. 
“I  don’t think it’s good for either one of them to be fighting each  other,” Joe Trippi, a longtime Democratic strategist, said about the  back-and-forth over fundraising between Warren and Buttigieg. “In a  multicandidate race, when you knock somebody, they go to someone else.  They don’t come to you.” 
Rufus Gifford, a longtime Democratic  fundraiser who donated the maximum amount to Warren’s 2018 Senate  campaign and has donated to Buttigieg, former vice president Joe Biden  and Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, said raising money from wealthy  donors at private fundraisers is a common practice and that branding it  as inherently corrupting is problematic. 
“Money in politics can  be a corrupting influence, absolutely. But you have to allow it to be  corrupting, something there is no evidence of here” with the Buttigieg  fundraiser, Gifford said. “In this instance, I believe the attacks are  disingenuous. Everyone is in this to score political points, but let’s  score political points above the belt.” 
The tension between  Warren’s current fundraising practices and her former one has been  present at other times in the campaign. In April, Warren attacked Biden  for holding a high-dollar private fundraiser in Philadelphia, blasting  out a note to supporters contrasting her practices to his: “Our  democracy is not for sale, and neither is my time,” Warren wrote. 
But  Warren had swept through Philadelphia the year before to solicit money  from some of the same people, including former Pennsylvania governor Ed  Rendell and Philadelphia lawyer Stephen Cozen, who helped organize the  Biden fundraiser. 
Both were co-hosts at a Warren fundraising  event in 2018 where donors gave the maximum amount to her Senate  campaign. “It didn’t make sense why it was okay for us to give her  $2,800 for her Senate campaign, but why we were bad people if we gave  $2,800 to Vice President Biden’s presidential campaign,” Rendell said. 
Rendell  added that Warren sent him a “wonderful” thank you note. “And less than  12 months later, I’m an influence peddler and a fat cat,” he said  dryly. 
On Sunday evening, after speaking at a rally in Oklahoma  City, Warren acknowledged that she used to have a big donor program.  “I’ve been to those fundraisers,” Warren said. “And I think we can do  better.” 
Her campaign tried to play down the high-dollar program  from the Senate races, saying that only $6 million of the $26 million  she raised for herself that cycle came from big-money events. 
Her  top strategist, Joe Rospars, said in September on the Campaign HQ  podcast that skipping high-dollar fundraisers “gives you a different  kind of diet of incoming to the campaign organization and the candidate.  It can’t be good for a candidate to be spending a third, two-thirds of  their time taking incoming from a donor class that is disproportionately  old, white, rich and male.” 
In Oklahoma City on Sunday, Warren  said she made a decision to halt big-dollar fundraising when she decided  to run for president. “When I first got into this presidential race, I  said, ‘I’m not doing these closed-door meetings. I’m not doing special  call time and special access to people with money,’ ” Warren told  reporters in Oklahoma City on Sunday night. “I’m going to run a  grass-roots campaign.” 
But the decision wasn’t easy or straightforward. 
As  recently as three months before Warren announced her presidential  campaign, she had sought to meet with donors in New York, said one  prominent Wall Street donor who spoke anonymously to describe private  conversations. 
“Right before she announced and everything, she  came to New York and she wanted to meet with folks who had money,” to  see whether those donors would contribute to her campaign, said the  donor, who declined the meeting. During her Senate campaigns, “she’d  come to New York, she’d raise money. Back then, she didn’t hate people  [who are wealthy], she was just a liberal,” the donor added. 
A  month before her initial New Year’s Eve presidential announcement,  Warren met with one of Hillary Clinton’s former major supporters in her  Cambridge house and asked whether he would support her and raise money  for her presidential campaign. 
“She wanted the folks that raised  money for her Senate campaign and the kind of money we raised for  Hillary and Obama to be part of her team,” said the donor, who spoke on  the condition of anonymity to speak candidly about the conversation. 
Profiles of all the presidential candidates
Warren’s  team didn’t hire regional fundraising consultants as she prepared to  run, which her campaign staff points to as evidence that they were long  considering a grass-roots-only approach. 
But Warren launched her  race with her longtime fundraisers on the payroll — the pair, Michael  Pratt and Colleen Coffey, both left the campaign shortly after Warren  announced that she wouldn’t do a traditional big-dollar program in  February. 
Vestiges of a big-dollar program remain. Businessman  Paul Egerman and another longtime fundraiser, Shanti Fry, serve as the  campaign’s finance co-chairs. 
The pair have been courting wealthy  donors on Warren’s behalf, helping the campaign maintain ties to the  big-donor world by asking them to donate individually, rather than  organizing private events for them and Warren. 
“Being asked by  fundraising staff to contribute to a candidate who refuses to sell  access is literally the opposite of being asked to contribute in order  to get access,” said Warren spokeswoman Kristen Orthman, defending the  practice. 
But it works. 
Steven Grossman, the former  chairman of the Democratic National Committee and former Massachusetts  state treasurer, said that his wife, Barbara, received a phone call from  Fry asking for a donation to Warren’s campaign. 
“I know you care deeply about her and believe deeply in her,” Fry said, according to Grossman. 
His wife agreed, he said, and wrote a $2,800 check. 
Typical Lizzie - and bernie and Biden and the rest. I say one thing and do another. 
That Nasty, angry old socialist harridan.
I do hope the DPST's nominate Lizzie - with her Socialist nut case proposals and ideology, it will be an easy republican win!
Merry Christmas, DPST's - you are the gift that keeps on giving!