I'm very hands-on about social media. That's my voice.
Democrats are a big-tent party. You know, I'm not trying to impose an ideology on all, you know, several hundred members of Congress.
There is no such thing as talking about class without there being implications of the racial history of the United States. You just can't do it.
Women like me aren't supposed to run for office.
I don't like having people do little things for me.
There's this false notion that you have to separate and choose between issues of class and issues of race. What people do when they say that you need to separate class from race is that they are really just saying that people of color should come second.
We have to stick to the message: What are we proposing to the American people? Not, 'What are we fighting against?'
Congress is too old. They don't have a stake in the game.
What we need to do is lay out a plan and a vision that people can believe in. And getting into Twitter fights with the president is not exactly where we're going to find progress as a nation.
For me, democratic socialism is about - really, the value for me is that I believe that in a modern, moral, and wealthy society, no person in America should be too poor to live.
I understand the pain of working-class Americans because I have experienced the pain.