Warren pivoted
to Trump during a speech at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, offering
suggestions for specific causes graduates could get more involved in.
"I'm
trying to keep this apolitical but I can't help myself ... the principle that
no one, no one in this country is above the law and we need a Justice
Department, not an obstruction of justice department," Warren said.
Democrats have
honed in on Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod
Rosenstein - both of whom Warren opposed - in the wake of Comey's firing this
week.
Fallout over
Comey's firing is the latest controversy swirling around the Trump
administration, which Democrats have criticized for months over a string of
issues including the president's refusal to place his assets in a blind trust
or release his tax returns.
Warren on
Friday didn't hold back from jabbing other members of Trump's team, mocking
senior White House adviser Kellyanne Conway for the phrase "alternative
facts."
"Go
online and read the facts, not the alternative facts the real facts. I have to
say I had never thought we would need a modifier for facts," Warren said.
The
president's senior advisor injected the phrase into the national vocabulary
after using it in an NBC interview to defend White House press secretary Sean
Spicer's claim that Trump had the "largest audience to ever witness an
inauguration, period."
The Democratic
senator also knocked Trump while referencing the "Elizabeth Warren
commencement speech drinking game," quipping that "fireball is a
nickname Donald Trump uses on Twitter, not a beverage to be consumed by
distinguished college graduates."
Trump wasn't
the only Republican figure that Warren targeted during her speech, going after
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).
Noting her
recommendation that graduates study policy wouldn't make her "Ms.
Popularity," she added: "I think as long as Mitch McConnell is
running the Senate that's out of reach for me."
McConnell
rebuked Warren on the Senate floor earlier this year for criticizing Sessions,
who was still a senator at the time. McConnell, justifying the move, said
Warren had been warned for breaking the Senate rules, adding,
"nevertheless, she persisted."
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