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Democracy Journal helped change Elizabeth Warren’s life

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motherjones.com

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Tue, Mar 15, 2022 01:01 PM

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The following advertisement from Democracy Journal has been sent to you via Mother Jones' email list

The following advertisement from Democracy Journal has been sent to you via Mother Jones' email list. Mother Jones is a nonprofit, and most of our budget comes from readers like you, but revenue from advertisers helps us produce more of the hard-hitting journalism you expect. We never disclose your information to an advertiser. Mother Jones does not endorse any candidate, political organization, commercial product, or service, and the views expressed in this email do not constitute any endorsement or recommendation by Mother Jones. Did you know that Senator Elizabeth Warren said she “literally might not be where she is today” without Democracy: A Journal of Ideas? It’s true: in 2007, Democracy published an essay written by a little-known Harvard Law School professor that argued for the creation of a federal agency to regulate mortgages and credit cards. Her idea took off, and three years later Elizabeth Warren was appointed by President Obama to help set up the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Today, the CFPB has put $12 billion directly in the pockets of people who were cheated by financial institutions, and Senator Warren remains an avid reader of Democracy’s pages. Democracy: A Journal of Ideas is a destination for thinkers who want to get their ideas placed before an influential audience in the hope that — like Senator Warren’s idea — they may someday turn their progressive ideas into policy or law. For 15 years we’ve published important, thoughtful pieces that lay out the ideas and arguments that will help level the playing field for working families and strengthen our democracy. [Now we want to invite you to become a reader. Click here to subscribe to Democracy’s email list to receive updates on our upcoming issues (which are not behind a paywall) and more:]( [Sign Up]( Whether on domestic policy, economics, foreign policy, or the law, Democracy is always pushing new ideas into a civic bloodstream that so badly needs them. It's what made The New York Times call us "one of the most influential publications of the post-Trump era" last year. Our pieces inspire real policy, and numerous Biden Administration officials have published their thoughts in our pages. President Biden’s Chief of Staff Ron Klain wrote in Democracy to warn that we’d better prepare for a coming pandemic — back in 2016. For 15 years we’ve published important, thoughtful pieces that lay out the ideas and arguments that will help level the playing field for working families and strengthen our democracy. [Sign up now to join Democracy: A Journal of Ideas and receive updates about our upcoming issues, interviews, symposiums, and more:]( [Sign Up]( On behalf of our entire team, including our president Andrei Cherny and editorial advisory committee chair E.J. Dionne Jr., thank you for being a reader. — Michael Tomasky, Editor [Mother Jones]( Mother Jones and its nonprofit publisher, the Foundation for National Progress, do not endorse any political candidate, political organization, commercial product, process, or service, and the views expressed in this communication do not constitute an endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by Mother Jones. This message was sent to {EMAIL}. To change the messages you receive from us, you can [edit your email preferences]( or [unsubscribe from all mailings.]( For advertising opportunities see our online [media kit.]( Were you forwarded this email? [Sign up for Mother Jones' newsletters today.]( [www.MotherJones.com]( PO Box 8539, Big Sandy, TX 75755

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