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AOC takes more steps toward 2028 run for president (axios.com)
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says she hasn't decided whether to run for president, but the New York congresswoman is making new moves toward a possible White House bid. Ocasio-Cortez launched a national tour in recent weeks — without calling it one. Why it matters: Whether AOC jumps into the race is one of the biggest X factors in the 2028 Democratic primary. Democratic operatives expect she would easily raise $100 million just from small-dollar donors, mobilize many supporters of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders' past campaigns, and command attention as few other candidates could. Driving the news: Just in May, Ocasio-Cortez has: Rallied voters in Philadelphia for a left-wing congressional candidate in a competitive primary. Spoken at a rally in Montgomery, Ala., about voting rights. Addressed the historic Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta with Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock. (Democrats note that Warnock, the church's senior pastor, doesn't always allow visiting politicians to speak at this church. Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg didn't speak when he visited in March.) Met with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s daughter at the King Center in Atlanta to talk about data centers and voting rights. Visited Morehouse School of Medicine, also in Atlanta, to discuss Black maternal health. Rolled out several endorsements in races across the country. This week, Ocasio-Cortez will travel to Missoula, Mont., to campaign for congressional candidate Sam Forstag, a smokejumper and union leader who spoke at a rally with AOC and Sanders last year. AOC also has raised eyebrows by attending meetings with Democratic Party powerbrokers. In April, she attended the Power Rising Summit in Chicago — an event that bills itself as "a space for Black women to turn power into action and create an actionable agenda to be implemented in their communities, and nationally." The summit was founded by influential Democratic operative Leah Daughtry. Between the lines: It's not just where Ocasio-Cortez is going, it's what she's saying that signals her ambitions go well beyond her New York City district. During her speech in Philadelphia, she approvingly quoted an activist who recently said that "MAGA is the last dying breath of the confederacy." She added: "In response to a confederacy, we have this moment here of liberation, abolition, and revival of the values that make this country actually great." She also waxed poetic about how the "founding of our nation introduced a radical new idea into the world that all people were created equal." At Ebenezer Baptist Church, Ocasio-Cortez brought the congregation to its feet when she said, "I'm here today, brothers and sisters, with a simple message: We stand together and we are not going back." She continued: "What happens in Georgia happens to New York, what happens to Tennessee happens to California, what happens to Louisiana happens to all of us, Ebenezer, because this is America. We are not divided by state, we are united by ou
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