Elizabeth Warren on why she battles corporate America: ‘Markets without rules are theft’

The battle over restrictive voting measures escalated this week in Texas, the latest state where some of the nation's largest corporations have publicly opposed further impediments for voters introduced by Republican lawmakers.

The uproar from corporate America sets an uneasy alliance between wealthy companies and Democrats, who in Washington D.C. are seeking a corporate tax hike, strengthened environmental regulation, and other measures that put them at odds with big business.

In a new interview, progressive Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) acknowledged that corporations have chosen her side in the fight for voting access. But she said it doesn't change her view that corporations wield too much political influence that yields them favorable laws, and in turn bolsters their influence even further.

Speaking with Yahoo Finance, she advocated for a strong government role in markets to ensure fair competition, consumer protections, and limits on the power of large corporations.

"I am all for seeing corporations get out there [and] make a profit," she says. "I believe in competitive markets, but markets without rules are theft."

"It is powerfully important that we have a government that is independent," she adds. "That is able to regulate to make sure that markets are transparent and level and [do] not have so much corporate influence that they tilt those markets over and over and over in their favor."

"So I'm going to stay after them," adds Warren, author of a new book entitled "Persist."

A shift in the Democratic party

The view expressed by Warren, an ardent critic of large corporations for years who ran for president last year, overlaps with a shift in the Democratic Party reflected in the agenda of President Joe Biden.

In a primetime speech to Congress last week, Biden called on corporate America to pay its "fair share," referring to a tax hike embedded in his $2 trillion infrastructure proposal that would raise the rate for corporations from 21% to 28%.

Plus, Biden proposed tax hikes on the wealthy that would pay for his $1.8 trillion American Families Plan, which includes universal pre-school, two years of free community college, and a host of other initiatives.

The potential corporate tax hike has drawn opposition from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Business Roundtable, which represent many major corporations and their CEOs.

While Democrats and corporate America disagree over tax policy, they share common ground in an ongoing fight over restrictive voting bills introduced in statehouses nationwide.