I grew up in Oklahoma on the ragged edge of the middle class. My daddy sold fencing and carpeting at Montgomery Ward, and ended up as a janitor. I have three older brothers who served in the military, and my oldest brother was career Air Force.
When I was twelve, my daddy suffered a heart attack. He was out of work for a long time and the medical bills piled up. We lost the family station wagon and were about an inch away from losing our home, when my mother got a minimum wage job answering the phones at Sears. Back then, a minimum wage job could support a family of three. That job saved our home, and it saved our family.
I’ve spent my whole career studying why America’s middle class has been hollowed out. I’ve taken on giant corporate special interests like big banks and credit card companies that cheat consumers and undermine small businesses. I’ve gone after shady for-profit schools that rip off students, veterans, and taxpayers. I’ve fought to end the influence of big money in politics.
In our country, everyone ought to be able to take care of themselves and the people they love. That should be the fundamental promise of America. This is deeply personal to me because I got a real taste of opportunity. I've known what I wanted to do since I was in second grade. I wanted to be a teacher. And it was the University of Houston, which cost just $50 a semester, that gave me my chance. I got to become a teacher, a law professor, and the senior senator from Massachusetts because America invested in kids like me. I’m in this fight to build an America that works for everyone.