Despite lobbying for full-time employment, Sen. Warren became a gateway for her daughter to expand her temp firm which specializes in finding contractual employment and part-time jobs.

Just like other democrats such as the Bidens, Elizabeth Warren’s daughter, Amelia Warren Tyagi, also used her mother’s position to grow her own company.

Amelia founded the Business Talent Group (BTG) in 2007 with her partner Jody Greenstone Miller. The company took advantage of the gig economy as the company is described as a “temp firm for specialized and highly skilled employees.” In fact, Amelia took part in encouraging an economy of part-time jobs rather than providing full-time employment solutions.

In just three years, BTG went from $4 million in revenue, with 200 employees on its talent pool in 2009, to a whopping $11 million and 1,800 talents. Based on reports by Breitbart News, Amelia used her mother’s influence during Warren’s stint as the chair of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to build connections.

At that time, the company was on a rough start, and Amelia needed corporate connections which she had accessed after Warren held her position as the chair of the TARP committee. Warren’s role fit perfectly into BGT’s pool of clients as the TARP committee was responsible for federal government bailouts in financial firms.

In his book, Profiles in Corruption; Abuse of Power by American Progressive Elite, author Peter Schweizer wrote; “In its early years, the firm struggled. Executives admitted that they had to be “extremely resourceful” in order to find new business. Executive recruitment and temp businesses are largely corporate connections.” Schweizer added that according to Clare Malone of the Daily Beast, she confirms that Amelia’s company is “a hybrid headhunting and consulting firm-industries whose bread and butter is leveraging connections.”

Schweizer pointed out that while Warren sets out to meet “some of the largest corporations” in the country, Amelia was also having more high-profile financial advisers on her list. Some of the names include Robert A. Kindler, who was the Global Head of Mergers and Acquisitions at Morgan Stanley, in which he had received $10 billion from TARP.

Another big corporate shot on the shared list of Amelia and Sen. Warren was Edward J. Mathias, the managing director at the Carlyle Group, which was awarded with $154 million in TARP funds for the company.

Sen. Warren gained even more corporate connections, as President Obama appointed her as the assistant to the president and special adviser to the secretary of Treasury. This allowed her to gain access to Wall Street brokerage firms, credit unions, and payday lenders. This gave her an opportunity to be in direct contact with chief executives.

As Schweizer wrote, “July 2017, [Warren] she joined a private door retreat held in Martha’s Vineyard home of Robert Wolf, the former UBS Investment Bank CEO.” The author also added that behind closed doors “She also held private meetings with JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. In public, she excoriated Dimon and pointedly asked for his resignation from the New York Federal Reserve bank of Directors.”

The explosive news had affected Warren who failed to gather support. In fact, even on the Emerson College Poll, Warren falls short of the 15% threshold, with a meager 11% support.

Most importantly, it reflects the Senator’s priorities as the BGT group falls against the senator’s rally for full-time employment rather than providing band-aid solutions.