screengrab via MSNBC
In a Time magazine profile detailing his own 2016 ambitions Thursday, Schweitzer hit Clinton for her 2003 vote for the Iraq War and for taking money from Wall Street. During an interview that same night on MSNBC, Schweitzer reiterated his attacks and directly suggested Clinton is "beholden" to special interests.
"Well, unfortunately we've come to a place in
Schweitzer went on to claim these campaign contributions have led to "a Democratic Party that is corporate-lite."
"Here's the problem: If they've been writing you the fat checks, you're beholden to 'em. So what we need is a Democratic Party that stands up for workin' people - who says, 'We need to have a strong middle class again.' We can't have a Democratic Party that is corporate-lite. And that's the risk that we're faced with right now," he continued.
Schweitzer is widely considered a long-shot against Clinton, who has already amassed the support of much of the national Democratic establishment for her still-unannounced bid. However, Schweitzer, who insists he would be a viable candidate, is hoping his populist message can compete against the Democratic front-runner.
"We already have a Congress full of people who have been bought by corporate America. We need chief executives that'll stand up to corporate America and say, 'I'm putting America first, not your profits,'" Schweitzer said on MSNBC.
For her part, Clinton's team seems uninterested in taking shots back at Schweitzer. When the Wall Street Journal asked her spokesman to respond to Schweitzer's criticisms in May, a Hillary rep simply said, "She's proud to have spent a lifetime fighting for equality and opportunity for all people, from jobs and education to health care and voting, and will continue to do so."
Watch Schweitzer's "Ed Show" segment below.