U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) emphasized the importance of the working class and criticized a system that allows billionaires to flourish in a talk she gave Friday night at the University of Chicago Friday.

The New York City progressive began her 90-minute conversation with political strategist David Axelrod by addressing a comment she made on Thursday that “you can’t earn a billion dollars” legitimately. The five-term congresswoman offered clarification by saying she opposes systems that create billionaires, not individual people.

“When we criticize the system, the system has gotten so concentrated that [billionaires] take it as criticism of themselves,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

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University of Chicago law student Mark Maddock, 26, said he hopes the congresswoman will run for president in two years.

“Everything's so rough and everyone's a bit downtrodden with the political climate around us right now, so having her here kind of feels like a preview of some hope to come,” Maddock said. “I'm from a rural part of Illinois where our representation doesn't really give as much of a damn about us, as she seems to.”

When asked about her 2028 ambitions for the U.S. Senate or presidency, Ocasio-Cortex said: "Presidents come and go. Senate house seats, elected officials come and go, but single-parent health care is forever."

Ocasio-Cortez condemned the Virginia Supreme Court’s decision striking down a Democratic gerrymandered voting map that state voters passed last month.

“We are in an era of a very real constitutional crises about the limits of power,” she said. “I don’t think we should take this siting down.”

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court tightened restrictions on a key provision of the Voting Rights Act that prohibits voting practices that result in minority groups having “less opportunity” than others when electing representatives. In its 6-3 decision divided on party lines, the court said the provision only a