Buttigieg makes it official: ‘We are not going back’
For a guy who acknowledges that 20 years ago he would gladly have taken a pill to turn himself from gay to straight, Pete Buttigieg showed an extraordinary level of confidence and comfort Sunday as he announced his formal campaign bid to become president of the United States.
Mayor Buttigieg evoked the memory of his 17-year-old self on Sunday afternoon as he explained to the world why he has the “audacity” to run for president now, as a 37-year-old Midwest mayor millennial. Without saying the word “gay” in his 35-minute speech, he talked about being gay, included a gay icon’s song in his pre-speech warm-up music, echoed an LGBT “It Gets Better” mantra, and embraced his husband on stage at the end, before walking off hand-in-hand.
“Running for office is an act of hope,” said Buttigieg to several thousand people crammed into a renovated factory building in South Bend, as thousands more stood outside in the rain, and millions more watched on numerous mainstream media webstreams and television at an estimated 400 “watch parties” around the country.
“You don’t do it unless you think the pulleys and levers of our government can be used and, if necessary, redesigned to make the life of this nation better for us all,” he continued. “You don’t do it unless you believe in the power of a law, a decision, sometimes even just a speech to make the right kind of difference, to change our lives better, to call us to our higher values. Things get better if we make them better.”
Buttigieg’s entry for the 2020 race won early attention for his being the first openly gay candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination and additional attention for the apparent difficulty many television news anchors had with pronouncing his Maltese-American last name (In his recently released autobiography, Buttigieg offered “Buddha Judge” but his campaign now pushes “Boot Edge Edge”.)
But within two months of launching his “exploratory” campaign in January, the relatively unknown candidate had capitalized on that early media to introduce his serious, compassionate, and faith-based self to a growing base of supporters far beyond his small midwestern hometown and the LGBT community. He jumped from not being on mainstream polling surveys lists of candidates to being on the list, then 12thon the list, then eighth, most recently, fifth. A poll of Iowa caucus goers in March and one of New Hampshire voters in April show him in third.
And this past week, he again garnered widespread media attention when he told a national Victory Fund event in Washington, D.C., that he had had a hard time accepting being gay when he was a teenager. He said that, as a teen, he would have eagerly taken a pill to become straight or cut the gay out with a knife. In doing so, he found a way to make his evolution as a gay person relatable to people who are not gay and a kind of metaphor for the nation’s struggle to evolve toward a new and better future.
“It will take courage to move on from our past,” said Buttigieg. “We are not going back.”
“You know, if I did get a chance to go back, it wouldn’t be out of a desire to live in that past,” he continued. “If I could go into the past, I’d go just 20 years back, so I could find a teenaged boy in the basement of his parents’ brick house, thinking long thoughts as he played the same guitar lick over and over again on his little Stratocaster, wondering how he could belong in this world.
“Wondering if his intellectual curiosity means he’ll never fit in. Wondering if his last name will be a stumbling block for the rest of his life. Wondering what it means when he sometimes feels a certain way about young men he sees in the hall at school. If it means he’ll never wear the uniform, never be accepted, never know love.
“If I found him and told him what was ahead, would he believe me?
“I can picture him,” said Buttigieg as a cheering crowd quieted. “If I could put my arm around him and tell him he was going to see the world and serve his country. That he would not only find belonging in his town but be entrusted by its citizens with the duty of leading it and shaping it …to tell him that he’ll be alright, more than alright.
“To tell him that one rainy April day, before he even turns 40, he’ll wake up to headlines about whether he’s rising too quickly into becoming a top tier contender for the American presidency. And to tell him that, on that day when he announces for president, he’ll do it with his husband looking on.”
In the latest national poll, Buttigieg has four percent of support among 559 Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters. That puts him in fifth place, tied with U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), in a field of 16 viable candidates included in a survey by the Quinnipac University March 21-15 (margin of error 5.1) It also was a bump up from the one percent he had registered just one week earlier to four percent.
By April 15, presidential candidates had file with the Federal Elections Commission a report indicating how much in contributions they have raised. While that information was still not yet available from the FEC early Monday morning, Buttigieg announced that he has raised more than $7 million.
Associated Press ran a story April 9 headlined, “LGBTQ donors help Pete Buttigied defy 2020 expectations.” Although it said, “Financial support from the LGBTQ community has helped Buttigieg defy expectations by raking in more than $7 million in just over two months,” it cited the name of only one gay contributor and unnamed “big-dollar Hollywood donors.” Late in the story, it quoted Victory Fund President Annise Parker as saying “it’s not the LGBTQ community alone that’s fueling” Buttigieg’s campaign.
“He’s not a gay candidate for president,” Parker told Associated Press. “He is a candidate for president and part of his life experience that he brings is being an openly gay man.”
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