Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Buttigieg Is Breath of Fresh Air in Dem Presidential Race
Bill McEwen updated website photo 2024
By Bill McEwen, News Director
Published 6 years ago on
June 4, 2019

Share

You can bet on just about anything online — including the Democratic presidential nominee.
Depending on the bookmaker, Pete Buttigieg, the openly gay mayor of South Bend, Indiana, has either the third- or fourth-best odds of facing President Donald Trump.

 
Portrait of GV Wire News Director Bill McEwen
Opinion
Bill McEwen
That’s a testament to the rising arc of Buttigieg’s campaign. A year ago, the 37-year-old Harvard graduate and former Naval Reserve intelligence officer was relatively unknown outside of the Midwest.

Buttigieg’s Youth Is Actually a Plus

Without a doubt, he’s a fresh-faced alternative to the old Democrats (Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders) and left-wingers (Elizabeth Warren, Sanders) aiming for the White House.
So what’s his appeal?
I put the question to Buttigieg fans who crammed into tiny Tuolumne Hall in downtown Fresno for a meet-and-greet with the candidate Wednesday morning.
The curated answer: He’s young, smart, well-spoken, likable and the anti-Trump.
“What we hear from him is so spot-on,” said Marianne Kast, a retired teacher.
Isn’t he a bit young? After all, the youngest president ever was Teddy Roosevelt, who was 42 when he moved up from vice president after William McKinley’s assassination. John F. Kennedy, the youngest elected U.S. president, was 42.
“Hell no,” Kast answered. “It’s Bernie’s age (77) that bothers me — or Biden’s age (76.)”

Buttigieg Is Calm in a Time of Political Turmoil

Sandy Baronian sees “Mayor Pete” as the antidote for a divided nation.
“Pete calms me,” she said. “He’s articulate and he’s intelligent.”
Buttigieg also scores points because he’s willing to politely engage people who disagree with him on the issues.
“His town hall on Fox News was great,” Baronian said.
It was great for Buttigieg as well. He turned the event in Claremont, New Hampshire co-moderated by veteran newsman Chris Wallace on the conservative network into a showcase for his campaign. It averaged 1.1 million viewers, according to Nielsen Media Research — topping the audience in the same hour for MSNBC and CNN combined.

A Wonk With Charisma

Buttigieg’s magic is that he’s a policy wonk who doesn’t sound like a wonk.
One, he knows how to break down policy and show how it might affect your life. Two, he’s blessed with indefinable traits that add up to charisma. Three, he presses opponents without sounding like he’s angry or on the attack.
On Monday, he took aim at Donald Trump and the president’s commandeering of the Republican Party.

“Whether you subscribe to a faith tradition or not, we all know hypocrisy when we see it, and we’re seeing an awful lot of it in Washington.” — Pete Buttigieg
“Freedom does not belong to one political party. Patriotism does not belong to one political party. God does not belong to a political party,” Buttigieg said. “People of any religion and people of no religion can come equally before American democracy in the public square and have our voices heard, that’s the idea. Well, many of us believe that our faith guides us. You see believers who demonstrate decency and humility and a commitment to lifting us the least among us. … Whether you subscribe to a faith tradition or not, we all know hypocrisy when we see it, and we’re seeing an awful lot of it in Washington.”
In a room packed with 200-plus activist Democrats, Buttigieg contrasted his campaign and his age to that of early front-runner Biden.
There are “communities that feel like Democratic and Republicans administrations have not been speaking to them,” Buttigieg said. “And so we in our party cannot go around promising to turn back the clock to the 2000s or the 90s any more than they can keep a promise to turn back the clock to the 1950s. We have got to do something completely different.”
It was as if Buttigieg was talking directly to Joan Hughes. Waiting outside the hall before the event, she told me the Democrats needed to look ahead — not in the rear-view mirror.
“We can’t go back to the days of Obama after being trampled by Trump,” she said.

How Buttigieg Defines ‘Pro-Life’

In response to a question from the audience about anti-abortion laws passed recently in Southern states, Buttigieg offered his definition of pro-life:
“We have a responsibility to support mothers and to make sure that we have the right kind of birth control and sex education so that — if you don’t like Planned Parenthood, think about unplanned parenthood and the pressure that puts on our communities,” he said. “So the work that is done whether it’s by Planned Parenthood, or the work that ought to be done supported by government policies supported by the right kind of health care, full health care, health care where being a woman is not a preexisting condition, that’s what it means to be truly pro-life, in my opinion.”
On LGBTQ rights, Buttigieg cheered the progress while saying there’s a long way to go.
“In Indiana, while Mike Pence was governor, I got reelected with 80% of the vote the same year that I came out. So the progress has been unbelievable,” he said. “But until discrimination is not lawful in this country, until anybody can walk without fear, knowing that they can be who they are, we’ve got our work cut out for us, and I’ll be there every step of the way.”
Clearly, Buttigieg is trying to give voice to a Christian Left that has been all but buried in many parts of the country by the chest-beating Christian Right that elected Trump.

Maybe Not 2020 But Someday

I asked longtime Fresno political analyst Don Larson if Buttigieg could end up as the Democratic nominee — ahead of Biden, Sanders or Kamala Harris.
As Larson sees it, Buttigieg is positioning himself for another presidential run down the line. His 2020 campaign is all about building his name and brand nationally.
“But I’m voting for him now,” said Larson, who turns 86 in September. “I don’t know that I can wait eight years.”
 

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Clovis Unified Families ‘Resigned’ To Grad Ceremony Ban, Attorney Says

DON'T MISS

Hegseth Orders the Name of Gay Rights Activist Harvey Milk Scrubbed From Navy Ship

DON'T MISS

Knicks Fire Coach Tom Thibodeau After First Eastern Conference Finals Berth in 25 Years

DON'T MISS

US Judge Dismisses California’s Tariff Lawsuit, Teeing up Appeal

DON'T MISS

Young Democrats Offer Lessons for Their Leaders at Party Convention

DON'T MISS

California Prisons Have a Narcotics Problem. Now, More People Will Face Canine Searches

DON'T MISS

After Years of Undrinkable Water, Our Rural California Community Finally Has Hope

DON'T MISS

Fellow Clovis Councilmember, Public Bash Pearce Over Trans Athlete

DON'T MISS

Musk Calls Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill ‘a Disgusting Abomination’

DON'T MISS

US Tariffs Could Put Air Safety at Risk, Aerospace and Airline Industries Warn

UP NEXT

Why Trump Is Mad at ‘Sleazebag’ Leonard Leo

UP NEXT

Newsom Tussles With Local Officials Over Homelessness

UP NEXT

California’s War Over Charter Schools Rages On in Court

UP NEXT

Why Did the California Senate Shunt a Cost-Cutting Housing Bill?

UP NEXT

Fresno’s Crime Beat Didn’t Prepare Me for What I Saw on a Ride Along

UP NEXT

The MAGA Revolution Threatens America’s Most Innovative Place

UP NEXT

California’s High Living Costs and Rampant Poverty Sharpen Its Economic Divide

UP NEXT

Three Well-Tested Ways to Undermine an Autocrat

UP NEXT

Test Your Memorial Day Knowledge With This Quiz

UP NEXT

Gavin Newsom’s Off-the-Mark Budget Numbers Undermine His Credibility Again

Bill McEwen,
News Director
Bill McEwen is news director and columnist for GV Wire. He joined GV Wire in August 2017 after 37 years at The Fresno Bee. With The Bee, he served as Opinion Editor, City Hall reporter, Metro columnist, sports columnist and sports editor through the years. His work has been frequently honored by the California Newspapers Publishers Association, including authoring first-place editorials in 2015 and 2016. Bill and his wife, Karen, are proud parents of two adult sons, and they have two grandsons. You can contact Bill at 559-492-4031 or at Send an Email

US Judge Dismisses California’s Tariff Lawsuit, Teeing up Appeal

9 hours ago

Young Democrats Offer Lessons for Their Leaders at Party Convention

9 hours ago

California Prisons Have a Narcotics Problem. Now, More People Will Face Canine Searches

10 hours ago

After Years of Undrinkable Water, Our Rural California Community Finally Has Hope

10 hours ago

Fellow Clovis Councilmember, Public Bash Pearce Over Trans Athlete

10 hours ago

Musk Calls Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill ‘a Disgusting Abomination’

11 hours ago

US Tariffs Could Put Air Safety at Risk, Aerospace and Airline Industries Warn

11 hours ago

Trump to Sign Order Doubling Metals Tariffs, White House Says

11 hours ago

California Inmate Gets Five Years for Role in Drone Drug Smuggling Scheme

11 hours ago

Millions Invested in Land for Innovation Village. Will It Be a Fresno Game-Changer?

12 hours ago

Clovis Unified Families ‘Resigned’ To Grad Ceremony Ban, Attorney Says

Barring any last-minute about-faces by Clovis Unified officials, eight high school seniors won’t be joining their classmates at their ...

5 hours ago

5 hours ago

Clovis Unified Families ‘Resigned’ To Grad Ceremony Ban, Attorney Says

7 hours ago

Hegseth Orders the Name of Gay Rights Activist Harvey Milk Scrubbed From Navy Ship

7 hours ago

Knicks Fire Coach Tom Thibodeau After First Eastern Conference Finals Berth in 25 Years

U.S. President Donald Trump holds a chart next to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick as Trump delivers remarks on tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
9 hours ago

US Judge Dismisses California’s Tariff Lawsuit, Teeing up Appeal

9 hours ago

Young Democrats Offer Lessons for Their Leaders at Party Convention

10 hours ago

California Prisons Have a Narcotics Problem. Now, More People Will Face Canine Searches

10 hours ago

After Years of Undrinkable Water, Our Rural California Community Finally Has Hope

10 hours ago

Fellow Clovis Councilmember, Public Bash Pearce Over Trans Athlete

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend