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  • - Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana

  • and famous boy detective.

  • (upbeat music)

  • First things first, a lot of people are asking,

  • how do you pronounce this guy's name?

  • It's pronounced Pete, okay?

  • It's like peaches, but you just stop, all right?

  • Pee, that's it.

  • Oh, and as for his last name,

  • we're still figuring that one out.

  • - Pete Buttigeg, Buttiget, Buttigeg.

  • - [Female Anchor] South Bend Mayor Pete Buttige, Buttigeg,

  • I always say this wrong.

  • - [Male Anchor] Buttigeg.

  • - [Female Anchor] Buttijeg.

  • - [Male Anchor] Indiana Mayor Pete Bugeteg.

  • - Buttijeg.

  • - [Male Anchor] Buttigig.

  • - Buttigig?

  • - [Male Anchor] Mayor Pete Buttedgedge.

  • - [Male Anchor] Pete Buttegeg, edge edge.

  • - On Pete Buttigieg.

  • - Peter Buttag, the mayor of Indianapolis.

  • - [Male Reporter] Best way to pronounce your last name?

  • (laughs)

  • - Buttigieg, but around South Bend,

  • they just call me Mayor Pete and that's fine with me.

  • - Oh thank God, Mayor Pete.

  • We'll take Mayor Pete, we'll take Mayor Pete.

  • Yeah, because people are really struggling with this one.

  • It's not Buttiedge, it's not Buttijay,

  • and it's definitely not Buttag.

  • (audience laughs)

  • But now that we're on the same page on how to say his name,

  • what has he done?

  • - The guy who's only 37, Pete Buttigieg,

  • boasts an impressive resume.

  • First elected mayor of his hometown at age 29,

  • a Harvard educated Rhodes scholar,

  • as well as a Lieutenant in the Navy reserve.

  • - [Male Anchor] Took an unpaid seven month leave

  • during his mayoral term for a deployment to Afghanistan.

  • - [Female Anchor] Not only the first openly gay

  • Presidential candidate, he's also a newlywed.

  • - [Female Anchor] Would be a President of firsts.

  • The first to be elected in his 30s, the first millennial,

  • the first openly gay Commander in Chief,

  • and the first Mayor.

  • - This is the only chance you'll ever get to vote

  • for a Maltese American, left handed, Episcopalian,

  • gay war veteran, mayor, millennial.

  • (audience laughs)

  • - Okay, wait.

  • Wait, wait, wait.

  • Maltese American?

  • Are you guys telling me this guy is part little dog?

  • (audience laughs)

  • Because if that's true,

  • he is gonna win every white person's vote in this country.

  • White people love them little ass dogs.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Love them!

  • But seriously though, I can see why people are impressed

  • by Buttigieg, right?

  • He has such a unique bio.

  • He's a veteran, a Harvard graduate and a Rhodes scholar

  • who's openly gay and also so young that if he served

  • two terms as President, when he came out,

  • he would still only be 46.

  • Yeah, plus he's a concert pianist

  • and speaks seven languages, including Norwegian,

  • which he learned just so that he could read Norwegian books.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Compare that to America's current President,

  • who has read zero books and is fluent in zero languages.

  • Now if you're watching this, going,

  • "Trevor, why are you only showing us the positive things

  • "about Pete Buttigieg?"

  • Because that's all we could find, all right?

  • (audience laughs)

  • No, I'm being serious.

  • There's no dirt on this guy, like nothing.

  • Usually candidates have some skeletons somewhere,

  • but even his skeletons are singing his praises.

  • "He gave me calcium for my bones."

  • (audience laughs)

  • He's the Mayor of South Bend, Indiana

  • and host of Nathan For You.

  • He did a Fox Hall, he did a Fox Town Hall on Sunday

  • and he showed that visiting Fox doesn't have to mean

  • that you endorse them.

  • - You know, a lot of folks in my party were critical of me

  • for even doing this with Fox News.

  • I mean, when you got Tucker Carlson saying that immigrants

  • make America dirty, when you've got Laura Ingram comparing

  • detention center with children in cages to summer camps,

  • then there is a reason why anybody has to swallow hard

  • and think twice before participating

  • in this media ecosystem.

  • But I also believe that there are a lot of Americans

  • who my party can't blame if they are ignoring our message

  • 'cause they will never hear it

  • if we don't go on and talk about it.

  • I hope you'll join me in making sure that that next era

  • is better than any that we've had so far.

  • (audience claps and cheers)

  • - Thank you Mayor, and thank you -

  • wow, a standing ovation.

  • - Wow, standing ovation.

  • Pete Buttigieg went on Fox News,

  • trashed their most popular anchors

  • and then got a standing ovation at the end.

  • That is amazing!

  • (audience cheers)

  • That is amazing!

  • Because if someone came to your house

  • and told you how ugly your kids were,

  • you'd probably be like, "Get the hell out of here."

  • You wouldn't be like, (claps)

  • "Someone had to say it.

  • "You got a big ass head Billy, you got a big ass head.

  • "Someone had to say it."

  • (audience laughs)

  • And it wasn't just the audience.

  • Some reporters on Fox News actually credited Buttigieg

  • for coming onto their network.

  • But the kids with the big ass heads,

  • they weren't as happy.

  • - Mayor Pete, who desperately needs a re-Boot-i-gieg.

  • Now when he wasn't pushing for tax increases

  • or lobbing lame cheap shots, he was trying to pass off

  • political pablum as some type of high minded oratory.

  • Maybe we should call him Pope Pete, because don't you love

  • how he - because he attends church, we're supposed

  • to treat him as the be all and end all moral authority

  • or the arbiter of who is and who is not

  • operating in good faith.

  • - Okay?

  • (audience laughs)

  • I get that Lura Ingram is trying to diss Pete,

  • but I don't know if she achieved that by calling him Pope.

  • (audience laughs)

  • People like The Pope.

  • It's not a great diss.

  • It's like going, "You know this guy Steve is always

  • "walking around being a dick to everyone,

  • "let's call him Big Dick Steve.

  • "That'll show him.

  • "Everyone will know what a big throbbing dick he has -

  • "I mean, he is."

  • Pete Buttigieg, democratic candidate,

  • mayor of South Bend, and real life Boss Baby.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Over the weekend, he did an interview Axios on HBO,

  • and one thing he said took the reporter

  • a little by surprise.

  • - If you were to win the nomination,

  • they'll say you're too young, too liberal, too gay

  • to be Commander in Chief.

  • You are young, you are liberal, you are gay.

  • How will you respond?

  • - People will elect the person

  • who will make the best President.

  • And we have had excellent Presidents who have been young.

  • We have had excellent Presidents who have been liberal.

  • I would imagine we've probably had excellent Presidents

  • who were gay, we just didn't know which ones.

  • - You believe that we've had a gay Commander in Chief?

  • - I mean, statistically, it's almost certain.

  • - Like in your reading of history,

  • do you believe you know who they were?

  • - My gay-dar doesn't even work that well in the present,

  • let alone retroactively.

  • (audience and Trevor laughs)

  • - Oh man.

  • That was such a great response.

  • I love how the journalist was like, "who?"

  • (Trevor stammers)

  • It's so funny that the journalist thinks

  • because Buttigieg is gay,

  • he automatically knows who else is gay.

  • Like gay people can even recognize each other

  • across time, yeah?

  • It's the same way when I tell people I'm from Africa,

  • some people are like, "oh my God, you're from Africa.

  • "Do you know Mufasa?"

  • I'm like, "No, you idiot.

  • "We went to different high schools, come on."

  • (audience laughs)

  • Also, Buttigieg is a better man than me

  • 'cause you realize he could have said any President is gay

  • and that guy would've believed him.

  • Yeah, he could have been like,

  • "Well, Thomas Jefferson was totally gay."

  • Guy would be like, "What, how can you tell?"

  • He'd be like, "Oh I can tell."

  • (audience laughs)

  • Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana

  • and kid who always asks for more homework

  • is getting attention for what he's saying in his ads.

  • - Pete Buttiegieg has a new kind of position or an ad

  • this weekend that was airing in Iowa

  • about education, listen.

  • - I believe we should move to make college

  • affordable for everyone.

  • There are some voices saying, "Well that doesn't count

  • "unless you go even further, unless it's free,

  • "even for the kids of millionaires."

  • But I only wanna make promises that we can keep.

  • - [Female Anchor] Alexandria Ocasio-Cortes,

  • a Bernie Sanders supporter,

  • slamming the new Iowa front runner, tweeting,

  • "This is a GOP talking point

  • "used to dismantle public systems

  • "and it's sad to see a Dem candidate adopt it."

  • - Ooh, Pete, you in trouble.

  • (audience laughs)

  • This is an interesting one.

  • Pete Buttigieg says that he supports free public college,

  • but it shouldn't apply to rich people's kids.

  • And in response, rich people said,

  • "What the (beep) is a public college?"

  • (audience laughs)

  • "Is that like a public toilet?

  • "I think I've heard of those."

  • No, but jokes aside, this ad is getting

  • a lot of backlash, right?

  • Because Buttigieg has basically drawn criticism

  • from the progressive wing of his party,

  • because they argue, if the government provides a service,

  • the service should be available

  • to all of its citizens, right?

  • It's the same way a public library doesn't ask

  • how rich you are before they let you in to masturbate.

  • It's a public library, everyone can masturbate,

  • that's what it's there for.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Now, despite the backlash, Buttigieg's campaign

  • is still steadily on the rise.

  • The major change from the last debate

  • is the rise of Pete Buttigieg, all right?

  • Mayor of South Bend, Indiana and the only adult

  • Michael Jackson would be into.

  • Over the past few weeks, he has surged

  • from the middle of the pack to take the lead

  • in Iowa and New Hampshire.

  • So now, between Buttigieg, Biden, Warren and Bernie,

  • this has become a four way race.

  • And if you include Corey Booker, it's still a four way race.

  • (audience laughs)

  • So with Buttigieg rising in the polls,

  • tonight the moderators asked him something

  • a lot of people are wondering,

  • why should a teenage mayor from South Bend, Indiana

  • become President of the United States?

  • - Mayor Buttigieg, let's talk about your record

  • as a candidate.

  • Why should Democrats take the risk of betting on you?

  • - In order to defeat this President, we need somebody

  • who can go toe to toe, who actually comes from

  • the kinds of communities that he's been appealing to.

  • I don't talk a big game about helping the working class

  • while helicopter-ing between golf courses

  • with my name on them.

  • I don't even golf.

  • As a matter of fact, I never thought

  • I'd be on a Forbes magazine list but they did one

  • of all the candidates by wealth

  • and I am literally the least wealthy person on this stage.

  • - Yeah, Pete Buttigieg may be the poorest person

  • on that stage, but Bernie was like,

  • "Yes, but I look the poorest."

  • (audience laughs)

  • "And that should count for something."

  • You know, it's actually funny how running for President

  • is the only time people brag

  • about how much money they don't have.

  • (audience laughs)

  • All right, it's like they're all bizzaro rappers, you know?

  • "Started from the bottom, never left."

  • (audience laughs)

  • "Started from the bottom and my whole team

  • "is in the exact same place

  • "because there's been no upward mobility

  • "for the last 30-40 years in this country."

  • Why do you think your candidacy

  • is catching on like wildfire?

  • - I think it's actually all the same reasons

  • that made my candidacy kind of unlikely.

  • The fact that I'm a mayor at a time when people

  • are frustrated with Washington

  • and looking for different sources of leadership.

  • The fact that I'm from the Industrial Midwest,

  • which is a place that Democrats have sometimes struggled

  • to connect with.

  • And the fact that I'm from a new generation,

  • which I think raised some eyebrows early on,

  • but I think it's one of the reasons

  • why it makes sense to do this.

  • And I think all of those things that we thought

  • might be constraints when we got into it,

  • it actually helped demonstrate that I'm not like the others

  • and I represent something different.

  • - I think you're not like anybody, to be honest.

  • No, because when you look at your resume and your story,

  • it genuinely seemed like you were created in a lab,

  • specifically to run - no, I mean, listen to this,

  • this is who Mayor Pete is, just a little bit.

  • I mean, listen to this.

  • You have someone who is a Rhodes scholar, a war veteran,

  • gay and religious, speaks multiple languages,

  • and you're from the Heartland.

  • You also have executive experience,

  • like what's the major scandal?

  • You should just tell us now.

  • There's gonna be - like, where are the bodies?

  • Are they in the basement?

  • Are they -

  • - No bodies.

  • - No bodies?

  • Is that just you?

  • Is that how you've lived your life and then happened

  • to coincide with the Presidential campaign?

  • Or is this what you've cultivated in your life?

  • - I mean, most of the turns in my life

  • came as something of a surprise.

  • Even when I was interested in politics as a student,

  • I never would have guessed that local government

  • would have been where I found a lot of meaning.

  • I'm not sure I would have guessed that moving home

  • to South Bend, Indiana would have been how I would

  • really find purpose and kind of make my fortunes.

  • Not a financial fortune, but you know,

  • my kinda professional life would be so fulfilling.

  • I think, so much of this is the element of surprise.

  • I mean, five or 10 years ago, you would not have said,

  • "If we're gonna cook up the ideal Presidential candidate,

  • "let's have a 30-something gay mayor from the Midwest."

  • Right?

  • - It's almost like you've come about at a time

  • when society is at a place -

  • - Yeah, in no other time in the last 200 years, right,

  • would somebody like me have fit a Presidential campaign.

  • But we're living in this moment, maybe the only moment,

  • for the last 200 or the next 200 years.

  • But I think when you're deciding whether to run

  • for any office, what you gotta do is you look at the moment,

  • you look at the constituency - the district or the city

  • or the country or whatever office you're running for -

  • say, what does it call for in this moment?

  • And to my surprise too at first,

  • I realized that this is a moment that just might call

  • for somebody like me.

  • - More recently, you've been thrust into the news

  • in and around issues regarding voters who are black.

  • People have said, "Mayor Pete, it feels like you have

  • a blind spot when it comes to black voters in America."

  • Whether it be the fact that in South Bend,

  • when South Bend's economy rose up,

  • black people didn't rise up as much, they stayed in poverty.

  • You've had issues in and around conversations

  • around the black Police Chief.

  • What do you think you're gonna do?

  • How are you going to appeal to black voters?

  • - I think a lot of it is the importance of outreach.

  • So there are people who will find their way to you,

  • and those are your core supporters.

  • And then there are the people who will never hear from you

  • unless you reach out to them.

  • This is important for me back home too,

  • not everyone knows that South Bend

  • is a racially diverse city, we're about 40-45% non-white.

  • As you mentioned, we had some very painful issues,

  • especially in my first days and months as Mayor

  • around race and policing, around neighborhoods.

  • We have a lot of racial inequality in our city,

  • not because we want to

  • but it's shown me that good intentions are not enough.

  • You have to have intention around your policies.

  • And we're working on everything back in South Bend

  • from black entrepreneurship to investing

  • in historically disinvested neighborhoods.

  • I think the same thing has to happen at the national level.

  • These racial inequities didn't just happen,

  • they're not an accident.

  • They're, in many cases, the consequence of racist policies,

  • which means we have to have, not just non-racist policies,

  • but anti-racist policies, if we're ever going to see

  • these things equalize in our lifetime.

  • And I may not be able to convince every voter out there

  • to be for me, but at the very least, I need to make sure

  • that every voter out there knows that I'm for them.

  • (audience cheers)

  • (upbeat music)

- Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana

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