Democrat Buttigieg discusses being part of first gay couple in the White House

Published 06/03/2019, 08:55 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg listens during a lunch meeting with civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton at SylviaÕs Restaurant in Harlem

By Tim Reid

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg said on Monday he does not believe the fact that he is gay and married to another man will hurt him with America's voters.

Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend Indiana who married his husband Chasten Buttigieg in 2018, said he won a landslide re-election in South Bend in 2015 - with over 80 percent of the vote - despite coming out as gay several months earlier.

Asked what he wants to say to voters about the thought of a gay couple in the White House, Buttigieg said he believes voters would not be put off by that.

"I would ask them to think about what kind of president I would make, and how I would serve them," Buttigieg said.

Buttigieg said when he revealed he was gay during his 2015 mayoral re-election bid, he said "we weren't sure what the politics of it would be. South Bend was generally Democratic but also quite socially conservative."

Yet, Buttigieg said, he was re-elected in a landslide "because people just cared about what kind of job I was doing for them as mayor."

Buttigieg was talking before a live television audience during a question and answer session on MSNBC in Fresno, California. His husband Chasten was part of the audience.

Buttigieg, 37, has been rising in Democratic nominating polls in recent months. He is a leading candidate in a second tier of White House hopefuls who currently trail frontrunners Joe Biden, the former U.S. vice-president, and Vermont U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg listens during a lunch meeting with civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton at SylviaÕs Restaurant in Harlem

Buttigieg, who is also an Afghanistan war veteran, is one of 24 Democrats vying to become the party's nominee to take on Republican President Donald Trump in next November's general election.

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