Barely two months ago, when Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, was rating no higher than 1 or 2% in national polls, he had a well-worn punchline he used as he pitched himself in living rooms and conference rooms where many of the guests were, like him, young, male and gay.
Barely two months ago, when Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, was rating no higher than 1 or 2% in national polls, he had a well-worn punchline he used as he pitched himself in living rooms and conference rooms where many of the guests were, like him, young, male and gay.
Barely two months ago, when Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, was rating no higher than 1 or 2% in national polls, he had a well-worn punchline he used as he pitched himself in living rooms and conference rooms where many of the guests were, like him, young, male and gay.
Barely two months ago, when Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, was rating no higher than 1 or 2% in national polls, he had a well-worn punchline he used as he pitched himself in living rooms and conference rooms where many of the guests were, like him, young, male and gay.Kenya The New York Times world27 Apr 2019
Pete Buttigieg, whose upstart presidential campaign has benefited from an early surge of donations and national attention, will no longer accept contributions from federal lobbyists, his campaign said Friday, bowing to pressure from fellow Democrats who want to change the way campaigns raise money.