Pete Buttigieg Becomes the Latest Democrat to Enter 2020 Presidential Elections

Pete Buttigieg Becomes the Latest Democrat to Enter 2020 Presidential Elections
Published on

Kathleen Struck, Esha Sarai contributed to this report.

Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, has become the latest Democrat to formally enter the crowded field of presidential candidates seeking to unseat Donald Trump in the 2020 election.

The 37-year-old, who announced a presidential exploratory committee in January, made it official at a rally in South Bend on Sunday.

The Harvard and Oxford graduate and Afghanistan war veteran has gone from being virtually unknown on the national political landscape to surging in recent polls, placing third behind behind former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg greets voters during a campaign stop at Portsmouth Gas Light, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, March 8, 2019. VOA

The son of an immigrant from Malta, Buttigieg attended Harvard College around the same time as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. He received a prestigious Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University, spent seven months in Afghanistan in the U.S. Navy Reserves as an intelligence analyst and driver and worked as a consultant for McKinsey & Company. Reportedly he speaks seven languages, some of them fluently, including Spanish and Norwegian.
And in 2011, he was elected mayor of his hometown, South Bend, population 100,000.

Buttigieg would be America's first openly gay president. His husband, Chasten, has also won over many American voters.

"As for my husband, you know I'm pretty biased, because I love him, but it's pretty great to see that the rest of America is falling in love with him too," Buttigieg said at a recent appearance in New Hampshire.

Mayor Pete Buttigieg talks with an AP reporter at his office in South Bend, Ind., Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019. VOA

The South Bend mayor has raised more than $7 million so far and assured himself a spot in the Democratic presidential debates that begin in June. Analysts say it remains to be seen if Buttigieg can maintain his recent momentum.
ALSO READ: Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg is Gushing in the Democratic Presidential Elections

"Sometimes candidates have a few weeks or few months of stardom and then another 'it candidate' replaces them," Leah Askarinam, a reporter and political analyst for Inside Elections, told VOA. "So I think we know he's viable. I don't think we know at this point that he's going to be a star in the field."

At least 18 Democrats are in the run to become the party's nominee to face off against President Donald Trump in next year's election. (VOA)

logo
NewsGram
www.newsgram.com