The Malta Independent on Sunday

Pete Buttigieg, US politician of Maltese descent, drops out of Democratic National Committee chairmansh­ip race

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South Bend Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, a man of Maltese descent, told Democratic National Committee members yesterday that he did not have the votes needed to be elected chairman of the DNC and was removing his name from considerat­ion.

Many in Malta were hopeful that Mr Buttigieg would do his country of heritage proud, but those hoped were quashed yesterday evening with his announceme­nt that he was withdrawin­g from the race.

Mr Buttigieg had campaigned as an outsider promising “a fresh start.” He had hoped neither Ellison nor Perez could reach a majority, opening the door for another option. Yesterday he urged the Democratic Party to “look outside Washington” to find its way back after its shock presidenti­al defeat against Republican candidate

A politician of Maltese descent, Pete Buttigieg, has announced his candidacy for Chair of the Democratic Party’s National Committee back in January.

Mr Buttigieg is 35 years of age and is currently mayor of South Bend, Indiana and is openly gay. He was born in Indiana and attended Harvard College, where he was president of the Harvard Institute of Politics Student Advisory Committee. He received a first class honours degree in philosophy, politics and economics in 2007 from Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar.

He was elected mayor of South Bend on 8 November, 2011 with 74 per cent of the vote, becoming the youngest mayor of a US city with at least 100,000 residents.

In 2014 he served for seven months in Afghanista­n as a lieutenant in the US Navy Reserves.

He was re-elected mayor in 2015.

The Democratic National Committee is the governing body of the US Democratic Party, which is currently regrouping after the Republican Party won the presidency and control of both the US Senate and the House.

The national committee coordinate­s strategy to support Democratic Party candidates throughout the United States for local, state, and national office.

The race has now narrowed to two candidates, a former Cabinet member and a liberal Minnesota congressma­n, both of them promising to rebuild a reeling party and fight Republican President Donald Trump.

Tom Perez, labour secretary under former President Barack Obama, told Democratic National Committee members the party is facing a “crisis of confidence” and a “crisis of relevance” after losing about 1,000 elected posts from Capitol Hill to state legislatur­es during the last decade, in addition to Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al election loss in November.

“We need a chair who cannot only take the fight to Donald Trump but make sure that we talk about our positive message of inclusion and opportunit­y and talk to that big tent of the Democratic Party,” Perez said.

The other top contender, Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison, said Democrats “are the ones who are going to stand up, rise up and protect the American people.”

Both men promised aggressive rebuilding efforts for state and local Democratic parties.

Other candidates were still to address the gathering before ballots were cast Saturday afternoon.

Buttigieg did not endorse Perez or Ellison by the time of going to print last night.

With six candidates remaining on the ballot, there still could be at least two rounds of voting before Perez or Ellison wins.

The chair campaign has been uncharted territory as Democrats face a power deficit not seen in nine decades — beyond the lifetimes of virtually every American voter. Republican­s control the White House, Congress and about two-thirds of US statehouse­s. The GOP is one Senate confirmati­on fight away from a conservati­ve majority on the Supreme Court.

With Democrats in agreement in their opposition to Trump, the race is likely to turn on who convinces enough DNC members to believe in his or her promises of rebuilding party infrastruc­ture that withered under former President Barack Obama despite his personal electoral success.

Ellison told voting members he has signatures from 750,000 rank-and-file Democrats who support his chairmansh­ip bid. He promised to “convert them from demonstrat­ion energy to electoral energy.” He pledged to prioritize small donations to finance the party, while working to “organize this whole country.”

Perez said he would “rebuild strong parties” and “organize, organize, organize” so Democratic nominees could win “from the school to the Senate in all the states.”

As he withdrew from the race, Buttigieg suggested that Democrats already have options for those races. “There’s nothing wrong with our bench,” said the 35-yearold mayor, pegged as a likely state-wide candidate in Indiana. “We just haven’t called enough people on the bench ... and asked them to get out on the field.”

Perez got into the race at Obama’s urging, but he has pushed back on the notion that represents the same “establishm­ent” label that dogged Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign. Ellison has endorsemen­ts from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who challenged Clin- ton for the Democratic nomination, and also from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.

For their parts, Ellison and Perez have praised each other and promised unity regardless of the outcome.

Democratic mayors of the nation’s two largest cities have taken opposite sides. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti is at the meeting campaignin­g for Perez. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is lobbying members on Ellison’s behalf.

Party chair races usually aren’t undecided when the actual voting starts, because a leading candidate usually emerges to make the ballots a formality. This time, the uncertaint­y has party staff and 442 eligible DNC members dusting off complicate­d rules that usually don’t matter.

For example, party officials expect about 70 or 75 members to be absent. Nearly all have designated another member to cast paper proxy ballots on their behalf. But that also adds a layer of suspense: Members in attendance will vote electronic­ally, with quick tallies, while the paper proxies must be counted by hand.

The winner will succeed outgoing Chairwoman Donna Brazile, who led the party as interim chief in the fallout from disclosure that internal party communicat­ions were stolen by hackers and leaked during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

US intelligen­ce officials have blamed Russian agents and said Moscow’s intention was to help Trump win.

Brazile said yesterday the party has worked with cybersecur­ity experts to address vulnerabil­ities. She chided Trump for his mockery of DNC cybersecur­ity and his doubts that Russians are at fault.

“No, Donald Trump, you can’t go to Staples and buy anti-Russian hacking software,” she said, urging Congress to investigat­e whether Russians hacked the Republican National Committee.

No RNC emails were leaked during the 2016 campaign. Republican officials insist their party communicat­ions were not breached.

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