Chicago Sun-Times

Buttigieg in Bronzevill­e: America ‘dragged down by racial inequality’

- BY SAM CHARLES, STAFF REPORTER scharles@suntimes.com | @samjcharle­s Contributi­ng: Lynn Sweet

South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg brought his presidenti­al campaign to Bronzevill­e Tuesday night, addressing a host of issues related to race in the United States.

“We need to act on the knowledge that this country is being dragged down by racial inequality,” Buttigieg said. “It is making the entire American project vulnerable. We have to act.”

Before taking questions from audience members, Buttigieg touted his “Douglass Plan,” named for the ex-slave and abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass, which, he said, would work to end “systemic racism.”

“We’re going to invest in the knowledge that the American Black experience might as well put you in a different country, and we cannot allow that to persist,” he said. “You cannot just replace hundreds of years of racist policy with a neutral policy and say, ‘OK, should be good to go now,’ and expect inequity will work itself out in the system.”

It was impossible to ignore, though, that the crowd of 1,000 at the Harold Washington Cultural Center was overwhelmi­ngly white.

Pastor Chris Harris of Bright Star Church introduced Buttigieg to the stage and noted the largely monochroma­tic nature of the audience in his warm-up address.

“Next time we have this kind of event, especially in Bronzevill­e — clap if you agree — we need some more black faces,” Harris said to rousing applause. “Next time, you can’t leave your black and brown friends at home.”

Buttigieg was asked by Q&A moderator Channyn Lynne Parker — a trans activist who is the manager of external relations for Howard Brown Health and a board member of Equality Illinois — what he’s learned so far from communitie­s of color while on the campaign trail.

“The biggest thing that I’ve learned is that good intentions are not enough,” he said. “We’ve got to have a conversati­on, the same conversati­on with white audiences that we have with audiences of color.”

Buttigieg also fielded questions concerning safety in schools in the age of mass shootings, immigratio­n reform, voting rights, the opioid crisis and LGBTQ rights in the military.

Before arriving in Bronzevill­e, Buttigieg attended another fundraiser at the downtown offices of Clayco, a constructi­on company whose chairman and CEO was a major supporter of former President Barack Obama.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg on Tuesday at the Harold Washington Cultural Center touted his “Douglass Plan,” which he said would work to end “systemic racism.”
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Democratic presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg on Tuesday at the Harold Washington Cultural Center touted his “Douglass Plan,” which he said would work to end “systemic racism.”

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