Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHAT PETE BUTTIGIEG COULD LEARN FROM DESANTIS

-

If Pete Buttigieg wants to be taken seriously as a potential presidenti­al contender, he ought to spend some time studying Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Compare the transporta­tion secretary’s bungling of the toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, with DeSantis’s hands-on management of Hurricane Ian, and it’s obvious why the governor’s presidenti­al prospects are rising — while Buttigieg has likely damaged his future chances to win the Oval Office.

When Hurricane Ian ravaged Florida, DeSantis was the very model of a commander in chief leading in a time of crisis. Before the storm hit, he was on the ground briefing Floridians on evacuation plans and putting in place strategies to manage gasoline shortages and restore power, internet and cellphone service. Once the storm had passed, he moved swiftly to restore essential services and rebuild critical infrastruc­ture. He got the bridge to Pine Island rebuilt in three days, reopened the Sanibel Causeway in just two weeks, cleaned up thousands of miles of debris, reopened roads and highways, created a state-run program to get travel trailers to residents whose homes had been destroyed, and offered free mental health services via online therapy to those impacted by the disaster. Even President Joe Biden praised DeSantis’s response to the hurricane as “remarkable.”

Buttigieg had a golden opportunit­y to demonstrat­e the same kind of leadership when a train carrying toxic chemicals derailed in East Palestine on Feb. 3. He could have been on the ground from Day 1, meeting with local residents and officials, and marshaling federal resources to help a community in need.

Instead, he blew it. Buttigieg did not even mention the crash for 10 days — not a tweet, much less a visit to the disaster site. He spoke publicly, at the National Associatio­n of Counties Conference in D.C. on Feb. 13, but failed to so much as mention East Palestine. It was not until Feb. 13 that he issued his first tweet on the subject. And it was not until Feb. 23 that he finally visited the site of the crash — a day after Donald Trump showed up. Yes, the former president got there before the sitting transporta­tion secretary.

Amazingly, Buttigieg attacked Trump for his visit and tried to deflect blame onto the former president. His suggestion that the Trump administra­tion’s regulatory rollbacks had contribute­d to the disaster was, according to The Washington Post’s fact checking, untrue.

Then, Buttigieg tried to downplay the incident, declaring, “While this horrible situation has gotten a particular­ly high amount of attention, there are roughly 1,000 cases a year of a train derailing.”

It’s not just the crisis in East Palestine that Buttigieg has botched. In the fall of 2021, as cargo ships lined up outside U.S. ports and Americans grappled with an unpreceden­ted supply chain crisis — while Congress nearly melted down over the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill — Buttigieg was mysterious­ly missing in action. It turned out that he was on unannounce­d paternity leave for his newborn twins. Ultimately, he seems wholly uninterest­ed in his job, which is probably why he never seems to be able to right things when the you know what hits the fan.

The job Buttigieg really seems to be interested in is president. He likely saw the transporta­tion post as a boring but easy steppingst­one on his way to the Oval Office. But his shambolic performanc­e has done damage to his presidenti­al aspiration­s. Americans might look at Buttigieg’s incompeten­ce and think: If he can’t manage a train derailment, how is he going to manage a crisis like the war in Ukraine?

Buttigieg’s feckless crisis management has shown that he’s no DeSantis. And with his performanc­e in East Palestine, his presidenti­al aspiration­s might have just gone up in smoke as toxic as the stuff wafting from a burning rail car.

 ?? ?? Marc Thiessen
Marc Thiessen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States