New York Post

‘TOXIC’ PETE SPEWING

- By MARK MOORE

Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg snapped that he was on “personal time” when questioned late Tuesday about his plans to visit the toxic-train derailment site in East Palestine, Ohio — before asking if he could take a photo of the reporter.

Jennie Taer, who posted the 46-second video on Twitter, identified herself to Buttigieg as a reporter for the Daily Caller News Foundation as he walked down the street with his husband, Chasten.

“What do you have to say to the folks in Ohio, East Palestine, who are suffering right now?” Taer asked the 41-yearold Biden administra­tion official.

“I’d refer you to about a dozen interviews I’ve given today, and if you’d like to arrange a conversati­on, make sure to reach out to our press office,” Buttigieg responded. “I’d like to have that conversati­on with you.”

“Do you have a message for them?” Taer persisted.

“I do and I shared that with the press many times today. I refer you to those comments,” Buttigieg repeated.

Taer asked if he could share that message with her.

“No. I’m going to refer you to the comments I made to the press because right now I’m taking some personal time and I’m walking down the street,” the secretary said.

‘When I’m ready’

Asked when he would be traveling to Ohio, Buttigieg said he would “share that when I’m ready.”

At that point, the Cabinet member stopped and asked Taer if he could take a photo of her.

In her Twitter posting, Taer said that “I guess he didn’t like that so he took a pic of me. Im [sic] just doing my job, sir.”

The bizarre exchange made many conservati­ves bristle.

“This is how elitists who are made uncomforta­ble act out,” tweeted The Hill columnist Joe Concha. “Amazing how few members of the press are commenting on this.”

Fox News host Harris Faulkner asked, “Why did the Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg need a picture of a member of our FREE press? Is he trying to be funny . . . or is something else at play here? Targeting? Journalist­s are allowed to speak with public officials who are in public.”

Ex-CNN producer Steve Krakauer tweeted, “This is totally weird, and shows the current administra­tion’s disdain for journalist­s. Imagine if [ex-Transporta­tion Secretary] Elaine Chao did this during the Trump administra­tion.”

Buttigieg has been criticized for not trekking to the eastern Ohio community since the Norfolk Southern train carrying a variety of toxic chemicals derailed on Feb. 3, and the Biden administra­tion has taken heat for not responding with federal assistance for the catastroph­e more quickly.

He said in an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America” Tuesday he would go to Ohio “when the time is right.” On Wednesday, the Department of Transporta­tion said Buttigieg would travel to East Palestine on Thursday to meet with community members and receive an update from the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Drawing on his experience as the mayor of South Bend, Ind., Buttigieg said there are “two kinds of people who show up” at disaster sites.

“People who were there because they have a specific job to do and are there to get something done. And people were there to look good and have their picture taken,” he said.

The comment was an apparent jab at Donald Trump, who visited East Palestine Wednesday.

Thirty-eight rail cars derailed and a fire destroyed another 12 cars, the NTSB said in a preliminar­y report.

The train was transporti­ng 20 known hazardous materials, including vinyl chloride, a chemical used in making plastic.

The spill caused the evacuation­s of hundreds of people from the East Palestine area and contaminat­ed the surroundin­g air, water and ground.

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