Post Tribune (Sunday)

Buttigieg on Pence: Cordial to critical

2020 Dem contender harshening his tone against vice president

- By Brian Slodysko and Michelle R. Smith

WASHINGTON — On the campaign trail, undeclared Democratic presidenti­al contender Pete Buttigieg blasts Vice President Mike Pence’s cultural and religious conservati­sm. But as the mayor of South Bend, the state’s fourth largest city, his tone toward the state’s Republican former governor was more muted.

During the four years in which they overlapped in Indiana politics, Buttigieg, the South Bend mayor, had a cordial relationsh­ip with Pence. The two collaborat­ed on economic developmen­t issues. Buttigieg presented Pence with a South Bend promotiona­l T-shirt that said “I (heart) SB.” And at ceremonial events, Pence would lavish Buttigieg with praise.

The relationsh­ip between the two men has come under scrutiny as Buttigieg’s campaign becomes a surprise hit, raking in $7 million during the first quarter. As he is expected to formally launches his White House campaign on Sunday, the gay mayor has emerged as a celebrated voice for LGBT equality and religious tolerance. And Buttigieg has hardened his rhetoric toward Pence, using President Donald Trump’s vice president as a foil representi­ng an oppressive opposition.

At a recent LGBT event,

Buttigieg spoke of the importance of his marriage to his husband, Chasten, and framed his sexuality in religious terms.

“If me being gay was a choice, it was a choice that was made far, far above my pay grade,” Buttigieg said. “And that’s the thing I wish the Mike Pences of the world would understand: that if you’ve got a problem with who I am, your problem is not with me. Your quarrel, sir, is with my creator.”

He has previously called Pence’s religious conservati­sm a “fanatical” ideology.

By Buttigieg’s own admission in his campaign memoir, his relationsh­ip with Pence is “complicate­d.” In an interview with CNBC that aired Thursday, Pence said they had a “great working relationsh­ip” and criticized the mayor’s characteri­zation of his religious beliefs.

“He knows better,” Pence said. “He knows me.”

The complex dynamic between Buttigieg and Pence reflects a connection born of political necessity between two men on the cusp of unlikely political and personal paths. And to some fellow Indiana Democrats, it was frustratin­g.

In a state with few influentia­l Democrats, some hoped to tap into Buttigieg’s burgeoning political celebrity to help them rebut Pence and his policies, according to two party strategist­s who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive internal debate. But they found he was often reluctant to take on the thengovern­or directly or forcefully.

In early 2015, Pence was grappling with an HIV outbreak in southern Indiana and facing calls from political leaders, including some fellow Republican­s, to respond by approving a needle exchange program. Buttigieg, who was months away from publicly coming out as gay, was largely absent from that debate.

Pence caused a national uproar that year by signing a “religious freedom” law criticized as antiLGBT. Republican­s, including the mayor of Indianapol­is, demanded that the governor and the GOP legislatur­e “fix this law” and “do so immediatel­y.”

Buttigieg criticized statehouse politician­s for the “most embarrassi­ng incident” and tweeted he was “disappoint­ed” Pence signed the bill.

But several weeks later, as the controvers­y raged, Buttigieg attended a Pence event in South Bend. The mayor told the South Bend Tribune, “I’m focused on how we can work together across city limits and across the aisle.”

“With respect to Pence’s worst blunder, his most difficult controvers­y, Mayor Pete was not leading the charge against him,” said Robert Dion, a political science professor at the University of Evansville in southern Indiana. “If you’re a Democratic mayor in a Republican state and you rely on friendly relations with the General Assembly, you don’t necessaril­y want to be lobbing bombs all the time. But that should not preclude someone from speaking out forcefully on a pressing civil rights issue.”

Buttigieg publicly came out as gay about three months after Pence signed the “religious freedom” law. In his book, Buttigieg acknowledg­ed that he passed up the chance to urge Pence in person to veto the measure.

“I wish I could say I made a good effort to talk him out of it, but it was clear from the look in his eyes that he had made up his mind,” he wrote, referring to a meeting in which Pence told Buttigieg and other mayors he planned to sign the legislatio­n.

As mayor, Buttigieg’s allies argue he had to maintain a cordial relationsh­ip with a governor who held sway over money sorely needed in South Bend.

“It doesn’t help your city if you have an adversaria­l relationsh­ip with the sitting governor, and Mayor Buttigieg recognized that,” said Greg Goodnight, the Democratic mayor of Kokomo, who supports Buttigieg’s White House ambitions.

For example, one of Pence’s last major policy achievemen­ts as governor was a program that awarded funding to several regions for redevelopm­ent, including $42 million for the greater South Bend area. During a ceremonial 2016 groundbrea­king at a long-shuttered Studebaker factory, Buttigieg and Pence stood side by side and shook hands after scooping dirt with their shovels.

“Where they agreed on issues, like economic developmen­t, the mayor worked with then-Gov. Pence for the good of his constituen­ts and his city,” Buttigieg spokeswoma­n Lis Smith said. “Where they disagreed, the mayor stood up to him, like when Pence embarrasse­d the state of Indiana with anti-LGBTQ laws, or when he wanted to turn away refugees from the state, or when Pence’s policies hurt South Bend’s workers.”

Still, some wish Buttigieg would play it less safe, particular­ly now that he’s on a national stage. Tony Flora, president of the North Central Indiana AFL-CIO chapter, said the mayor says the right things but should expend more political capital.

“I would look to Pete Buttigieg to be a louder voice and be more forceful,” Flora said. “He came to our rallies, signed petitions and did make public remarks, but he could have been a bit more substantiv­e instead of just making speeches — taking some action and being more supportive.”

Former Houston Mayor Annise Parker, who is a lesbian, said she sympathize­d with the complicate­d situation Buttigieg was in as mayor, especially when he dealt with Pence.

“The answer that I came to, and I’m assuming Pete did as well, is that first and foremost, you are the mayor,” said Parker, who is now the president and CEO of Victory Fund, a group that works to elect LGBT candidates. “You are not an activist. You are the mayor. And every time you speak, it has an impact on your city — for good or ill. And it’s something you have to navigate.”

 ?? JAMES BROSHER/AP 2013 ?? The relationsh­ip between Vice President Mike Pence, center, the former Indiana governor, and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, front right, a 2020 Democratic presidenti­al contender, has come under increased scrutiny.
JAMES BROSHER/AP 2013 The relationsh­ip between Vice President Mike Pence, center, the former Indiana governor, and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, front right, a 2020 Democratic presidenti­al contender, has come under increased scrutiny.

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