Pete Buttigieg, the youthful mayor of South Bend, Indiana, whose presidential exploratory committee has attracted a surge of interest in recent weeks coinciding with a steady rise in the polls, defended his past criticisms of President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence during an appearance on ABC's "Good Morning America" Thursday, while pushing back on Republican efforts to label recent Democratic proposals as 'socialist.'
During Buttigieg's appearance, which came on the same morning he released a video teasing an upcoming event at which its expected he will formally launch his campaign, he was asked about his characterizations of the president as a "chicken hawk" who dodged the Vietnam War draft and whether such attacks had a harmful effect on the nation's political discourse.
"I work very hard to make sure that when we oppose this president we're not emulating him," Buttigieg said. "But we do need to call out hypocrisy when we see it and when we have people wrapping themselves in the flag, who evidently faked a disability in order to get out of serving, when you have somebody seeming to want to impose his religion on others as the vice president has, and at the same time teaming up with the presidency that seems to have no regard for, at least, what I would consider to be Christian values, I do think that hypocrisy needs to be called out."
"It needs to be called out forcefully," the mayor added. "But we need to be factual and we need to be honest and we do, in resolving all of this disagreement, need to be decent as well."
(MORE: Who is Pete Buttigieg?)In the video emailed to supporters and posted to his social media channels earlier in the morning, Buttigieg, 37, recounts his efforts to introduce himself and spread his message since his committee’s launch in late January before asking supporters to join him in South Bend on April 14.
“We’ve listened as you’ve shared your stories and your ideas, your visions for our future and your expectations for your political future, and it’s clear people want a new direction for America,” Buttigieg says. “But it’s not just about winning an election, it’s about winning an era.”
As he travels the country sharing his platform with voters, the mayor, along with much of the Democratic primary field as a whole, has faced widespread criticism from the Republicans, led by Trump, for embracing ideas like Medicare-for-all and the proposed "Green New Deal," which it claims have roots in socialism. On "GMA," Buttigieg characterized such attacks as misleading.
"The president is adopting a tactic that takes us back to the darkest days of the '50s when you could use the word 'socialist' to kill somebody's career, or to kill an idea, but that trick has been tried so many times that I think it's losing all meaning," he said, pointing to the right-wing origins of the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, of an example of a proposal on which the GOP flipped.
"The Affordable Care Act was a conservative idea that Democrats borrowed and they called that 'socialist.' So it's kind of like the boy who cried wolf," Buttigieg continued. "It's lost all power I think, especially for my generation of voters. Folks just want to know whether an idea is a good idea or not and slapping a label on it, especially in a careless way that doesn't make any sense, I don't think it moves the debate."
The mayor further argued, citing polling that on several of the issues with proposed "socialist" solutions, the American public leans further to the left than Congress.
"Let's take universal background checks [for the purchase of firearms], 80-90% of Americans think we ought to do it. Over 80% of Republicans think we ought to do it. And congress can't make it happen," he said. "Comprehensive immigration reform, higher wages, paid family leave, even Medicare-for-all, these are things that command a support of the majority of the American people."
The interview on "Good Morning America" and the announcement of next week's event coincides with the mayor’s emergence from relative obscurity. He’s parlayed a string of high-profile interviews and appearances into a place among the upper-tier of candidates in the Democratic primary.
On the back of a well-received CNN town hall in March that elevated his status in insider circles, Buttigieg’s exploratory committee raised $7 million in the year’s first quarter, and a recent Quinnipiac University poll measured him at 4 percent support, tying him with Sen. Elizabeth Warren and outpacing high-profile names such as Sens. Cory Booker, Amy Klobuchar and Kirsten Gillibrand.
Prior to the launch of his exploratory committee in January, Buttigieg was perhaps best known outside of Indiana for an unsuccessful bid to be chair of the Democratic National Committee in early 2017. But even with that marginal notoriety, he has had to wholly introduce himself to the majority voters of in 2019, with Thursday’s video joking that his efforts have included pronunciation lessons.
“Our first hurdle was simple,” Buttigieg says, leading into a graphic of the phoenetic spelling of his last name (Boot-edge-edge) as clips of incorrect attempts to say it play in the background.
(MORE: Buttigieg officiates a hometown wedding on day off from the campaign trail)As part of Buttigieg’s pitch to voters, he has argued that as the second-term mayor of South Bend -- Indiana’s fourth-largest city by population and the home to Notre Dame University -- he has more political executive experience than both Trump and Pence had during the 2016 campaign. He has paired his pitch with the notion that American politics are due for a generational shift.
“We would be well-served if Washington started to look more like our best-run cities and towns,” Buttigieg said during the CNN town hall and repeated again on "GMA."
Additional interviews with Stephen Colbert and on "The Breakfast Club" radio show to start his campaign have led to increased awareness of the mayor, his personal life (Buttigieg is gay, knows multiple languages and speaks openly about his Christian faith) and his packed resume -- prior to earning his Rhodes Scholarship, Buttigieg attended Harvard, and he worked as a consultant for John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign before enlisting in the Navy Reserve, serving in Afghanistan and moving home to his native South Bend.
In his video, Buttigieg further outlines a few of the goals of his potential candidacy, seeking supporters who want to "make our politics more honest," "fix our democracy," "defend racial justice," "look forward to the future" and "bring generations together."