海角大神

海角大神 / Text

After early success, a historic candidacy faces a much steeper hurdle

Pete Buttigieg has struggled to gain traction in Southern states. Is it his identity as an openly gay candidate, or his record on racial justice?

By Simon Montlake, Staff writer
North Charleston, S.C.

On a rainy afternoon, Pete Buttigieg is on his feet inside the fellowship hall of a Baptist church, fielding questions from a mixed-race audience, when an African American woman takes the microphone.聽

She introduces herself as an educator and points out that South Carolina ranks 42nd out of 50 states on education. How does Mr. Buttigieg, who is running for president, plan to create equity in public schools, she asks. The audience applauds.聽

He thanks her for her public service. 鈥淎s someone who鈥檚 married to a teacher, I feel like I get an education about education every time I come home,鈥 he says, generating a laugh from the crowd.聽

What Mr. Buttigieg leaves unsaid, as he speaks of the need to raise teachers鈥 salaries, is that his spouse at home in South Bend, Indiana, is a man.聽

As the first openly gay candidate in a Democratic presidential race, Mr. Buttigieg and his long-shot bid have become a signifier of how much attitudes have shifted on LGBTQ rights in a political party that a decade ago didn鈥檛 support same-sex marriage. For all the talk of Democratic identity politics, his sexual orientation doesn鈥檛 rate a mention at many of his public events, where he pitches himself as a thoughtful technocrat with a calm, respectful tone and a progressive platform.聽

As he tries to build a more diverse coalition in Southern states, Mr. Buttigieg knows that some voters may recoil from the idea of electing a gay president. But for most Democrats, Mr. Buttigieg鈥檚 sexual orientation is far from disqualifying; in a crowded early primary field, it was something of an asset for an unknown Midwestern mayor.聽

Later that day, Mr. Buttigieg is asked by a voter at a CNN town hall about a 9-year-old boy in Colorado who asked for advice from 鈥淢ayor Pete鈥 about coming out as gay.聽

鈥淭here have been so many moments like that, whether it鈥檚 a young person who is wondering where they fit, and this campaign sends a signal to them that they belong,鈥 he says.聽

He adds: 鈥淚鈥檓 under no illusions about the struggle toward equality in this country for anyone, including LGBTQ Americans.鈥 But, he continues, his baritone voice rising a notch, it鈥檚 possible 鈥渢o see those prejudices overcome and to do it in a way that brings more and more people along.鈥澛

The sea change in opinion on LGBTQ equality traces the life of Mr. Buttigieg, who was born in 1982. In a Gallup poll the following year, less than a third of respondents said they鈥檇 vote for a qualified gay candidate for office. Today that proportion has swung to 78% of respondents.聽

Mr. Buttigieg came out as gay in 2015 in an op-ed in a South Bend newspaper. He was reelected later that year as the city鈥檚 mayor with an increased majority.聽

Having a young, openly gay candidate in the race makes many Democrats feel good about their brand, says Don Haider-Markel, a politics professor at Kansas University. 鈥淗e speaks to their inclusiveness.鈥 And if he fails to make the final cut, Democrats may reason, rightly or not, that it wasn鈥檛 down to anti-gay prejudice in their ranks.聽

When Mr. Buttigieg does speak directly to his identity, unprompted, he ties it into his narrative of public service 鈥撀燼 struggle to reconcile his sexuality with his political goals 鈥 and his 海角大神 faith. That resonates with the Rev. Colin Kerr, pastor of Parkside Church in Charleston, who has endorsed his candidacy.聽

Most politicians genuflect to religion in making their electoral pitch, but Mr. Buttigieg, an Episcopalian, invokes his faith in a far more thoughtful way, says Mr. Kerr. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an exciting dynamic. We see someone who is both a devout 海角大神 and is very open about his orientation.鈥澛

In a 2019 Pew survey, 66% of mainline Protestants said they favored same-sex marriage. Among white evangelicals, though, only 29% did. Attitudes also vary by age: Half of baby boomers said they oppose same-sex marriage.聽

Mr. Buttigieg acknowledges the whiplash that some have felt since same-sex marriage became a constitutional right in 2015, the year that he came out. 鈥淚 recognize that marriage equality in particular was a change that came so fast,鈥 he told Monday鈥檚 CNN town hall. 鈥淎 lot of people were disoriented by it.鈥澛

That conservatism is stronger here in the South, where faith and race intersect with politics, making it thornier ground for Mr. Buttigieg, who has struggled to win over African American voters. Some African American leaders have indicated that his sexuality is an issue, though others have argued his real stumbling block has been political, citing his record in South Bend in handling racial justice.聽

For supporters in the LGBTQ community here, Mr. Buttigieg鈥檚 candidacy is both a marker of progress and a reminder of the resistance that remains.聽

鈥淗e won鈥檛 get enough votes down South, and that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 worried about,鈥 says Molly Shields, a medical student in Charleston who identifies as queer and says she felt the disapproval of classmates when she told them she was in a relationship with a woman. 鈥淭here may be more tolerance, but that鈥檚 not the same as acceptance.鈥

Still, win or lose, Mr. Buttigieg has cut a historic path to the highest office.聽

鈥淧ete has been competing just like every other candidate, and he鈥檚 been judged by the same standards as every other candidate. And that鈥檚 a remarkable thing,鈥 says Annise Parker, president of the LGBTQ Victory Fund.聽

Elite education, hardscrabble hometown

The only son of academics at Notre Dame 鈥撀爃is Maltese father translated Antonio Gramasci, an Italian Marxist 鈥 Mr. Buttigieg has the smooth cadence of a baseball announcer turned professor. Educated at Harvard and Oxford, his rapid ascent on the national stage irks some and dazzles others, though he wears his learning lightly, preferring to emphasize his roots in a hardscrabble city.聽

Last April, he announced his run for president in a former auto plant in South Bend that now houses tech startups. At the time, he was 37. 鈥淚 recognize the audacity of doing this as a Midwestern millennial mayor,鈥 he told the crowd.聽

At the end of the speech, a bespectacled man in slacks and a blue shirt climbed on stage and waved. He kissed the mayor on the cheek and embraced him. The hometown crowd knew him as Chasten, the teacher who married Mr. Buttigieg a year earlier at their Episcopal church.聽

While Mr. Buttigieg has faced criticism from Democratic rivals for raising money from the ultrawealthy, his campaign also got early support from pro-LGBTQ donors who helped sustain his run in a crowded field.

The 2018 midterms saw an unprecedented number of candidates who identified as LGBTQ. In all, 180 candidates, nearly all Democrats, were elected to state legislatures, including 70 incumbents, according to a study co-written by Mr. Haider-Markel. Ten were elected to the U.S. Congress. Most, though not all, ran in left-leaning urban districts.聽

The study found that sexual orientation didn鈥檛 appear to make a difference to candidates鈥 chances of success, controlling for other factors. Still, that doesn鈥檛 necessarily apply to Mr. Buttigieg, were he to become the presidential nominee. 鈥淎 national race is unprecedented,鈥 says Mr. Haider-Markel. 鈥淭he candidate doesn鈥檛 get to choose the district.鈥澛

He says that while most of those opposed to LGBTQ candidates would be staunch Republicans, 鈥渢here鈥檚 a real question if he could get enough support among independents or ... Republicans who switch鈥 between elections.聽

On the campaign trail, Mr. Buttigieg has rarely leaned into the historic nature of his candidacy. 鈥淚鈥檓 not running to be the gay president of the United States,鈥 he has said.聽

He is a stoical, even-keeled campaigner, in contrast to the more raucous notes hit by rivals. As a result, his more emotional moments have gotten attention, including a speech in New Hampshire where he reflected on the empowering message that his victory in Iowa sent to young Americans who wondered if they belonged.聽

At other rallies, he has pledged his support for LGBTQ equality legislation and ending discrimination against transgender individuals.

鈥淚鈥檓 standing right in front of you as a veteran, happily married, running for president of the United States,鈥 he told a rally in Arlington, Virginia.聽

Campaigning in the Bible Belt

That combination may not have served Mr. Buttigieg quite as well in South Carolina, where a majority of Democratic voters are African American and religious conservatism runs deep.聽

Renard Chisolm calls it an 鈥淴鈥 factor, and perhaps not in a good way.聽

Mr. Chisolm, who is African American and a member of a Baptist church in Jonesville, says he believes Mr. Buttigieg has a right to his own private life, but that a presidency would put that private life on official display.聽

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know much else about him, so I鈥檓 willing to be open-minded and listen to what he鈥檚 got to say. But for me at least, a first husband would be hard to stomach,鈥 says Mr. Chisolm.聽

In focus groups held here last summer by the Buttigieg campaign that later leaked to McClatchy, some undecided black voters also said they were uncomfortable with a gay candidate 鈥 or even discussing the topic. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like the fact that he threw out there that he lives with his husband,鈥 one man said.聽

Still, others resist the idea that African Americans won鈥檛 vote for a qualified gay candidate. They say Mr. Buttigieg鈥檚 failure to win over more black voters is better explained by his lack of national experience and a mixed record on social justice in South Bend, as well as the stronger outreach made by candidates with longer track records in South Carolina.聽

鈥淵ou鈥檙e in the South, the Bible Belt. It鈥檚 gonna be relevant. But it鈥檚 not as relevant as people are making it out to be,鈥 says Michael Bailey, a spokesman for the Democratic Black Caucus of South Carolina.

Jordan Ragusa, a political scientist at the College of Charleston College, says Mr. Buttigieg has had few endorsements by African American officeholders, and that counts in a tight primary. Black primary voters tend to be less ideological and are laser-focused on who can defeat President Donald Trump in November.聽

And while gay marriage is a no-no for some conservative voters, this attitude isn鈥檛 limited to one racial community. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 happening with all races and education levels. There鈥檚 a generational gap on this issue,鈥 says Mr. Ragusa, co-author of 鈥淔irst in the South: Why South Carolina鈥檚 Presidential Primary Matters.鈥澛

Indeed, in Iowa, a middle-aged white woman was filmed asking to retract her vote for Mr. Buttigieg after being told he was married to a man.聽

He later told ABC News that he was running to be her president too. 鈥淚 wish she was able to see that my love is the same as her love for those that she cares about,鈥 he said.聽

鈥淎m I here to judge?鈥

Last Sunday, Cassandra Whaley heard Mr. Buttigieg address worshippers at her church on Jones Island outside Charleston. The next day she drove to his town hall to learn more about his policies on health 鈥撀爏he works at a hospital 鈥撀燼nd youth services.聽

When she found out Mr. Buttigieg was gay, Ms. Whaley decided to set it aside and listen. 鈥淎m I here to judge? No. Jesus didn鈥檛 judge. He gave us parables. He still loved,鈥 she says, as she waited in line with a mostly white crowd.聽

Will other voters in her community be as accepting? She pauses. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not there yet.鈥澛

Inside the hall, Mike Tecosky, a banker, sat in the third row. He was undecided on a primary candidate and curious to hear how Mr. Buttigieg proposed to tackle racism. Mr. Tecosky, who is white, says he would be happy to elect a gay candidate, but wasn鈥檛 sure everyone else would.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 2020. You wouldn鈥檛 think that racism exists but it does, so religious beliefs may impact how people feel about Buttigieg,鈥 he says.聽

Should Mr. Buttigieg actually become the Democratic nominee, he knows his sexual orientation will be weaponized by opponents. 鈥淗e does this with his eyes open. He goes in knowing what may happen,鈥 says Ms. Parker.聽

She should know. In 2009, she ran for mayor of Houston and was the target of anti-LGBTQ leaflets during a runoff with a Democratic opponent. Ms. Parker, who had already held public office as a married lesbian with two children, won the election and became a high-profile LGBTQ mayor.

Her opponent in that race was black. 鈥淭he African American community is no different from the rest of America,鈥 she says, noting her success in building a diverse coalition.聽

Mr. Haider-Markel says Mr. Buttigieg鈥檚 willingness to talk about his struggle to come out as a public figure gives him an authenticity for some voters. He draws a parallel with another historic candidate, President Barack Obama, who ran in 2008 as a unifier and tried not to be defined by race.聽聽

Just as Mr. Obama did in 2008 after a controversy over his pastor鈥檚 politics, however, Mr. Buttigieg may be forced to speak more pointedly about his sexual orientation and to offer a path to understanding. 鈥淚 suspect that at some point if Buttigieg continues to rack up delegates and stays in the race ... then he鈥檒l have to give some kind of speech,鈥 he says.聽聽聽

Two Midwest marriages

Mr. Buttigieg has spoken about how he suppressed his sexuality because he aspired to a conventional Midwestern life: marriage, kids, public service. 鈥淵ou could be married and have kids, or you could be gay. You couldn鈥檛 be both,鈥 he told The Daily podcast in November.聽

It took a legal battle in Ohio to flip that script. Jim Obergefell petitioned the Supreme Court after appealing Ohio鈥檚 refusal to put him on the death certificate of his late husband, whom he married in Maryland in 2013. The justices ruled in 2015 that Ohio鈥檚 refusal to recognize Mr. Obergefell鈥檚 same-sex marriage was unconstitutional.

Three years later, Pete and Chasten Buttigieg got married. Among the readings at the service was the ending of聽Obergefell v. Hodges,听the decision that made the wedding possible.聽

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 amazing,鈥 says Mr. Obergefell, the litigant in the landmark case. 鈥淚 love the fact that he is running, and he鈥檚 out there with his husband.鈥澛

Mr. Obergefell, who advocates for LGBTQ rights in Ohio, says while he鈥檚 thrilled to see Mr. Buttigieg on the national stage, he also worries about what might be unleashed. 鈥淚t will embolden people who are our opponents to become louder and more hateful if he becomes the nominee.鈥澛

But he鈥檚 optimistic that Mr. Buttigieg can break down more barriers. 鈥淥ne of Pete鈥檚 greatest strengths is that he鈥檚 openly gay, but he鈥檚 also a person of faith and that appeals to a huge segment of society. He served our country. That appeals to a large segment of society.鈥

Staff writer Patrik Jonsson contributed reporting from Jonesville, S.C.