The Mayor learned from watching Biden that it is easy to look Americans in the eye, lie about the obvious, and be fully supported by much of the electorate. TD
Andrea Widburg
When Buttigieg entered the Democrat presidential primary in 2019, the only real ability he demonstrated was that he could leverage himself into positions for which he seemed to have no useful qualifications. Briefly, he was a good student, whose hard-left focus showed him perfectly suited for a life in academia but did not train him in any of the skills required for being president.
. . ." And then, there Buttigieg was, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, the 310th largest city in America but recently ranked as the 10th most dangerous city in America. During his mayoralty, Buttigieg had virtually no significant accomplishments and never received more than 11% of the vote.
"Heading into the Democrat party primaries, where he placed very well, Buttigieg had only two things going for him: First, he made a big deal out of being gay, as if that is a useful accomplishment that qualifies one to be a nation’s chief executive. Second, he has a truly beautiful voice, one that is deep and mellifluous, making any nonsense he spouts sound weirdly reasonable.
"Those minimal qualifications catapulted Buttigieg onto Biden's cabinet as Transportation Secretary and, today, allow him to spin a complete fantasy for the Democrats’ poor polling leading up to the midterms. According to him, Biden’s policies have been so darn good it is impossible for Democrat candidates properly to explain all the benefits to voters:"
"Remember, we have our challenges right now but when the president took office, we were facing an economy that was at risk of going into freefall. The American Rescue Plan stopped that," Transportation Sec. Buttigieg tells @GStephanopoulos. https://t.co/SYNTcCdm7c pic.twitter.com/rGpvBCzcYq
— This Week (@ThisWeekABC) October 16, 2022
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