Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Pete Buttigieg: the Bernie Sanders fan running for president
Pete Buttigieg: the Bernie Sanders fan running for president
Mar 28, 2026 3:22 PM

Pete Buttigieg (pronounced BOOT-edge-edge), mayor of South Bend, Indiana is running for president. His candidacy is a pared to democratic front-runners like former vice president Joe Biden or senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT). Nevertheless, he’s worth watching for the window he offers into his generation: millennials.

Buttigieg is 37 years-old, and while twice-elected mayor of South Bend, his first splash into the political scene was with the winning essay he wrote in the year 2000 for the JFK Presidential Library and Museum’s “Profile in Courage” contest. His chosen topic? Bernie Sanders.

While it is safe to say the mayor is to left of me politically, there are elements of his essay that resonate and which I believe paint a more accurate picture of our generation’s approach to politics — or, at least, another side to the story. Too often, our political discussion — especially when one generation is critiquing another — devolves into grouchy name-calling because the terms used, such as “socialism,” don’t mean the same thing to different generations of Americans.

One key difference that I’ve observed, if only anecdotally, is that millennials are far less cynical than previous generations. This is important politically since according to Pew millennials will likely be the largest generation among the electorate in 2020. It is important morally because inter-generational understanding is essential municating timeless principles to the future leaders of our societies.

In his essay, Buttigieg begins by outlining the cynicism that perennially characterizes our nation’s political discourse:

We must re-examine the psychological and political climate of American politics. As it stands, our future is at risk due to a troubling tendency towards cynicism among voters and elected officials. The successful resolution of every issue before us depends on the fundamental question of public integrity.

While the tendency today is for the major parties to drift away from one another rather than feigning to be centrists — as Buttigieg saw it in 2000 — much posturing is still a matter of similar, cynical rhetoric.

I remember watching former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Price-Is-Right Bernie Sanders in the 2016 Democratic debates. Instead of betting one dollar more like a contestant on that game show, her policies were one degree less progressive than the senator from Vermont. Sanders said he wanted Medicare for all, so she said she only wanted to expand the Affordable Care Act. Sanders said he wanted a $15 national minimum wage, so she said she wanted $12. The fact that some pundits still refer to her as a centrist — despite voting with Sanders 93 percent of the time when they were in the Senate together — shows that the rhetoric worked.

So how did Buttigieg think that Sanders broke the political mold?

Fortunately for the political process, there remain a number mitted individuals who are steadfast enough in their beliefs to run for office to benefit their fellow Americans. Such people are willing to eschew political and fort and convenience because they believe they can make a difference. One outstanding and inspiring example of such integrity is the country’s only Independent Congressman, Vermont’s Bernie Sanders.

Before jumping to the conclusion that Buttigieg was just another young socialist, keep reading:

[A] politician dares to call himself a socialist? He does indeed. Here is someone who has “looked into his own soul” and expressed an ideology, the endorsement of which, in today’s political atmosphere, is analogous to a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Even though he has lived through a time in which an admitted socialist could not act in a film, let alone hold a Congressional seat, Sanders is not afraid to be candid about his political persuasion.

I actually wrote something quite similar during the 2016 election: “Far from a liability, [Sanders’] idealism has served his interest.” My essay came 16 years later and didn’t win a prize, but I’m not mayor of a Midwestern city or a presidential hopeful either. So props to the mayor on that.

While Buttigieg may be sympathetic to Sanders’ proposals, he at least disagrees with them enough 19 years later to run against the man for the same party’s nomination. And indeed, it is not Sanders’ idealism alone but his perceived pragmatism that stood out to Buttigieg in 2000:

It is the second half of Sanders’ political role that puts the first half into perspective: he is a powerful force for conciliation and bi-partisanship on Capitol Hill…. It may seem strange that someone so steadfast in his principles has a reputation as a peacemaker between divided forces in Washington, but this is what makes Sanders truly remarkable. He represents President Kennedy’s ideal of promises of issues, not of principles.”

One might expect Buttigieg’s own campaign rhetoric to be full of starry-eyed idealism, like fellow millennial rep. Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), but he instead touts his record in South Bend in terms more reminiscent of this latter quality he admired in Sanders. If anything, I’d say his “ideology” is hard to pin-down from the interviews he’s given so far. He speaks in moral terms about restoring the character of our national discourse, but he quickly shifts to pragmatism when es to policy. Instead of rhetoric about the “one percent”; evil, conniving millionaires and billionaires; or the inherent and unquestionable virtues of organized labor, Buttigieg talks about how South Bend transitioned away from the auto industry toward tech, for example. Unions love Sanders. I doubt the UAW has any thought of endorsing Buttigieg.

Perhaps the mayor wouldn’t be that different from Sanders, but despite his youthful praise for the senator, the contrast between the two is sharp. He admires Sanders, but he isn’t Sanders. He isn’t bothered by a term like “socialist,” but he doesn’t call himself one either. He doesn’t really talk much about socialism at all from what I’ve seen.

Buttigieg may not be likely to win the Democratic nomination for president, but he has managed significantly to raise his profile in the last few months. Perhaps he’s really running for a vice presidential nomination, or maybe he’s hoping the extra media attention will help him sell a book or run for Senate or something like that.

Or maybe his lack of cynicism is genuine. And maybe the mayor’s uniquely millennial mix of pragmatism and idealism will fare better than anyone can predict.

In the meantime, I think if one wants a clearer political picture of millennials, Buttigieg offers a window into another side of that multifaceted demographic.

Photo credit: Pete Buttigieg @ Merrimack, NH (20190216) by marcn.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Woke Capital and the End of the Friedman Doctrine
A new book outlines what happens when businesses forsake their true mission—to serve the customer—and instead seek to transform the culture. Is there any hope that business will get back to, well, business? Read More… The woke agenda in corporate America is increasingly tyrannical and must be stopped to preserve free markets and the American way of life, so writes Stephen R. Soukup in the newly released second edition of The Dictatorship of Woke Capital: How Political Correctness Captured Big...
South Africa and the Merit of Merit
What happened to the early promise of liberal democracy and economic growth in South Africa? Marxism is what happened. Read More… In 1994 a momentous change unfolded at the southern tip of Africa as the oppressive regime of apartheid came to a peaceful end. The African National Congress (ANC) and its revered leader, Nelson Mandela, took the reins of power, and at first glance everything progressed perfectly—liberal democracy had won the day. By 1997 foreign direct investment (FDI) to South...
Alexa’s Just Not That into You
What do you do when your smart home starts outsmarting you? The dangers some forms of artificial intelligence pose are just beginning to be realized. Read More… A few weeks ago, software engineer Brandon Jackson found himself shut out of his smart home for a full week. When Alexa wouldn’t respond to mands, he called the Amazon help desk to see what the issue was. Evidently, pany locked him out because of his apparent racism: “I was told that the...
Young People Aren’t Becoming Conservatives. Here’s Why.
America’s biggest voting block doesn’t think conservatives “care.” To win, we have to change that. Read More… Almost everyone has heard the cynical political adage, generally attributed to Winston Churchill, that “Any man under 30 who is not a liberal has no heart, and any man over 30 who is not a conservative has no brains.” While the sentiment is lighthearted at its core, it municates a popular piece of political wisdom: as people get older and buy into the...
God’s Cricketer
With a passion for social justice, ending Apartheid in South Africa, and cricket, David Sheppard is perhaps the best batsman-bishop you’ve never heard of. Read More… You’re facing the Cy Young Award–winning pitcher Justin Verlander from a distance of 22 yards, armed only with a three-foot long, paddle-shaped club and your own nerve. To enliven the proceedings, Verlander interacts with you not from the traditional essentially static crouch, but after a headlong sprint from the outfield to the pitcher’s mound,...
Hungary Is Not Viktor Orbán
Hungary’s history plicated. It’s also greater than its current leader. Hungarians still have hope for reform. What it needs is some friends. Read More… Viktor Orbán, the controversial prime minister of Hungary, has no shortage of critics or defenders. For the critics, he is an authoritarian villain, a sinister leading voice in the global populist movement. To his supporters, Orbán is a champion of traditional values, protecting the nation-state and Hungarian culture from shadowy global elites. A recent Religion and...
Barbie Is a Movie for Our Time. This Is a Bad Thing.
The War of the Sexes is over. Guess who won? Nobody. Read More… When I was a college boy, one of my history professors argued persuasively, if self-interestedly, that pink was the medieval European color of manliness—it was the color of living flesh, of manly health. And I certainly admire the pinks one sees in Renaissance paintings. But I’ve never been able to see the good of it in our lives. When a man puts on a suit, it had...
David Brooks Is onto Something. Christians Take Note.
A recent New York Times op-ed took to task the “elites” who thumb their noses at Trump supporters. Maybe if the smart set listened more and harangued less they’d better understand why so many of their fellow citizens vote the way they do. Read More… It has taken some time but there are signs that the cultural elites, members of what has been called America’s “ruling class,” have started to engage in some long overdue self-examination as it relates to...
Christianity and Liberalism: The Spirituality of the Church in a Politicized World
It’s the 100th anniversary of J. Gresham Machen’s classic work. It didn’t change American Presbyterianism but should have. Was he just ahead of his time? Read More… J. Gresham Machen’s book Christianity and Liberalism, published 100 years ago, was a curious mix of theology and politics. Readers monly miss the political part if only because Machen, a Southern Presbyterian who labored in exile among Northern Presbyterians (the munions were divided from the Civil War to 1983), was a proponent of...
JPII, Mises, and Economics in Action
What do the Bishop of Rome and an agnostic Austrian economist have mon? The pursuit of human flourishing via respect for the dignity of the acting human person. Read More… Why would a theologian conduct a theological and moral analysis of human action as described by Ludwig von Mises, a represen­tative of the Austrian school of economics? What can an economist and agnostic tell the moral theologian about man? The Church teaches that economics is the science of human action...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved