Buttigieg, who graduated magna cum laude from Harvard and then studied politics, philosophy, and economics at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, has also written his second book, the just released “Trust: America’s Best Chance “(Liveright 2020; $23.95).
Pete Buttigieg
If you’re wondering what Mayor Pete, aka Pete Buttigieg the former two term mayor of South Bend, Indiana has been doing since he dropped his bid for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination in May, the answer is a lot. Since then, Buttigieg has accepted a position as a Faculty Fellow for the University of Notre Dame’s Institute for Advanced Studies (NDIAS) and launched “Win the Era,” a political action committee aimed at electing a new generation of leaders who bring new ideas and generational vision to down-ballot races.
“We are calling out to a new generation,” he says.
Buttigieg, who graduated magna cum laude from Harvard and then studied politics, philosophy, and economics at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, has also written his second book, the just released “Trust: America’s Best Chance “(Liveright 2020; $23.95).
“I believe our country faces a three-fold crisis in trust,” says Buttigieg, listing those as the lack of trust in America’s institutions and in each other as well as trust in America around the world. His belief in the need for a global renewal in trust ties in with his work at NDAIS. Besides teaching an interdisciplinary undergraduate course on the importance of trust as understood through different fields, he is working on two research projects–exploring how to restore trust in political institutions and another focusing on the forces distinctively shaping the 2020s.
The book is another way of starting a conversation about trust and how we can, as he says, “move on from this pandemic, to deliver racial and economic justice, and how trust can be earned and how it can restore America’s leadership role in this world.”
Buttigieg believes that America offers a type of leadership that the world needs.
“Not just any kind of American leadership,” he says. “But America at its best.”
In January 2011, Newsweek magazine
published an article titled “America’s Dying Cities” focusing on 10 cities with
the steepest drop in overall population as well as the largest decline in the
number of residents under the age of 18. Among those listed such as Detroit and
Flint, was South Bend, Indiana which over the years had lost or seen diminished
several large manufacturing companies including Studebaker and an exodus of
young talent.
“What is particularly troubling
for this small city is that the number of young people declined by 2.5% during
the previous decade,” the article posited, “casting further doubt on whether
this city will ever be able to recover.”
Around that same time, Pete
Buttigieg, who graduated magna cum laude from Harvard, studied politics,
philosophy and economics at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and had worked for the management
strategy consulting firm McKinsey and Company—the type of resume that screams
New York, Los Angeles or London, but certainly not his native South Bend—moved
back to the city where he grew up and threw his hat into the ring as a
Democratic mayoral candidate. He was 29 years old.
Buttigieg won his election. During his first term, as an officer in U.S. Navy Reserve from 2009-2017, he took a leave of absence to serve for a seven-month deployment in Afghanistan in 2014, receiving the Joint Service Commendation Medal for his counter terrorism work. Back home, he won re-election with 80% of the vote despite having come out as gay just four months earlier. Let me repeat that—a gay man was re-elected in Indiana with 80% of the vote.
“I’ve found people are really
accepting,” Buttigieg tells me when we finally connect on the phone—since we
set up a time to talk it’s been changed numerous times because he’s been very
busy since announcing he was going to run for president. He’s appeared on “The
View,” “CBS This Morning,” and “CNN” and has been interviewed by Rolling Stone,
the New Yorker and the New York Times to name just a few. Plus, his father, a
Notre Dame professor, had passed away.
The citizens of South Bend also
like results and this city, which Newsweek had doubted could come back just
eight years ago, is doing just that.
I live near South Bend, my brother
taught at Notre Dame University for 30 years, my son went to Holy Cross College
and I’m a big football fan so I’m there a lot. Over the years I’ve watched the
city’s downtown empty out, morphing into a place of empty storefronts as retail
and restaurants left either for good or for the area around University Mall, a
large sprawling indoor shopping center surrounded by smaller strip malls, car
dealerships and both chain and independent restaurants.
Then came such Buttigieg initiatives
as “1000 Homes in 1000 Days initiative,” which demolished or rehabilitated abandoned
homes in the city. His “Smart Streets” redefined the downtown, making it both
safer and more appealing. Two years ago, the city made the largest investment
ever—over $50 million– in its parks and trails, creating the green spaces so
valued by urban dwellers.
“There’s been an evolution in
economic redevelopment,” Buttigieg tells me. “It’s not about smoke-stack
chasing anymore. The coin of the realm is the work force—the people. A city is
made of people and it needs to be fun and a place you want to live. We didn’t
have those expectations before.”
Buttigieg talks of “urban
patriots,” a term he uses to describe groups of people who savor the challenge
of turning a rust belt city around and making it a “cool” city.
“It’s a type of militancy in how
people are approaching it which is quite different than when people were
leaving cities,” he says. “I grew up believing success had to do with leaving
home, but once I got out, I missed that sense of place and I realized I could
be part of my city’s economic re-development. So, I moved home. At a moment
when we’re being told that the Rust Belt is full of resentment, I think South
Bend is a reply, we’ve found a way of coming together, getting funding to make
our city better. There’s a sense of optimism. I think people are beginning to
look at politics and politicians and asking do they make life better or not and
what do they bring to the table to help everyone.”
Here’s what South Bend is like now. You can go white water rafting through the center of town. Vibrant neighborhoods consisting of coffee shops, eclectic boutiques, trendy restaurants and outdoor gathering places thrive in the downtown. Last fall, Garth Brooks performed outdoors in Notre Dame’s football stadium (its $400 million expansion which added several thousand premium seats as well as new academic buildings was completed just two years ago) in front of a sold-out crowd of 84,000 on a very cold and rainy October night. SF Motors started manufacturing at the old Hummer plant, producing electric cars. Walking trails, including one along the St. Joseph River, abound. Eddy Street Commons located across from the Notre Dame campus continues to expand, a destination of bars, shops and eateries as well as condos and apartment buildings. Old neighborhoods with homes that once had sagging porches and peeling paint, are now pristinely restored.
“We’re calling out to another
generation,” says Buttigieg. “There’s an energy here, people are proud of their
city and are working together to make it even better.”
Indeed. The other day, I was flipping through a magazine article about the best places in Indiana and paused at a magnificent photo of a downtown scene lit with colored lights reflecting on the sparkling waters of a river. Where is this? I wondered. Looking down, I saw the answer: South Bend.
In
January 2011, Newsweek magazine published an article titled “America’s Dying Cities”
focusing on 10 cities with the steepest drop in overall population as well as
the largest decline in the number of residents under the age of 18. Among those
listed such as Detroit and Flint, was South Bend, Indiana which over the years
had lost or seen diminished several large manufacturing companies including
Studebaker and an exodus of young talent.
“What is
particularly troubling for this small city is that the number of young people
declined by 2.5% during the previous decade,” the article posited, “casting
further doubt on whether this city will ever be able to recover.”
Around
that same time, Pete Buttigieg, who graduated magna cum laude from Harvard,
studied politics, philosophy and economics at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and had
worked for the management strategy consulting firm McKinsey and Company—the type
of resume that screams New York, Los Angeles or London, but certainly not his
native South Bend—moved back to the city where he grew up and threw his hat
into the ring as a Democratic mayoral candidate. He was 29 years old.
Buttigieg won his election. During his first
term, as an officer in U.S. Navy Reserve from 2009-2017, he took a leave of
absence to serve for a seven-month deployment in Afghanistan in 2014, receiving
the Joint Service Commendation Medal for his counterterrorism work. Back home,
he won re-election with 80% of the vote despite having come out as gay just
four months earlier. Let me repeat that—a gay man was re-elected in Indiana
with 80% of the vote.
“I’ve found
people are really accepting,” Buttigieg tells me when we finally connect on the
phone—since we set up a time to talk it’s been changed numerous times because
he’s been very busy since announcing he was going to run for president. He’s
appeared on “The View,” “CBS This Morning,” and “CNN” and has been interviewed
by Rolling Stone, the New Yorker and the New York Times to name just a few. Plus,
his father, a Notre Dame professor, had passed away.
The
citizens of South Bend also like results and this city, which Newsweek had doubted
could come back just eight years ago, is doing just that.
I live
near South Bend, my brother taught at Notre Dame University for 30 years, my son
went to Holy Cross College and I’m a big football fan so I’m there a lot. Over
the years I’ve watched the city’s downtown empty out, morphing into a place of
empty storefronts as retail and restaurants left either for good or for the
area around University Mall, a large sprawling indoor shopping center
surrounded by smaller strip malls, car dealerships and both chain and
independent restaurants.
Then came
such Buttigieg initiatives as “1000 Homes in 1000 Days initiative,” which
demolished or rehabilitated abandoned homes in the city. His “Smart Streets”
redefined the downtown, making it both safer and more appealing. Two years ago,
the city made the largest investment ever—over $50 million– in its parks and
trails, creating the green spaces so valued by urban dwellers.
“There’s
been an evolution in economic redevelopment,” Buttigieg tells me. “It’s not
about smoke-stack chasing anymore. The coin of the realm is the work force—the people.
A city is made of people and it needs to be fun and a place you want to live.
We didn’t have those expectations before.”
Buttigieg
talks of “urban patriots,” a term he uses to describe groups of people who savor
the challenge of turning a rust belt city around and making it a “cool” city.
“It’s a
type of militancy in how people are approaching it which is quite different
than when people were leaving cities,” he says. “I grew up believing success
had to do with leaving home, but once I got out, I missed that sense of place
and I realized I could be part of my city’s economic re-development. So, I
moved home. At a moment when we’re being told that the Rust Belt is full of
resentment, I think South Bend is a reply, we’ve found a way of coming together,
getting funding to make our city better. There’s a sense of optimism. I think
people are beginning to look at politics and politicians and asking do they
make life better or not and what do they bring to the table to help everyone.”
Here’s what South Bend is like now. You can go white water rafting through the center of town. Vibrant neighborhoods consisting of coffee shops, eclectic boutiques, trendy restaurants and outdoor gathering places thrive in the downtown. Last fall, Garth Brooks performed outdoors in Notre Dame’s football stadium (its $400 million expansion which added several thousand premium seats as well as new academic buildings was completed just two years ago) in front of a sold-out crowd of 84,000 on a very cold and rainy October night. SF Motors started manufacturing at the old Hummer plant, producing electric cars. Walking trails, including one along the St. Joseph River, abound. Eddy Street Commons located across from the Notre Dame campus continues to expand, a destination of bars, shops and eateries as well as condos and apartment buildings. Old neighborhoods with homes that once had sagging porches and peeling paint, are now pristinely restored.
“We’re
calling out to another generation,” says Buttigieg. “There’s an energy here,
people are proud of their city and are working together to make it even better.”
Indeed. The other day, I was
flipping through a magazine article about the best places in Indiana and paused
at a magnificent photo of a downtown scene lit with colored lights reflecting
on the sparkling waters of a river. Where is this? I wondered. Looking down, I
saw the answer: South Bend.