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Pete Buttigieg’s MSNBC Town Hall: Live Updates | |
(32 minutes later) | |
Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., one of a small handful of Democratic candidates to agree to a town-hall event on Fox News, visited the friendlier terrain of MSNBC on Monday. | |
Quick on his feet and skilled at finding applause lines, Mr. Buttigieg, 37, has thrived in the town-hall format before. It was his performance at a CNN event in March that launched him to the top quarter of the 23-person Democratic field, and he received an enthusiastic reception in his Fox News appearance last month. | Quick on his feet and skilled at finding applause lines, Mr. Buttigieg, 37, has thrived in the town-hall format before. It was his performance at a CNN event in March that launched him to the top quarter of the 23-person Democratic field, and he received an enthusiastic reception in his Fox News appearance last month. |
The MSNBC town hall, which will be moderated by Chris Matthews in Fresno, Calif., runs until 8 p.m. Eastern, and we will update this article during and after the event. | |
The first question for Mr. Buttigieg was about gun control, which has become a litmus-test issue for Democratic candidates in a way that has not happened in previous presidential election cycles. Mr. Matthews pressed him on his proposal to require gun licensing along the same lines as driver’s licenses: How would that work, Mr. Matthews asked, when Americans already own 400 million guns? | |
Mr. Buttigieg said his primary focus was on requiring licenses for all guns purchased going forward. “Retroactively is going to be tougher,” he acknowledged, while arguing that crafting a system for future purchases could eventually create a template to apply to past purchases. | |
Also raised early in the event was Mr. Buttigieg’s experience coming out as gay while serving as a mayor in a conservative state — governed, at the time, by now-Vice President Mike Pence. He came out during an election year, he said, but was overwhelmingly re-elected “because people just cared about what kind of job I was doing for them as mayor.” | |
The question that prompted the discussion — from an audience member who said he and his husband had adopted sons through the foster care system and suggested, with a smile, that perhaps Mr. Buttigieg and his husband, Chasten, might do the same — concerned how to improve the foster care system. Mr. Buttigieg discussed, in broad terms, federal policies that would hold states to “a higher standard” on things like wait-lists and moving children from home to home. He also called for policies to prevent foster care and adoption agencies from discriminating against same-sex couples. | |
As the night continued, Mr. Buttigieg was asked about impeaching President Trump, about tariffs and about abortion rights. This article will be updated with more from the event. |