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Buttigieg returns to Iowa for veterans' town hall amid talk of another White House bid

Buttigieg returns to Iowa for veterans' town hall amid talk of another White House bid
At this point no decision has been made on whether to charge them. Former Transportation Secretary, Pete Buttigieg, is planning to come to Iowa. Buttigieg is headlining a town hall with the group "Vote Vets Action Fund." This is his first public, in-person event since finishing his role with the Biden Administration in January. The town hall is May 13th in Cedar Rapids. In March, Buttigieg passed on running for a U.S. Senate seat in Michigan. Those close to him say he is considering a second run for
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Buttigieg returns to Iowa for veterans' town hall amid talk of another White House bid
Pete Buttigieg returns to Iowa on Tuesday for an event focused on veterans, six years after he burst onto the national political stage with a strong run ahead of the state's leadoff presidential caucuses.Buttigieg, a former intelligence officer in the Navy Reserves who served in Afghanistan, will headline a town hall in Cedar Rapids sponsored by the Democratic political organization VoteVets, which is focusing on President Donald Trump's cuts to federal agencies and how they affect veterans and military families.While the 43-year-old former transportation secretary has not confirmed he will make a second White House run, he has tangled with Trump online and has spoken out about changes he wants to see in the Democratic Party.Opposition to the Republican president "has to travel with a clearer picture of what we are actually for," Buttigieg said during a recent interview with former Biden White House press secretary Jen Psaki on MSNBC."That needs to be as clear a picture as our response to the authoritarian tendencies of this administration," he said. "We would not be in this situation if the government, the economy and the politics of our country were healthy. They've been unhealthy for a long time."Buttigieg finished atop the Iowa Democratic Party's tallies in the glitch-plagued 2020 caucuses alongside Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, though The Associated Press did not call a winner given remaining concerns about whether the results as reported by the party are fully accurate.Buttigieg, a former South Bend, Indiana, mayor who moved with his husband and twins to Michigan, turned down runs for his adoptive state's open U.S. Senate and governor's races. His aides insist his travel to Iowa is intended to meet people and hear their concerns, not just as an exercise to set up a presidential bid.Still, a number of other potential 2028 contenders are traveling the country in the early days of the second Trump administration.Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's recent joint rallies have drawn large crowds around the country, including in Republican-led Western states. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker recently called for mass mobilization of Democrats at a speech in New Hampshire, and Govs. Wes Moore of Maryland and Tim Walz of Minnesota plan stops in South Carolina at the end of May.

Pete Buttigieg returns to Iowa on Tuesday for an event focused on veterans, six years after he burst onto the national political stage with a strong run ahead of the state's leadoff presidential caucuses.

Buttigieg, a former intelligence officer in the Navy Reserves who served in Afghanistan, will headline a town hall in Cedar Rapids sponsored by the Democratic political organization VoteVets, which is focusing on President Donald Trump's cuts to federal agencies and how they affect veterans and military families.

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While the 43-year-old former transportation secretary has not confirmed he will make a second White House run, he has tangled with Trump online and has spoken out about changes he wants to see in the Democratic Party.

Opposition to the Republican president "has to travel with a clearer picture of what we are actually for," Buttigieg said during a recent interview with former Biden White House press secretary Jen Psaki on MSNBC.

"That needs to be as clear a picture as our response to the authoritarian tendencies of this administration," he said. "We would not be in this situation if the government, the economy and the politics of our country were healthy. They've been unhealthy for a long time."

Buttigieg finished atop the Iowa Democratic Party's tallies in the glitch-plagued 2020 caucuses alongside Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, though The Associated Press did not call a winner given remaining concerns about whether the results as reported by the party are fully accurate.

Buttigieg, a former South Bend, Indiana, mayor who moved with his husband and twins to Michigan, turned down runs for his adoptive state's open U.S. Senate and governor's races. His aides insist his travel to Iowa is intended to meet people and hear their concerns, not just as an exercise to set up a presidential bid.

Still, a number of other potential 2028 contenders are traveling the country in the early days of the second Trump administration.

Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's recent joint rallies have drawn large crowds around the country, including in Republican-led Western states. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker recently called for mass mobilization of Democrats at a speech in New Hampshire, and Govs. Wes Moore of Maryland and Tim Walz of Minnesota plan stops in South Carolina at the end of May.