Buttigieg gives a strident anti-Trump message in Iowa, demands Democrats
make their agenda clear
[May 14, 2025]
By THOMAS BEAUMONT
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Pete Buttigieg returned to Iowa on Tuesday
with some subtle and not-so-subtle messages about what's changed since
he ran in the state's 2020 Democratic presidential caucuses.
His speech included mentions of his adopted twins, a boy and a girl, and
how he explained to his daughter the different nicknames for the
American flag. He talked of flying into the Cedar Rapids airport after
visiting while transportation secretary to oversee the facility's
expansion. And having left the state in 2020 as a youthful, baby-faced
candidate not quite 40 years old, Buttigieg on Tuesday was sporting a
burgeoning beard.
Above all, his speech sounded like he was preparing for a second White
House bid. Buttigieg gave a strident critique of President Donald
Trump's administration while demanding Democrats make their agenda clear
and reach out to people who disagree with them.
“We are being tested on nothing less than whether the United States of
America is in fact the freedom-loving people that we believe and know
ourselves to be,” Buttigieg told an audience of more than 1,000 in Cedar
Rapids, his first public political appearance since leaving the Biden
administration in January.
It was a return to where Buttigieg emerged as a national political
figure six years ago, when the millennial former South Bend mayor rose
among a class of better-known Democrats to finish atop the Iowa
Democratic Party's 2020 presidential caucuses. Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders also finished near the top as well in a glitch-plagued contest,
and The Associated Press did not call a winner, given remaining concerns
about whether the results as reported by the party were fully accurate.

“It feels really good to be back in Iowa,” Buttigieg said at the outset
of the town hall-style meeting, with many in the audience sporting
slightly worn Buttigieg 2020 campaign caps and T-shirts. “Anyone can
come to Iowa just before an election's coming up. I wanted to make sure
I got a chance to talk to the people I got to know five and six years
ago, and the people I’m just getting to know.”
The combination rally and policy chat toggled between questions about
the future of the Democratic Party, both nationally and in Iowa, after
three consecutive elections where Donald Trump has carried the
once-competitive swing state.
A man began by saying, “I caucused for you six years ago,” to which
Buttigieg replied politely, “Thank you.”
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Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg speaks during
a VoteVets Town Hall, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
(AP Photo/Cliff Jette)

The man responded, “It's a treat to hear someone speak in complete
sentences," prompting an explosion of applause and a standing
ovation. “I do my best,” Buttigieg answered with a quick head nod.
As much as an indictment of the first months of the second Trump
administration, Buttigieg argued Democrats' reemergence as a leading
national party must come with a concise telling of what they
support.
“There's this theory that we should just hang back and let them
screw up. I disagree,” he said. Buttigieg acknowledged Democrats
need to revisit some of their policy principles without naming any.
But he pivoted quickly to note, "We need to be in touch with our
first principles, what we would be doing if we were in charge.”
Among them, he argued, was to restore a federal right for a woman to
receive an abortion, he said, prompting a 30-second standing
ovation.
Buttigieg, a former intelligence officer in the Navy Reserves who
served in Afghanistan, was headlining an event sponsored by the
Democratic political organization VoteVets, which is focusing on
Trump's cuts to federal agencies and how they affect veterans and
military families.
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.
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