The Daily - The Candidates: Pete Buttigieg
Episode Date: November 22, 2019Today we launch Part One in our series on pivotal moments in the lives of the 2020 presidential front-runners. In studio with “The Daily,” Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Ind., talks abou...t how his lifelong political ambitions were complicated by the secret he kept for decades.Guests: Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Ind., and 2020 Democratic presidential candidate.Jeremy W. Peters, a politics reporter in the Washington bureau of The New York Times.“The Candidates” is a new series from “The Daily” exploring pivotal moments in the lives of top presidential contenders in the 2020 election. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
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I remember in history class, must have been a junior.
It was during the impeachment process of President Clinton or all the scandal, everything that was going on.
And I remember the teacher was just kind of riffing on this.
And he said, you know, would anybody here ever want to be president or want to run for office?
Seeing what a mess and what an ugly place Washington was.
And I just maybe involuntarily, my hand went up.
And from then on, it became the running joke of the class
that I'd wind up running for president.
And then by the time I got to college,
they had this Institute of Politics at Harvard,
and every day there'd be a different speaker who would come through.
I remember when I was there as a freshman,
people like Donna Brazile, who had just come off managing the Gore campaign, and Rick Davis, who had done the same thing for McCain, and the former president of Ecuador.
He'd been deposed in a coup.
You just kind of hang around and watch them and see what they were like.
The biggest realization was that they're just people.
These people who were shaping the world, people I was seeing on TV, were obviously very impressive people, but they were just people.
I think it changed my awareness of the fact that on some level,
I could be part of that world too.
But in a very simple sense, especially coming from Indiana,
it seemed that it was a choice.
You could be an elected office, or you could be an out gay person.
Not both.
At least not where I was from.
From the New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
I am running.
Announce my candidacy
for President of the United States of America.
Part one in our series on the pivotal moments in the lives of the top four Democratic candidates for president.
I'm running for president.
And I'm running for president.
President of the United States.
President of the United States.
President of the United States.
Today.
President of the United States. Today. I'm a proud son of South Bend, Indiana,
and I am running for President of the United States. Pete Buttigieg. It's Friday, November 22nd.
So, Jeremy Peters, you cover politics for The Times, and you've been closely tracking Mayor Buttigieg. And in order to better understand the Democratic field of presidential candidates, we're trying to figure out the most revealing moments in their lives. So, when it comes to Pete Buttigieg, what moment should we focus on? Pete has always been a candidate for whom his story, his biography is very central to his appeal to voters.
And he's got a great story to tell.
He's been elected mayor of this medium-sized town in Indiana before turning 30.
He has an Ivy League pedigree.
He's been a Rhodes Scholar.
He's worked at a prestigious consulting firm.
He's gone off to Afghanistan as
part of the Navy Reserves. So he has all of these components that you kind of think if you're a
voter, wow, he really stands out. There's something unique about this guy. But at the same time,
for most of his adult life, he had this nagging secret, the secret that he couldn't
confront because he thought that it would mean the end to this political career that he had spent so
much time perfecting, basically, since he went away to college and decided, hey, you know,
I can run for president. And he doesn't see how it's possible for the politician with the perfect background, the perfect resume, to also be open about their sexuality in his case.
turmoil with his very public ambition, I think is a defining moment in his life, if not the defining moment. Welcome to the studio. Thank you. You're going to sit there.
So that story begins in 1982 in South Bend, Indiana, where Peter Buttigieg is born.
Mayor, tell me about the kind of kid that you were growing up in Indiana.
Well, I think I was, safe to say, a little on the nerdy side.
Lived in a neighborhood kind of in the middle of South Bend,
close to a park where you would have as much as possible
what you'd call a prototypical Midwestern kid's upbringing.
You know, playing in the park
with friends, a lot of time in the house. I was really interested in baseball cards, but I was
more interested in categorizing them than I was in baseball, I think. Loved science and science
fiction, loved reading. Plus, I was an only child, so I think it's safe to say I had a lot of interior
life going on in a fairly quiet house where it was a dog and my parents who were both academics and me.
What was your introduction to even the idea of politics?
Politics was always in the air in our house just because my parents were very politically passionate.
They really cared about what was happening.
Thank you.
I can remember the Democratic Convention.
It must have been 1988.
NBC News continues its coverage of America's conventions.
I would have been six years old,
and my parents explaining what a convention was,
I remember Jesse Jackson giving a speech.
When I look out at this convention,
I see the face of America,
red, yellow, brown,
black, and white. We're all precious in God's sight, the real rainbow coalition.
And I remember my parents thinking it was important to watch the Republican convention,
too. I mean, you would stop, even though I don't think it ever crossed their mind to ever vote for a Republican. Now let's go down to the podium. Here is George Herbert Walker Bush addressing his convention.
Everything in the House would kind of stop, and it was time to watch what was playing out.
Thank you.
At what moment in this early phase of your life did you go from just watching this and maybe finding it very fascinating to feeling really drawn to it?
Well, when I got to college, it felt like the Republicans and the Democrats at the time, it's crazy to think about now, polarized as we are, but what it felt like when I showed up as a freshman on campus was that the two parties were converging and not necessarily in a good place,
that you had this kind of center right and center left, both of them very committed to
growth and business, but it seemed not very committed at all to some of the questions of
how we take care of vulnerable people around the country. And I think there's a moment for any
kind of well-spoken or intelligent young person watching the news when you see a senator or a
candidate saying something or doing something and you think, well, that's not right. I could do that.
I could do it different. Now, you might be wrong. They might be way more sophisticated than you are
and you can't see it. Or you might be right. And it might well be the case that what
they're saying is just not right. But I certainly had that feeling reinforced when I saw these
figures come to campus, some of whom were extremely impressive, but none of whom seemed like they were
on a different plane of existence. They were just people. So at this point, a year or two into Harvard,
have you made up your mind that you were probably going to find a way to have a career in politics?
I knew I wanted a career that involved policy. I don't think I'd figured out for sure that that
meant running. Plus, you know, when I thought about it, even well before I was coming to terms with the fact that I was gay, I knew that I had no political connections at home.
I had an unpronounceable name.
And I was a Democrat who lived in Indiana.
So it was not obvious that I could overcome some of the obstacles toward running.
But I think it's safe to say by the time I graduated, I had some sense that I could see myself doing it.
Well, I want to talk to you about that realization of your sexuality in particular.
Obviously, your candidacy is historic in a couple of different ways.
And among those is the fact that you're the first major party presidential candidate who is openly gay.
And so I want to ask you about that part of your identity.
When did you sense that you were gay? When did that realization start to dawn on you?
I think it depends what you mean by a realization, right? There are things you could point to going way back.
Certainly a fascination I had with a classmate when I was about 12 that in hindsight is very obviously a crush, but I was not willing
to think of it that way. Although some part of me must have, I mean, I wasn't stupid either,
right? So you, you, you have this kind of awareness that was definitely there by the time I was,
I was hitting middle school, but taking a word like gay and applying it to myself, I was still
years away from being able to do that, even in my own mind.
Well, what did you do with those feelings i guess i packed them up yeah packed them not much would be the best answer
packed them up and put them where i don't know i don't know how these things work even in your
own mind i just didn't explore them that's for First of all, there were not a lot of out gay people that I knew as such growing up. I mean, in high school, it was exactly zero. There was just no sense of
gay life or a gay community. And when I got to college, that's when the kind of internal battle
was starting to heat up. Why? I think because you just can't escape it. I mean, I got you're in
college, right? I mean, any feelings you have,
especially in the romantic department are going to start asserting themselves even more fiercely
than they have when you get to college for a lot of people, that's a big part of what you spend
college on. Right. So how did you deal with it? Uh, same way I dealt with it up to then just
packed it away, dated women, remarkable women, because I enjoyed these relationships. I think I could defer facing the fact that that wasn't the same as what it was to be in love with somebody.
And your political ambition was already solid at that point.
know exactly where it would take me or what it would mean, but I think by then I knew that there was a good chance I was going to be running for office in my adult life. But at that point,
I'm still clinging to some kind of hope, however vanishing, that maybe I'm straight or I'm bisexual.
I'm just not worried about the gay part. I think when I thought about my career, certainly when I
talked about my future, how I was going to be involved, I wasn't even thinking about the
possibility that that would come into contact with this developing side of me. But I'm sure to the extent that I thought
what it would mean to come to terms with the fact that I was at very least different and
as became increasingly clear, gay, that one of the things that would have kept that in its corner
was the simple fact that that didn't fit with any of the other things I wanted to do in life.
Not just a career, but a family, right? I wanted to get married. I wanted to have kids. From my perspective, you could be married and have kids, or you could be gay. Not both.
You graduated in 2004. That, correct me if I'm wrong, that's the year when Massachusetts
legalizes gay marriage.
Yes.
The court today, as you know, in a 4-3 advisory opinion to the Senate, has ruled that in their November 18, 2003 decision, they meant marriage.
They meant equality.
They meant that the Commonwealth may no longer deny marriage rights to same-sex couples.
Marriage rights to same-sex couples.
So I say that only to try to understand,
are you falling behind the culture in a sense?
Are you ignoring some of the signs that these things are changing?
Marriage, and only marriage, will be enough to satisfy the requirements of the Massachusetts Constitution.
Well, the thing is, I wasn't from Massachusetts.
I was in Massachusetts for a while, but I never felt like I was from there. And nothing against Massachusetts, but I realized pretty quick after turning up at Harvard that I didn't belong there either.
Why not?
left the Midwest. And just little things, cultural things, the way, I don't know, the way people interact, what's expected of you. Once I got there, I realized that socially, I was way more
Midwestern than I had thought. So take me from graduating from Harvard to your decision to join
the Navy Reserves. So it starts with 9-11.
Actually, it starts before 9-11.
There's this family tradition
of serving in the military.
There's a painting hanging in the wall
of my parents' house
of a relative, a great uncle,
who I kind of idolized in theory.
He was an Army Air Corps pilot.
And so I had this idea,
this maybe romantic idea
of being in the military.
And then it never really became real. But I remember on 9-11 thinking, oh, war isn't just a thing that
happens in other places or in other periods of history. Like war has come to my generation too.
And thinking at least in the back of my head that that might mean I would be involved, but
not taking any steps to do with it. But that turned into more and more of a nagging feeling when some friends of mine
started to serve. A friend of mine from college shared with me just before we graduated that he
had decided to join the Navy Reserve. I was fascinated. And then when I was talking to
someone about applying for the Rhodes Scholarship and how I wanted to talk about my interest in
public service. And to the faculty member who was giving advice to students and just said pointedly,
like, you might want to really think about how you're going to say that knowing that you're
going to be competing against people from the military academies. Oh, yeah, that's true. Like,
my chest thumping about caring about public service feels a lot smaller, held up against what
others are doing.
Do you think that was one of the things that might have drawn you to military service,
knowing that to get a Rhodes, to be in that world, in that league, it might be a good thing? I think definitely that it was part of how you're true to a culture of service. And also,
the Kennedy presidency kind of hangs over the, certainly the Kennedy
school, as you might imagine, and that can't be separated from his military career. I mean, really,
it was almost an expectation that you would have served up until roughly the time when I came of
age, when everything shifted. An expectation that you would serve? Well, when you're looking at the
history of, you know, the people we were studying.
Of presidents.
Who had made history, yeah, as presidents.
And then the thing that put me over the top was this experience knocking on doors in Iowa with a couple of buddies from college.
We went out, we took a week off and rented a car and it was the last few days before the Iowa caucuses and we were volunteers for Obama.
They sent us to this very rural area, some of the lowest income counties in Iowa. And it felt like anytime I met a young, especially a young man, it was somebody who was serving or was about to serve. And starting to realize here you had service that used to be something that bridged people together. Now it was completely different that if you were rural or low income, you were highly likely to serve.
different that if you were rural or low income, you were highly likely to serve. If you were from a background like mine, which was middle-class economically, but I'd had the chance to go to an
institution like Harvard, almost nobody with that background was serving. And I began to feel like
it wasn't just this kind of thing I'd thought about that I hadn't got around to is that I was
part of a problem. I was part of a divide. That was the thing that kind of propelled me that last few inches toward being ready to, you know, go open the door of the recruiting office
in Indiana and say, hey, how do I sign up? I wonder, do you think you joined the military in
part because you knew what it would mean for a political career? You know, I wrestle with that
because as soon as I get that question, there's a part of me that thinks if the answer is yes,
does that mean the service wasn't pure in some way?
And I remember at the time asking myself, if being in the military was as unpopular as it is today popular, would I still do it?
And I want to believe the answer is yes, but there's no way to go back and prove it.
I'm not somebody who thinks that it's like a prerequisite that if you want to run for office, you need to have served. But I do think if you have a heart for elected office, one way to put your money where your mouth is, is to have been in that kind of service too.
That strikes me as a very candid answer because of course you could just say, well, of course I would have done it even if there was no possible political benefit.
And I want to say that. I just can't prove it.
So I want to talk about this run for mayor for just a little bit. Whenever you run for office,
your character is on display. And at this point, you are keeping something quite elemental about yourself secret did it feel like
you were hiding something not really the only time it felt that way was when there was small
talk about whether i was dating and i would crack a joke or something we'd be sitting in a studio
like this one and a radio host would ask a question and I'd say, well, if anybody listening is into economic policy and long walks on the
beach, go ahead and reach out and just kind of play the busy single person, which is what I was.
Except for the fact that I wasn't actively looking for love, I was going out of my way to avoid it.
But if somebody had just straight up asked me on the record,
to this day, I'm not sure what I would have done.
Do you think that that would have potentially cost you the mayoralty?
Might have kept you from being mayor or staying mayor?
Yeah, I think there's a good chance of that.
There's a reason why no, as far as I know, no out gay person had ever run for mayor of any place in Indiana.
This is a state with strong Christian values and not known for progressive social
outlooks on politics. And here I am rocking up 29 years old saying, trust me,
support me. Nevermind this state legislator who has earned tons of credibility in this community.
Nevermind this county councilman who's the party favorite. Go with me instead. If there had been anything that looked like a skeleton or a vulnerability, I think it probably would have sunk me before I got anywhere at all.
So I want to now move into this notion of you reconciling these things? Yeah. So when I first joined the reserve, the message was kind of,
you're pretty much going to go to one of these wars and we'll let you know which one.
And so I knew that at a certain point it was coming. And of course, I didn't want to take
office in South Bend without a plan for this. So we had gamed it out with my team. If I get orders,
here's what you do. And when I received my orders and knew I was going for sure,
Here's what you do. And when I received my orders and knew I was going for sure,
I don't think even then it occurred to me that it would have much to do with my sexuality. If anything, I was thankful that I was single, right? I'm the hardest thing for people who deploy is
the fact that you're leaving behind somebody you love in addition to all the professional
complications. But then the more I started getting mentally ready for going over and
really thinking about what it meant, the more it started weighing on me that I didn't have a, I wasn't coming back to a family, my parents, of course, but I wasn't coming back to a household.
And more than that, I had no idea what it was like to be in love.
And the idea that I'm, here I am, I'm a grown ass man.
I own a home. I'm the mayor of my city. I'm a military officer. And if I get killed over there,
I will go to my grave, not knowing what it's like to be in love. And that just made me realize how
untenable the situation I was in really was. And up until then, it didn't seem untenable,
I guess, because I was so busy and I might've deferred coming out and having a dating life
forever. If not for this moment where I'm thinking, shit, I could die.
You wrote a letter. I want to ask you about.
Yeah. You know, it's a thing you do. assume everybody does it i don't know um but it's a
thing you do when you go to war right you you want to make sure that you have the last word
on uh on your life and leave a few instructions so i wrote up a letter put an envelope put just
in case on the outside put it in the desk drawer would have been pretty easy to find if if worse
came to worst and uh and that's a real too, because you're sitting there staring at the screen, trying to figure out how to give a short
accounting of your life. And what did you say? Well, what I said was that I wouldn't want people
to think that I'd been cheated, that obviously be terrible if I didn't come back, but also this
amazing life where I have wonderful friendships and I got to serve my community in a way that very few people
get to do, let alone at my age. And that I'd had this very fulfilling life. And of course it'd be,
uh, it'd be too bad if something happened to me, but, but to keep that in perspective.
But if you're asking if there was like, PS, I'm gay. No, that's kind of what I was asking.
that's kind of what i was asking so you are deployed you do not die right you come back and you're mayor yeah and how do you decide that it's time to come out
well i think by the time i hit the ground and i was back i knew that i was going to come out and
then it's just it was more how and when.
I remember resenting the idea that you're supposed to have to come out, right?
Straight people don't have to come out. Why do I?
And then while I'm in the process of figuring this out.
Thank you all for coming.
It's been a tough week here in the Hoosier state.
But we're going to move forward.
We have this explosive controversy over Mike Pence,
the governor Mike Pence, and his so-called religious freedom bill. The Religious Freedom
Restoration Act was about religious liberty, not about discrimination. So suddenly we're on
national television, my state, as the most officially anti-gay state in the country.
Look, everybody supports religious freedom, certainly everybody in South Bend, including me.
What this bill has done is send exactly the wrong message about what kind of state we are.
And I don't want people thinking, when they first think of South Bend or they think of Indiana,
about discrimination. I want them thinking about everything that's good here.
I'm fighting him on it, of course, because it's a terrible policy.
But now I'm fighting this terrible anti-gay policy putatively from the perspective of a
straight ally wondering whether i'm more effective because people don't know that i'm gay and at the
same time knowing that that this just kind of speeds things up even more that like it's just
a really weird position to be in to be having all these hypothetical arguments about discrimination
against gay people when it really means me. Meanwhile, this is also the period when
we realized that soon the Supreme Court's going to weigh in on marriage. I mean, all of this was
happening in that early part of 2015 while I'm wrestling with how to do this. And so oddly enough,
it was another military experience. I had my two weeks a year that you do when you're in the
reserve. I went off to training and if you're as busy as I was as mayor, military duty actually felt like
kind of a, almost like a break because it was eight hour days, 40 hour week. I wasn't used to
having that much time. And so it was a lot of time to sit and write and think and call friends and
get advice. So you produce a plan? Yeah. Well, I produced a letter, an op-ed, I guess.
What was the essential line?
I'm sure you remember it that you wrote.
I remember saying that it's just part of who I am
and that it has no bearing on how I do my job.
The way I did my job,
either as an officer or as a mayor or in business,
had nothing to do with the fact that I was gay.
It still sounds a little defensive.
Yeah.
Or maybe a little scared.
Probably.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I didn't feel like I was coming out guns blazing.
I felt like I, again, part of me was bothered that I had to share this at all.
Then part of me knew that it would do some good if I did.
I mean, not just in my own life, that my main agenda was personally, I want to get out
there and start dating, but also that it would mean something. It might mean all kinds of things
to a whole bunch of different people when I came out and said this.
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A very personal announcement coming from South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg today.
In an essay published in today's South Bend Tribune, the mayor announced he is gay.
Currently in the midst of running for his second term,
Pete Buttigieg penned an essay in Tuesday's South Bend Tribune revealing he was gay. A lot of people wondering why he chose to make this announcement now.
It comes just months after the state's religious freedom law
thrust the state into the national debate on gay rights.
As for the mayor himself,
he says nothing is different, nothing has changed,
and his focus is on South Bend.
I want to talk about the timing, the exact moment of the op-ed,
because my sense is that at this phase of your career,
you're up for re-election, right?
You've won the primary, and winning the primary, in a sense,
means you're standing a very good shot of winning.
Depending on the year,
but yeah, in South Bend it should be.
So does that mean you deliberately
chose a safe, low-risk
time to do this?
I don't know. I would think that going into a
Democratic primary would be a safer time
than going into a general election.
And I think also the decision to do this
came by way of realizing that there's no such
thing as a safe time.
I was just done with not having the kind of personal life that I wanted to have.
So once you come out, how does your personal life change?
Well, I started dating.
And it kind of changes everything.
I mean, I still have this very demanding job.
You're the mayor. And so
anybody in town that you ask to like have a cup of coffee is...
It's a thing.
Yeah, it's a thing. It might be misinterpreted. You could cross some line without meaning to. I mean,
most of the people I interacted were either people who needed something from me,
people I needed something from, or people who worked for me. So it's not like a very healthy pool for dating is what I'm saying. And I remember thinking there were all these kind of city fathers who early on in my time as mayor seemed determined to fix me up with their daughters. And I remember just thinking like, where are you now? Like, did none of you have like a son or nephew or something?
Did none of you have like a son or nephew or something?
So I did what millennials do.
I went online.
It turns out there's apps for all of this.
There was OkCupid, Tinder.
The one that actually came through for me was called Hinge.
And it's supposed to serve up people.
I don't know how the algorithm works, but I find this guy, this cute guy with a big smile.
And I'm like, I want to know this guy. So we start chatting.
Well, I was chatting with a lot of people.
But obviously he's the one I remember because that was Chastin.
Your future husband?
Yes.
So your story to many people is a particularly compelling one.
Everything we've just discussed.
You are a Harvard graduate.
You're a Rhodes Scholar.
You're a veteran.
You're gay.
You're religious.
You're a veteran. You're orchestrating a political biography.
Do you ever question whether that, no matter what your intention is,
could possibly undermine the power of the story itself, however genuine?
Yeah, I mean, I think we're conditioned to not like the idea of somebody
who sat around thinking all their lives about how to
become president and i don't view myself that way although i get that that that story has been
written around me although i also don't know what it is we expect like that somebody kind of gets
struck by lightning and then they turn into somebody who might become president we all have
these paths right that bring us to where we are. And I think anybody in professional life or even
social life thinks about this story that you tell about yourself. At the end of the day,
I'm not doing this because I have this personal need to be in elected office or to be the
president. I'm not coming at the presidency as a thing that I'd like to
occupy. I'm coming at it as this way to do something that I think I'm able to do.
And I think it's helpful in the sense that I could also have a very happy life doing something else.
And oddly, I think that helps prepare me to do what's required to do this.
And this is advice I give talking to students, too.
You know, imagine somebody's being sworn in, an ambitious, talented person, kind of in the middle of their career, is being sworn in as an assistant secretary in the State Department for the Middle East.
And then imagine if that person has got there one of two ways.
that person has got there one of two ways. In kind of universe A, it's a person who woke up one day in high school and said, I want to be the assistant secretary for the Middle East,
and took the right courses, and got the right jobs, and had the right fellowships,
and wrote the right papers, and did everything in order to occupy that title.
And the other person is somebody who woke up in high school and said, I want to be the person who
makes the United States a force
toward peace in the Middle East. And they don't know what that's going to mean. And maybe it means
they start out becoming an activist or maybe they're an academic or maybe they're a civil
servant or whatever, but by whatever winding path they wind up in this job, right? Which of those
two scenarios is going to lead to somebody who's better equipped to take that job they've been handed? I've got to think it's the latter. And so what I've tried to do in my life is to prepare myself to be useful to others. And yes, I think that in all likelihood means in a form that involves holding office or seeking office, or at least public life where I speak to lots of people, sometimes millions at the same time. But it's not about necessarily having one title or another.
And so I think if you overthink it, that's where you start to lose the fidelity to what it is that would guide you when you actually get what you've been chasing for a long time.
Jeremy, what do we learn from Mayor Pete Buttigieg about the way he reconciled internalizes decisions personally, but how he thinks about them in the longer arc of a political career.
And he's been very intentional along the way about choosing certain endeavors that he thinks would benefit a long-term political career. Now, some people would think, on the one hand, that's too calculating. I don't want somebody who's
thought about being president since he was a teenager. And, you know, in the era when
voters seem to prize authenticity in their political figures, they could see that as inauthentic.
On the other hand, the decision that he made to wait
seems to have borne out to his benefit.
Here he is, the first openly gay candidate for president of the United States
who has a legitimate shot at being his party's nominee.
Look at where he is in the Democratic primary right now. He's rocketed to the top of the polls.
He's brought in all this money in large part because he's gay and that opened a lot of doors
with Democratic donors. He's heading into the Iowa caucuses in the lead by some measures.
But we won't know if his decision to wait actually was the right one until people start voting.
So it seems to have worked out well for him right now, but no one's cast a single vote.
And we don't know how voters in the Democratic primary are going to react.
We certainly don't know how voters in a general election are going to react.
So we're just not going to know until Democratic voters have their say. Mayor, when you think back to your younger self,
not just your teenage self, but even your college self
and your post-collegiate self,
who was so fearful about telling the world that you were gay.
What do you kind of wish you could tell that person, that version of Mayor Buttigieg?
Well, back then I would have thought this other fact, if I dared to unpack it, this fact about my life, this way in which I was different,
was the thing that could multiply all
the other stuff by zero in terms of the impact I was going to have in the world. That I might very
well choose that path, but that the price would be that I wouldn't get to make a difference in
public life. And if you want proof of God having a sense of humor, one of the things I'm seeing now,
especially in the interactions I have on the campaign trail
and the fact that this campaign is historic in a lot of ways,
is that that same fact that I thought would mean
never getting to this point
might actually be one of the things that makes it matter the most.
It's a strange thing to think about that the one thing that I couldn't control,
the one thing that might've meant that it would be better not to have any aspirations
related to politics at all could be the very thing that anchors the moral and
emotional purpose of this entire campaign.
Thank you very much.
Thanks for having me.
We'll be right back. says New York Herald Tribune. The New York Times calls it the summit of the American musical theater.
It's unlike anything America has known before, says The New Yorker.
It's the anthem of New York City.
Previews begin December 10th.
Opens February 6, 2020.
West Side Story on Broadway.
Tickets at telecharge.com.
Here's what else you need to know today.
And I did say to him, Ambassador Sondland, Gordon, I think this is all going to blow up.
And here we are.
In the latest public testimony before impeachment investigators, Fiona Hill, the former top Russia expert on the National Security Council,
recalled her growing frustration with Ambassador Gordon Sondland as she realized he was pursuing a political agenda in Ukraine on behalf of President Trump.
He was being involved in a domestic political errand.
And we were being involved in national security foreign policy.
And those two things had just diverged.
Hill testified that when Trump and Sondland pressed Ukraine
to investigate the discredited theory that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election, they were playing directly into Russia's hands, since Russia wants to deflect attention away from its interference. This is a fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated by the Russian security services themselves.
These fictions are harmful even if they're deployed for purely domestic political purposes.
And Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was indicted on charges of bribery and fraud
after a long-running corruption investigation,
throwing his political future into doubt
at a moment when neither he nor his chief rival
have been able to form a governing coalition.
The charges involve allegations
that Netanyahu accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in gifts
in return for political favors
and performed favors for Israeli media tycoons hundreds of thousands of dollars in gifts in return for political favors,
and performed favors for Israeli media tycoons in exchange for favorable news coverage.
The Daily is made by Theo Balcom, Andy Mills, Lisa Tobin, Rachel Quester,
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That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you on Monday.