64°F
weather icon Windy

Culinary Union embraces Pete Buttigieg’s stance on health care

Updated January 11, 2020 - 6:41 pm

Former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg introduced himself Saturday to workers from Culinary Local 226 in Las Vegas as part of the union’s presidential candidate town hall series.

The political newcomer did not enjoy the fanfare that preceded more experienced candidates during their Culinary forums, but the crowded union hall embraced Buttigieg’s responses to questions on health care, immigration and war in the Middle East.

He opened by crediting the Culinary union for helping the Nevada Legislature pass a measure restricting surprise emergency room bills, which union members loudly cheered, and ended his remarks with a well-received answer on why he is tough enough to take on President Donald Trump in what union leaders said will be a dirty 2020 presidential election.

Spanish a plus: During his typical opening campaign remarks and an answer on immigration, Buttigieg became the first candidate to address the crowd in Spanish. A loud, enthusiastic response immediately followed from the majority-Latino union, whose 60,000-plus members hold significant political power in Nevada.

No problems on health care: Like Sen. Amy Klobuchar, who held her own town hall just before his, Buttigieg received a passing grade by telling members they will keep their cherished health care coverage if he is elected president.

“I don’t think Washington ought to decide when and whether you go onto a public plan,” Buttigieg said. “I think you ought to decide, and I trust you to make the right decision.”

No one in the crowd challenged his former support for “Medicare for All,” which was a sticking point for Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders during their town hall meetings with the union.

Facing down Trump: Buttigieg called Trump a bully, adding that he had plenty of experience dealing with bullies growing up as a gay man in Indiana. He also said his deployment to a war zone in Afghanistan gave him a sense of calm in dealing with an opponent whose main form of attack comes from “a tweet full of typos.”

Buttigieg said every election comes down to voters selecting who will make their lives better. His platforms on increasing worker pay and the right to organize, expanding health care access and increasing paid family leave are better than Trump’s, he added.

“In order to keep focused, (we have) to remember the less we’re talking about him, the more we’re talking about you,” Buttigieg said. “And the more we’re talking about you, the more we’re going to win.”

Trump campaign spokesman Keith Schipper attacked Buttigieg’s criticism of Trump’s decision to kill Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani, saying Nevadans know they can trust Trump to keep them safe.

^

Contact Rory Appleton at rappleton@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0276. Follow @RoryDoesPhonics on Twitter.

THE LATEST
VP Harris trip to Las Vegas today canceled

Vice President Kamala Harris’ planned trip to Las Vegas was pulled. She will remain in Washington D.C. instead, according to the White House.

‘What do we got to pay for this?’ Trump trial jury hears recording

In the recording, Donald Trump and Michael Cohen discuss a plan to give hush money to a Playboy model who claimed she had an affair with the former president.