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This Article is From Feb 03, 2020

Buttigieg Makes Final Iowa Pitch, Leaning into Historic Campaign

(Bloomberg) -- Pete Buttigieg is urging Iowans to make history again in his final pitch to voters, framing his candidacy as an opportunity for them to push the country forward by supporting a young, untested, and openly-gay candidate.

In a final sprint asking for voters' support, Buttigieg is regaling Iowans with his personal connection to Barack Obama's 2008 caucus victory and reminding them that the state was first in the Midwest to legalize same-sex marriage in 2009.

“I'm asking you to make history with me one more time,” Buttigieg said in Sioux City on Friday morning, as he recounted his time as a volunteer for Obama's Iowa campaign in the final days.

He pointed to his wedding ring and thanked Iowans for being one of the first states that made marriages like his possible.

Buttigieg has staked his candidacy on a strong performance in Iowa, and a finish below third place could spell the end of his campaign. So, on Friday, he jetted around the state from the northwest to the eastern edge and leaned into the historic nature of his candidacy.

New Generation

“Everybody's going to remember what Iowa does in just three days and I hoped that I've persuaded you,” Buttigieg said at a rally in Davenport, perched on the Mississippi River across from Illinois.

Buttigieg, who turned 38 in January, rose from an unknown mayor of the fourth largest city in Indiana to a serious contender to win the Iowa caucuses. Centering his campaign on an Obama-like message of hope, Buttigieg has presented himself as the candidate best equipped to usher in a new generation of leadership.

He's also used that message to draw a stark contrast with the three septuagenarians with whom he's battling for the top spot in Iowa. The RealClearPolitics polling average in Iowa shows Bernie Sanders maintaining a 3.6 percentage point lead over Joe Biden, who is followed by Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren.

QuickTake: How the Iowa Caucuses Work and What's New for 2020

On Thursday, Buttigieg started to take direct shots at Biden and Sanders, dispensing with the subtly that's characterized his generational pitch since he launched an exploratory committee. The sharper criticism is part of his larger electability argument that Democrats will not win the “same Washington playbook.”

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