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I don't know. Pete is holding his own better than I would have imagined six months ago. He is leading by delegates right now. And both he and Cool Grandpa Bernie are leaving Uncle Joe and Cherokee Princess Lizzie in the dust.
Just being able to ramp up a national campaign for president and hang with these "experienced" individuals is telling. Many experienced politicians try and fail. Early on, we expect them to be rising stars only to see them falter in their messaging or simply fail to make it into orbit. Why? Either they did not put the right people in the right jobs or they as a candidate did not listen to their team. Pete is succeeding on his first go. Leadership at this level is not so much about personal experience as it is about getting the right people in the right jobs. I would offer our current Oval Office Assclown for the sake of comparison.
When Pete Buttigieg Was One of McKinsey’s ‘Whiz Kids' said:Among the hoops that candidates for plum consulting jobs at McKinsey & Company had to jump through in late 2006 was a bit of play acting: They were given a scenario involving a hypothetical client, “a business under siege,” and told they would be meeting with its chief executive the next day. How would they structure the conversation?
One contender stood out that year: a 24-year-old Rhodes scholar named Pete Buttigieg.
“He was the only one who put all the pieces together,” recalled Jeff Helbling, a McKinsey partner at the time who was involved in recruiting. Mr. Buttigieg soon won the other candidates over to his approach.
“He was very good at taking this ambiguous thing that he literally had no background on and making sense of it,” Mr. Helbling said. “That is rare for anyone at any level.”
How many people have such capability? Well if one of them wants to be president, I think we should listen closely to what they have to say.
http://https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/05/us/politics/pete-buttigieg-mckinsey.html