Pete Buttigieg Gets Demolished After Forgetting One Important Thing During Speech

Pete Buttigieg has built a national reputation as the polished guy in the room, always ready with a tidy answer, a smooth delivery, and the sort of tone that suggests everyone else should really be taking notes. But at a recent town hall in Tulsa, that image took a hit when he wandered into one of the oldest traps in politics, making a grand argument without checking the scoreboard.

Speaking at a “Win the Era” event at Will Rogers High School, Buttigieg discussed a range of issues including artificial intelligence, LGBTQ rights, and healthcare. Then he turned to a favorite topic among many Democrats since the 2000 election, abolishing the Electoral College.

He told the crowd that America would be better off if “the person who got the most votes” simply became president instead of using the Electoral College system. The audience cheered enthusiastically, because of course they did. Political crowds love hearing ideas that sound noble, especially when no one mentions the details.

Buttigieg went further, saying a popular-vote system would force Democrats to campaign in Oklahoma and Republicans to campaign in Brooklyn. He called that good for democracy.

It is a clever line. It is also missing one rather important fact.

Under the most recent national results, President Trump won both the Electoral College and the popular vote. That means if Buttigieg’s preferred system had already been in place, President Trump would still be in office.

Awkward.

This is the recurring problem with many anti-Electoral College arguments. They are often presented as timeless principles, but they tend to surge in popularity only when Democrats lose under the current rules. When they win the popular vote, the system is unfair and outdated. When they win both, suddenly constitutional reform becomes less urgent. Funny how that works.

The Electoral College exists for reasons larger than partisan mood swings. It forces candidates to build geographically broad coalitions rather than simply running up margins in dense urban centers. It gives smaller states a voice. It prevents a handful of population-heavy regions from dominating every election cycle.

Would candidates campaign differently under a national popular vote? Sure. But not necessarily in the romantic way Buttigieg described. They would likely spend enormous time and money in the biggest media markets chasing raw vote totals, while rural America became even easier to ignore.

Social media users quickly pointed out the flaw in Buttigieg’s applause line. He was pitching a reform that would not have changed the very result his audience dislikes.

That does not make him foolish, but it does show that polished rhetoric is not the same as serious thinking. Sometimes the smartest person on stage is just the one holding the microphone.

And in politics, there is no substitute for math.