Pete Buttigieg, former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, praised the state’s Republican lawmakers on Thursday after they firmly rejected Donald Trump’s redistricting push.
The Indiana Senate voted 31 to 19 against adopting new maps that would favor Republicans in next year’s midterms. “It’s absolutely extraordinary,” Buttigieg told MS NOW’s Chris Hayes on “All In,” hours after the vote failed.
Republicans rejected the bill despite an intense lobbying campaign from the administration, which included a visit from Vice President JD Vance in October. “The Indiana GOP needs to choose a side,” Vance wrote in a post on X shortly before the lawmakers took up the bill.
“The vice president said they have to pick a side, and they did,” the former transportation secretary told Hayes.
“Now, to be clear, they didn’t stop being Republicans. This is a conservative state. These are conservative legislators, but they figured out that the right thing to do — and for them, the smart thing to do — was to say no to the White House, no to Donald Trump, and no to JD Vance,” he added.
The transportation secretary praised state lawmakers for standing strong in the face of the president’s pressure campaign.
“Having spent a fair amount of time around the Indiana legislature, I got to tell you just how intense this pressure might have been,” Buttigieg explained. “These are not full-time legislators; at least last time I checked, they don’t even have a full-time staff member. They often share a legislative aide. So imagine having a day job, being a part-time legislator, and you get a phone call from the president of the United States. You get an in-person visit from the vice president of the United States. You got the speaker of the House in Washington working the phones.”
“That pressure is enormous, and they said, ‘No’ — it’s an extraordinary thing,” he said.
Buttigieg said political organizing in the state also contributed to the president’s failure. In September, he, along with hundreds of other protesters, rallied against the redistricting efforts inside the Indiana Statehouse.








