TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「@pete.buttigieg’s greatest political asset may be his ear for languages. The mayor of South Bend (and early breakout star of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary) speaks eight, including Norwegian and Arabic, but he’s particularly fluent in the dialect of the neglected industrial Midwest. Buttigieg is a master of redefinition, a translator for a party that has found it increasingly difficult to speak to the voters who elected President Donald Trump, writes @charlottealter. The son of an English professor and a scholar of linguistics, he roots his campaign in an effort to reframe progressive ideas in conservative language. “If the substance of your ideas is progressive but there’s mistrust about them among conservatives, you have three choices,” Buttigieg tells TIME. “One is to just change your ideas and make them more conservative. The second is to sort of be sneaky and try to make it seem like your ideas are more conservative than they are. And the third, the approach that I favor, is to stick to your ideas, but explain why conservatives shouldn’t be afraid of them.” Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @ryanpfluger for TIME」5月2日 22時52分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 5月2日 22時52分


@pete.buttigieg’s greatest political asset may be his ear for languages. The mayor of South Bend (and early breakout star of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary) speaks eight, including Norwegian and Arabic, but he’s particularly fluent in the dialect of the neglected industrial Midwest. Buttigieg is a master of redefinition, a translator for a party that has found it increasingly difficult to speak to the voters who elected President Donald Trump, writes @charlottealter. The son of an English professor and a scholar of linguistics, he roots his campaign in an effort to reframe progressive ideas in conservative language. “If the substance of your ideas is progressive but there’s mistrust about them among conservatives, you have three choices,” Buttigieg tells TIME. “One is to just change your ideas and make them more conservative. The second is to sort of be sneaky and try to make it seem like your ideas are more conservative than they are. And the third, the approach that I favor, is to stick to your ideas, but explain why conservatives shouldn’t be afraid of them.” Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @ryanpfluger for TIME


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