Democratic presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg told voters Saturday that his marriage to his husband exists "by the grace of a single vote on the U.S. Supreme Court."
The South Bend, Indiana, mayor visited South Carolina for the first time since announcing his presidential exploratory committee. The 37-year-old would be the first openly gay presidential nominee from a major political party.
Buttigieg referenced the landmark 2015 Supreme Court ruling that granted, in a 5-4 decision, same-sex couples a right to marry. He married his husband, Chasten Glezman, last year.
Speaking in Columbia, South Carolina, Buttigieg recalled when his father was undergoing chemotherapy and his mother learned she needed a triple bypass as an example of what's at stake in the 2020 presidential election.
Buttigieg said Glezman was able to stay at the hospital with his mother while he went to tell his father because his husband "is a member of our family."
Other highlights of Saturday's campaigning:
CORY BOOKER
New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker said during a stop in South Carolina that he was "a little bit worried" about how the issue of reparations was being discussed during the presidential campaign.
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Booker told people crowded into a barbershop in Rock Hill that it was time to discuss the "persistent reality" of racism in this country, rather than worrying about how to handle a specific plan on reparations.
South Carolina holds the first Southern primary and is the first place where candidates are tested by a primarily black Democratic electorate.
Several candidates in the sprawling Democratic field have called President Donald Trump as a racist. Some have voiced support for the idea of reparations for the descendants of enslaved black Americans.
Booker, who announced his candidacy at the start of Black History Month, has said it is time to recommit to the fight for justice in America.
ELIZABETH WARREN
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren confronted the topic of climate change during a campaign stop in Berlin, New Hampshire, saying the government is badly out of sync is with the future of America.
"We're not spending money on infrastructure right now, we're not even repairing what's falling apart in infrastructure, much less building an infrastructure for the 21st century, much less hardening an infrastructure against the kind of change that is coming in our direction," Warren said.
The presidential contender railed against "giant drug companies" and emphasized a message of economic equality during her speech.
Warren later praised the idea of the Green New Deal, saying she wanted to make a strong pitch in favor of it to voters.
"We've got to have a goal that we're headed toward," she said.
KAMALA HARRIS
California Sen. Kamala Harris introduced her first policy proposal since officially launching her 2020 campaign: a significant federal investment in teacher pay.
At a Houston rally, Harris pledged that by the end of her first term she would close a pay gap that she said amounts to teachers making about $13,000 a year less than other college graduates.
Her campaign is citing a study from the liberal-leaning Economic Policy Institute that found what's called the "teacher pay penalty" — the difference in compensation for teachers and comparable public workers — is larger than ever. The Economic Policy Institute study puts the teacher compensation penalty at a record-high 11.1 percent in 2017.
AMY KLOBUCHAR
During a town hall in Rye, New Hampshire, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar defended John McCain, the deceased military veteran and senator who has been the subject of scorn from President Donald Trump.
Klobuchar called McCain her friend and said Trump's "ranting and raving" about the Arizona Republican led her to remember the last time she had seen the Arizona Republican, who ran for president in 2000 and 2008.
Klobuchar and her husband visited McCain and his wife at their ranch. McCain was having trouble speaking, she remembered. He found one of his books and pointed out a quote to Klobuchar.
"There is nothing more liberating than fighting for a cause larger than yourself," the quote read, she said.
Trump, she said, doesn't understand that sentiment.
PETE BUTTIGIEG
At a stop in Greenville, South Carolina, Buttigieg told a crowd that his candidacy may seem unlikely, but added that maybe it was time the party nominated a millennial from a red state.
He acknowledged the more "traditional" route to the White House is to spend years in Washington before running. But he said the country "would be better served if Washington started looking more like our best-run cities."
Buttigieg said that as a millennial he has a greater stake in the future of the country and more urgency to tackle issues like climate change.
Associated Press writers Meg Kinnard, Juana Summers and Paul J. Weber contributed to this report.