Trump says he’d like to run against Buttigieg | TheHill – The Hill

President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump tears into ‘crazy’ Bernie Sanders after Fox News town hall Trump claims supporters were kept out of Fox News’s Bernie Sanders town hall Overnight Defense: Trump vetoes measure to end US-role in Yemen war | Poland close to deal on base jokingly called ‘Fort Trump’ | Iranian lawmakers vote to label US Mideast forces as terrorists MORE said Wednesday that he would welcome the opportunity to run against Democratic presidential candidate Pete ButtigiegPeter (Pete) Paul ButtigiegButtigieg responds to protesters yelling about ‘Sodom and Gomorrah’ O’Rourke declines to sign pledge barring fossil fuel money On The Money: Conservatives rally behind Moore for Fed | White House interviewing other candidates | Trump, Dems spar on Tax Day | Budget watchdogs bemoan ‘debt denialism’ MORE, his first public acknowledgment of the South Bend, Ind., mayor’s burgeoning candidacy.

In an interview with David Webb on SiriusXM, Trump speculated that he may end up campaigning for the presidency in 2020 against Sen. Bernie SandersBernard (Bernie) SandersTrump tears into ‘crazy’ Bernie Sanders after Fox News town hall Trump claims supporters were kept out of Fox News’s Bernie Sanders town hall O’Rourke declines to sign pledge barring fossil fuel money MORE (I-Vt.), former Vice President Joe BidenJoseph (Joe) Robinette BidenTrump tears into ‘crazy’ Bernie Sanders after Fox News town hall The Memo: Sanders becomes Dem front-runner Several 2020 Dems say they’re ready to face Fox News town hall MORE or “the mayor from Indiana,” referencing Buttigieg without mentioning him by name.

“I think I’d like running against him, too,” Trump said of Buttigieg. “But it’ll be interesting to see it unfold.”

The interview marked Trump’s first direct comment on Buttigieg, who formally entered the Democratic field of prospective candidates on Sunday and has surged in recent polling.

The 37-year-old launched an exploratory committee earlier this year as a relative unknown in an increasingly crowded presidential primary field. 

Since then, Buttigieg has attracted strong crowds at campaign events and raised an impressive $7 million for his campaign in the first quarter of 2019. That figure put him ahead of prominent candidates such as Sens. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenButtigieg responds to protesters yelling about ‘Sodom and Gomorrah’ O’Rourke declines to sign pledge barring fossil fuel money Overnight Health Care: CEO of largest private health insurer slams ‘Medicare for All’ plans | Dem bill targets youth tobacco use | CVS fined over fake painkiller prescriptions | Trump, first lady to discuss opioid crisis at summit MORE (D-Mass.) and Kirsten GillibrandKirsten Elizabeth GillibrandSeveral 2020 Dems say they’re ready to face Fox News town hall More than one in 10 in new poll say men are ‘better suited emotionally’ for politics Buttigieg second most talked-about candidate on cable news shows: analysis MORE (D-N.Y.).

Buttigieg has made a number of comments criticizing Trump, saying earlier Wednesday that the president uses “white guy identity politics” to divide working- and middle-class Americans.

In addition to his first jabs at Buttigieg, the president in Wednesday’s interview chided Sanders and Biden, two candidates he speculated a day earlier might be the two front-runners for the Democratic nomination.

I believe it will be Crazy Bernie Sanders vs. Sleepy Joe Biden as the two finalists to run against maybe the best Economy in the history of our Country (and MANY other great things)! I look forward to facing whoever it may be. May God Rest Their Soul!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 17, 2019

“I think I put out yesterday, it could be Bernie, and it could be Biden,” Trump told Webb, who is a contributor to The Hill. “And I think Sleepy Joe’s going to have a hard time. He’s, you know, 1 Percent Joe. I don’t think he’s going to make it, and I don’t, I don’t know that Bernie — it may be Bernie has the most spirit over there right now.”

Biden has yet to formally announce his candidacy, though he is widely expected to do so soon. He and Sanders have been at or near the top of most Democratic primary polls in recent months.

Trump appeared to be irked by Sanders’s appearance Monday night on a Fox News town hall event, tweeting several times about the Vermont senator and questioning the network’s audience selection.

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