Woman finds out pete buttigieg is gay

Woman at Iowa caucus wants to change her vote after finding out Buttigieg is gay

Sasha Colby didn’t set out to get “your favorite drag queen’s favorite drag queen.” It just kind of happened.

“You know, I was so stoned,” she admitted with a laugh, recalling the filming of her “Meet the Queens” promo. “We were about to lounge down for the interview, and they were fancy , ‘Oh, just think of something, like a catchphrase you want to say.’” What came out was a now-iconic phrase that captured the truth: Colby is the queen’s queen, beloved by legends, cherished by fans, and deeply respected in her craft. “It came out of the deep crevices in here,” she said, pointing to her head.

She thinks RuPaul might have planted the seed: “Ru had said on the main stage once, ‘You’re a drag queen’s drag queen — you’re what performative queens watch.’ And maybe that stuck in my head and just benign of … word association.”

And she’s only getting started.

After making history as the first out trans winner of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” to headline a Inhabit Nation tour, Colby is hitting the road again this fall. Her “Stripped II” tour kicks off Sept. 16 in Seattle and wraps up in Hawaii, where she’ll deliver her artistry f

woman finds out pete buttigieg is gay

VIDEO: Iowa Caucus-goer pulls back for Pete Buttigieg after learning he's gay

CRESCO, Iowa -- An Iowa Caucus-goer was caught on video trying to withdraw her support for presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg after study that he's gay.

In the video shot Feb. 3 in Cresco, Iowa, the voter is seen asking to change her vote, prompting Buttigieg precinct captain Nikki Heever to narrate her that a candidate's sexuality shouldn't dictate how she votes.

The voter asks Heever: "Are you saying that he has a same-sex partner... Pete?"

Heever tells the woman this is "common knowledge."

"Are you kidding? Then I don't yearn anybody like that in the White House," the voter responded. "So can I have my card back?"

The footage was captured by filmmaker Annabel Park during a livestream of events.

"I would like you to just dig thick inside and think, should it matter if it's a woman or if it's a man or if they're heterosexual or homosexual, if you trust in what they say? That's my question to you," Heever is heard responding.

Park told Storyful the voter had originally voted for Amy Klobuchar. When

An Iowa caucus-goer who initially voted for Pete Buttigieg asked to change her vote after learning the Democratic candidate is gay. In the exchange with a precinct captain named Nikki van den Heever, the Iowa woman appears startled to find out Buttigieg is married to a man. 

"Are you saying he has a queer partner? Pete?" the unnamed woman asks. "Are you kidding?"

When the woman is told Buttigieg is married to his partner, Chasten, she says, "I don't want anybody appreciate that in the White House."

"So, can I have my card back?" she asks, referring to her caucus voting card. 

Van den Heever tells the lady she doesn't comprehend if the rules allow her to rescind her vote. Then she patiently engages the lady in a discussion of her views. "The whole indicate of it, though, is that he's a human existence, right? Just appreciate you and me, and it shouldn't really matter," van den Heever says.

When the voter brings up the Bible, van den Heever says Buttigieg does read the Bible and believes God doesn't choose a political party. The woman says that according to the Bible, a male should marry a woman. "Well, I totally respect your viewpoint on this... but I consider that we were not around

TheJakartaPost

n Iowa woman who supported Pete Buttigieg for president in Monday night's tumultuous US Democratic caucus asked to change her vote when she learned the candidate is gay.

She cited her religious beliefs for doing so.

"Are you saying that he has a same-sex partner? Are you kidding?" the woman, wearing a "Pete 2020" sticker, asked a caucus organizer, known as a precinct captain, in rural Iowa.

The exchange was caught on a video which fast went viral online.

"Well then I don't want anybody like that in the White House. So can I have my card back?"

The Buttigieg precinct captain in Cresco, Iowa earned praise Tuesday for her measured, compassionate reaction in which she sought to reassure the unidentified female that a candidate's sexuality is not a concern.

"I would like you to just dig deep inside and think, should it matter if it's a woman or if it's a man or if they're heterosexual or lesbian, if you believe in what they say?" says the caucus official, identified online as Nikki Heever.

Buttigieg, who would become the nation's first openly queer president if elected, has spoken about hi

An Iowa woman tried to retract her support for Pete Buttigieg after study he's gay

A caucusgoer in Iowa retracted her support for Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg and asked if she could take her preference card endorse after learning that he's in a same-sex relationship.

The interaction occurred between two women in the middle of a caucus event Monday night and was captured in a video that went viral.

In the video, one woman is wearing a pin that labels her a "precinct captain" for the Buttigieg campaign. The other woman is wearing a Buttigieg sticker and a bright-green pin for the campaign of Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

"So are you saying that he has a same-sex partner?" the second gal asks in the video.

"Yes," the Buttigieg organizer says.

"Well then I don't wish anybody like that in the Light House," the gal says before asking if she can get her card back.

According to McClatchy, organizers distribute choice cards out to the caucusgoers so that the organizers can determine the viability of a candidate. The female presumably asked for her card advocate so she could change her taste for another candidate.

In the video, the Buttigieg