Pete Buttiegigâs run as an openly gay presidential candidate has roots in Laguna Beach
While news of Pete Buttigiegâs run for president generated headlines this year, the lineage of openly gay political candidates stretches back decades â and its roots are in Laguna Beach.
Before South Bend, Ind.âs âMayor Peteâ became a household name, there was Mayor Bob Gentry, a soft-spoken but aggressively progressive politician who served on the Laguna Beach City Council from 1982 to 1994. Gentry has carried the mantle of being Californiaâs first openly gay mayor since he assumed the role in 1983, the first of three one-year mayoral terms.
Gentry, in turn, inspired the political aspirations of another Laguna Beach resident, Fred Karger, whose 2012 bid for the Republican nomination made him the first openly gay presidential candidate.
Now, Karger, 69, a former political strategist, has thrown his support behind Democrat Buttigieg, whom he sees as carrying the torch from Gentry, through Karger.
âThis guy â all you have to do is see him once and he just kind of pulls you in,â Karger said of Buttigieg. âItâs a unique kind of charisma.â
In a few weeks, Karger and his partner, Joe Wagner, will co-host a sold-out fundraiser for Buttigieg in Beverly Hills. He reached his own $2,800 maximum campaign contribution weeks ago.
âI think heâll make a wonderful president insomuch as he is a great conciliator,â said Karger, who added that he has not voted Republican in the past several elections. âHe gets along with people. Heâs not a shoot-from-the-hip, attack kind of person.â
Karger does have one bone to pick with Buttigieg, though: Everyone keeps calling him the first openly gay presidential candidate.
For the past several months, Karger has set out on a campaign to correct any media outlet that makes that claim. He put Buttigiegâs name and âfirst openly gay candidate for presidentâ on Google alerts so he could immediately fact-check articles. So far, Karger said, he has contacted more than 20 outlets for corrections, including the New York Times, Fox News, Business Insider and Newsweek.
Karger doesnât hold it against Buttigieg or the reporters. He understands he âwas not the greatest-known candidateâ and never made it to a presidential debate. The self-described student of LGBTQ history just wants to set the record straight.
âMy historic candidacy will not be erased,â Karger said.
In many ways, Kargerâs candidacy could not have been more different than Buttigiegâs. Karger, a self-titled âRockefeller Republican,â curated a by-the-book conservative career, working on the presidential campaigns of Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush and rising through the ranks as a political strategist.
The times were different too. In 2012, gay marriage hadnât become legal nationwide. President Barack Obama had just overturned the âDonât ask, donât tellâ policy, allowing LGBTQ people to serve openly in the military. There werenât as many laws banning âconversion therapy.â
But like Buttigieg, who harked back to his closeted youth in his candidacy announcement, Karger wanted to inspire the LGBTQ communityâs next generation with his run.
âI really wanted to let these younger people know that anything you want to do, you can do â even run for president,â Karger said. âAnd that message that Pete, with his huge, huge platform that he has now, is resonating. You canât imagine the impact that has.â
Despite their opposing parties, Karger said Buttigieg charmed him immediately. The two met briefly in February at the Brooklyn Library, where Buttigeig was holding a book signing for his newly released memoir, âShortest Way Home.â
Buttigiegâs inscription on the front page of Kargerâs copy reads: âFor Fred Karger, a trailblazer who made it a little easier for those who follow your path.â
Yet, Karger may have never run for office without Gentryâs example or support.
Growing up, Karger said he never had any openly gay political role models. He was already an adult when San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk became Californiaâs first openly gay elected official in 1977.
So when he read as a 32-year-old in 1983 that Laguna Beach had chosen its first openly gay mayor, Karger âwas just in awe and disbelief.â
âI never thought it was possible for me,â Karger said. âThis is now a possibility ... far beyond Laguna Beach.â
Gentry announced his sexual orientation a year after his election. He made protecting the LGBTQ community a pillar of his time on the council.
âLaguna Beach had always been a safe haven for artists, hippies, yippies, whatever group was kind of on the margins,â Gentry said. âAnd the gay and lesbian community was one of those on the margins.â
Gentry proposed an anti-discrimination clause that passed the City Council, as did a domestic partnership ordinance he proposed to recognize same-sex couples.
âWe were able to correct legislatively ... and kind of set a new standard for the city,â Gentry said.
Gentry also led Laguna Beach through a difficult period when it had one of the nationâs highest per capita rates of AIDS. He lost his partner of 15 years, Michael Gary Burdick, to the disease. He became a staunch advocate for AIDS awareness and education.
âThere have been plenty of openly gay politicians ⌠but they just kind of went along with things,â Karger said. âThey were not Bob Gentry â they were not aggressively ⌠passing important laws and being visible and doing the kinds of things he did.â
Karger finally met his role model in 2006 during the heart of Kargerâs effort to save the Boom Boom Room, an iconic gay bar that closed a year later. Karger reached out to the retired mayor at his home in the desert.
âI told him I was very scared because I had been very closeted and suddenly I was going to be saving a gay bar. People put two and two together,â Karger recalled. âHe told me, âDonât be afraid, youâre doing the right thing. Just do it.â And that for me, when I was kind of determining how active I wanted to get, was life-altering.â
Gentry was one of the first people Karger called when considering a run for president.
âI was just blown away that somebody gay and open ran ⌠and then became a very, very effective, aggressive, accomplished mayor,â Karger said of Gentry. âNow I think of Pete on the stage with that message for the world to LGBTQ youth. ⌠Thatâs so impactful, so important.â
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.