Popular presidential candidate South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg speaks at a campaign event December 08, 2019 at Washington Mid-section School in Washington, Iowa.
Win McNamee | Getty Images
Democratic presidential contender Pete Buttigieg, in a new transparency burden, will reveal the identities of his campaign bundlers and the clients for whom he worked while a consultant at McKinsey & Co. nearly a decade ago, his stump said on Monday.
In addition, the 37-year-old Democrat will open up his campaign fundraisers to reporters, appearing to head off appraisal waged in recent days by rival Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachussetts.
“In a continued commitment to transparency, we are announcing today that our push will open fundraisers to reporters, and will release the names of people raising money for our campaign,” campaign chief Mike Schmuhl said in a statement.
Fundraising events will be open starting Tuesday, and a list of those who construct money for the campaign will be released by the end of the week, Schmuhl said. Lis Smith, a campaign spokesperson, said that the lean over of Buttigieg’s McKinsey clients will be released “soon.”
Buttigieg previously disclosed the names of his campaign bundlers but had not updated the roll since April.
The new measures come after a barrage of criticism from progressives including Warren, who does not hold forth private fundraisers. Warren accused Buttigieg on Saturday of creating conflicts “every single day, right now” by continuing to suppress fundraisers behind closed doors.
“Whoever is bundling for him at these fundraisers should be exposed,” she told reporters.
The commentary was leveled at a potentially vulnerable spot for Buttigieg, who has made transparency a hallmark of his campaign. The campaign has invited reporters to shell out long hours with him during three on-the-record bus tours, and claims to be the most transparent in the field.
But Buttigieg has been dogged in latest weeks by criticism because of the secrecy of his fundraisers and those who raise money on his behalf — known as bundlers — and his refusal to fink the names of his clients while he worked as a consultant at McKinsey for three years after graduate school.
Buttigieg has about that he is prohibited from naming his clients because of a legal agreement he entered into with the company, and has asked McKinsey to issue him from it. On Friday, under pressure from Warren and others, Buttigieg released a summary of his work for the company, which lasted from 2007 to 2010.
In a assertion on Monday, a McKinsey spokesperson said that “we recognize the unique circumstances presented by a presidential campaign.”
“After acquiring permission from the relevant clients, we have informed Mayor Buttigieg that he may disclose the identity of the clients he fulfiled while at McKinsey from 2007 to 2010,” the spokesperson said. “Any description of his work for those clients still should not disclose confidential, proprietary or classified information obtained during the course of that work, or violate any security approval.”
While his own secrecy was being scrutinized, Buttigieg also called for Warren to release additional tax records covering her years result in for corporate clients as a bankruptcy attorney.
On Sunday evening, Warren revealed that she received nearly $2 million for that judiciary work, which spanned three decades.
Warren’s campaign has released 11 years of tax returns. The campaign bid that its disclosures on Sunday provided more detail than tax returns would.
The back-and-forth between the two contenders get well as Buttigieg has risen in national polling averages. Warren, who ascended to the front of the crowded Democratic field over the summer, has since diminished in nationwide surveys and is behind Buttigieg in Iowa.
Warren and Buttigieg are both among the most prolific fundraisers in the brief race. Warren raised $24.6 million in the most recent quarter, averaging around $26 per donation, while Buttigieg mustered $19.1 million, with the average donation about $40.