Pete Buttigieg will campaign in Michigan to raise funds before participating in the second Democratic presidential primary debate of 2019.

The Indiana mayor made one of few mentions to the Midwest during the first Democratic National Convention debate last week, but Buttigieg has yet to visit Michigan. A Sunday, July 21 fundraiser in Saugatuck will be the first time he’s campaigned personally in the state, though Buttigieg’s husband, a Traverse City native, appeared at a fundraiser in Ingham County earlier this summer.

Buttigieg, 37, is scheduled to visit just over a week before the second DNC debate is held at the Fox Theatre in Detroit. He is among 20 Democrats who will qualify, sharing the stage during two nights on July 30 and 31.

Buttigieg is polling near the top of the historically large field, only slightly lagging behind U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., for the number three spot.

Michigan voters prefer Buttigieg to President Donald Trump, according to a June poll from The Detroit News and WDIV-TV.

The Saugatuck event is registered on ActBlue, a Democratic online fundraising platform, but no address is provided. The campaign did not provide additional details Monday morning.

The presidential hopeful was one of few candidates to call attention to the Michigan during the first debate last week. Buttigieg said the industrial Midwest is suffering from Trump’s trade war with China.

“Tariffs are taxes, and Americans on average are going to pay $800 more a year because of these tariffs,” he said. “Meanwhile China is investing so they could run circles around us in artificial intelligence.”

Buttigieg raised $24.8 million from more than 294,000 donors in the second quarter of 2019.

The campaign has more than $22.6 million cash on hand, more than doubling the amount of individual donors since the first quarter. The average donor contributed $47.