South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg had the most individual donors in D.C. of any candidate vying for the Democratic presidential nomination, per FEC data.

Damian Dovarganes / AP Photo

With Federal Election Commission data in through the end of June, the New York Times created a series of maps showing where Democratic presidential contenders are raising their money from. Individual donors serve as a barometer of how much candidates are resonating with the electorate, as the Times notes.

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is far and away the candidate with the largest amount of individual donors, clocking in at approximately 746,000 people (Elizabeth Warren follows at 421,000, and Pete Buttigieg is next at 390,000), and he dominates across much of the country.

As with many things, though, the D.C. metro area isn’t quite like the rest of the U.S. The blue, denoting Sanders’ support, isn’t nearly as prevalent as it is in the country writ large or even in the metropolitan areas surrounding New York City, Chicago, Atlanta, and San Francisco.

Instead, the vast swath of western D.C., including its wealthiest neighborhoods, are filled with supporters of South Bend, Ind. Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and his dominance extends out into Arlington. NYT reports that Buttigieg has more donors in one District zip code than any of the Democratic candidates have in the entirety of South Dakota. Dupont Circle Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Randy Downs asks on Twitter, “Could this be because DC has the highest density of LGBTQ folks of any US jurisdiction?” (Buttigieg is gay.)

Meanwhile, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren has the most donors in D.C.’s northern neighborhoods, largely in wards 4 and 5, and stretching into Takoma Park and other points north.

On the eastern portion of the city, California Senator Kamala Harris is in the lead, through the border into Prince George’s County. Only once the map heads to further from the city in Prince George’s County does former Vice President Joe Biden surpass his competition in individual donors.

Former Congressman John Delaney, the only locally based candidate, didn’t make the map.

A speechwriter for Sanders, David Sirota, seems to be taking the D.C. area’s preference for other candidates as a medal of honor. “NEWSFLASH: The D.C. Swamp hates @BernieSanders,” he wrote in a now-deleted tweet.

He has since re-worded the sentiment in a new tweet: “Glad to see Bernie leading in so many cities. DC is an anomaly. My guess is big campaign cash from the Beltway – one of the wealthiest areas on Earth – doesnt come mostly from low-income households, but more from the wealthy political class. Just a hunch!”