Support truly
independent journalism

Support Now

Our mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth.

Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts.

Support us to deliver journalism without an agenda.

Louise Thomas

Editor

The week after Joe Biden’s disastrous debate performance against Donald Trump, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and a host of Democratic governors gave a press conference firmly stating their support for the president. During the Republican National Convention, Waltz showed up in neighboring Wisconsin for counter-programming.

Then, Biden announced he would not seek re-election and passed the torch to Kamala Harris. All of a sudden, the former high school football coach with a heavy midwestern accent and former congressman who represented a district that voted for Donald Trump found himself in the hunt to be Harris’s running mate.

Walz faced stiff competition from contenders like Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, Governor Andy Beshear of Kentucky and Governor Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania. As time went on, rumors swirled especially around Shapiro — but ultimately, Harris picked Walz on Tuesday morning.

“Someone like him or someone like Governor Beshear [as a veep pick] would be absolutely beneficial to competing for rural votes,” Matt Barron, a political consultant who worked with Walz in the past and specializes in electing Democrats in rural areas, told The Independent ahead of the announcement.

Just days before President Joe Biden dropped out, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (right) stood behind him. Now he’s a favorite to be Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate. (Getty Images)

Walz has also earned plaudits from progressives for passing a series of priorities like free school meals for children regardless of income status, paid family leave, paid sick leave and gun legislation.

“It's one of those things where Minnesotans are having this [moment] like: Oh my gosh, do we have to share him with the rest of the country?” Senator Erin Maye Quade, who serves in Minnesota’s legislature as a senator, told The Independent. “This was a really lovely secret that we kept from the rest of the rest of the country. Like, they still think we're flyover world.”

Walz, who calls himself the “anti-Tommy Tuberville,” delivered a pep talk during the White Dudes for Harris Zoom call.

“How often in 100 days do you get to change the trajectory of the world?” he said. “And how often in the world do you make that b*****d wake up afterwards and know that a Black woman kicked his ass and sent him on the road?”

But since his rise to prominence, Walz has set the main tone for Democrats by hitting them with one word: weird.

“These are weird people on the other side,” he said on MSNBC last month. “They want to take books away. They want to be in your exam room.”

Since then, Harris’s campaign, and Democrats as a whole, have glommed onto the idea that their opponents are weird. The term has irritated numerous Republicans from Vance to former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. And it might just be Walz’s ticket to become Harris’s teammate.

“I think the governor will also be an outstanding contender for the job and he is really demonstrating over these last few weeks... what those of us in Minnesota have known for a long time. He's a straight shooter who knows how to talk to people like he's a human being,” Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota told The Independent.

Some progressives also appreciate that Walz has taken a more empathetic tone toward activists worried about Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. When a large number of Minnesotans voted “uncommitted” in the state’s primary, he said on CNN: “Their message is clear that they think this is an intolerable situation and that we can do more, and I think the president’s hearing that.”

“I think that [Walz] brings something special to the table, in the sense of, while there is no bad option, he's able to speak to this group that feels so disenfranchised in a way that no one else can,” Sunjay Muralitharan, the national vice president for the College Democrats of America, told The Independent.

Being on a ticket as a progressive champion is a peculiar bookend for Walz, who won his first election to Congress as a Blue Dog Democrat representing a rural district in 2006. That year, Democrats recruited numerous pro-gun rural candidates and veterans like Walz, who was a command sergeant major in the National Guard.

But in 2016, as Donald Trump began to dominate in rural areas, Walz won re-election by a little more than 2,549 votes after Trump won his district.

In the next election, he chose to run for governor. And in 2018, after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, he gave away money he had received from the National Rifle Association, which has earned the praise of activists focused on ending gun violence like March for Our Lives co-founder David Hogg.

Since then, he’s passed a red flag law as governor and has received “F” ratings from the NRA.

Trump has also criticized Walz for allowing rioting in Minneapolis after the killing of George Floyd.

“I sent in the National Guard to save Minneapolis,” Trump said in a rally last month — though actually it was Walz, not Trump, who deployed the National Guard, albeit later than some in Minneapolis wanted.

Walz has stayed firmly on the offensive as the election cycle continues. When Trump held a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina recently and spoke about the fictional Silence of the Lambs character Hannibal Lecter as if he were a real person, Walz went to his usual response on X/Twitter.

“Say it with me: Weird,” he said.

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.