Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is the man who was responsible for Democrats’ bizarre strategy to call Sen. JDVance “weird” and has now made another strange attack on the former president Donald Trump’s running-mate.
Walz said he could beat Vance at pheasant hunting during an interview with “Anderson Cooper 360”, which promoted more gun controls.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, appeared to criticize Sen. JDVance (R-Ohio), saying the vice presidential candidate could not hunt pheasants as well as he.
“That’s JD Vance talking about guns. Walz, on Tuesday’s “Anderson Cooper 360deg,” said: “I guarantee that he cannot shoot pheasants as well as I can.”
“And that is a part to saying, but I assure you, I do not want weapons of warfare in classrooms.” There’s no reason why you couldn’t put reasonable restrictions on that without violating your Second Amendment,” added he.
Vance’s personal story about his Appalachian roots has been a major part of his argument to become former President Trump’s running mate. He told an anecdote at the Republican National Convention in early October about finding 19 loaded firearms around his grandmother’s home. The audience roared with applause.
Walz repeated the “weird’ trope that was mocked on social media and repudiated when asked if it appeared he was insulting Trump and Vance supporters.
“I was born in a small town of 400 people and graduated with 12 cousins and 24 classmates. I know these people. This isn’t about them. “I’m talking to those people who we need to convince,” he said.
He added, “These are people who Democrats, they felt that Democrats had spoken down to them. We haven’t gotten richer where they are, and they’re just trying to be themselves.”
Walz defended himself further on CNN by saying that calling Harris’s opponents “weird” is “observation”, and “not a name-calling.”
Walz has reportedly been considered to be Kamala’s running mate. Some leftists have supported it, citing his roots in the upper Midwest.
The Democrats who are running in rural districts in competitive states this fall worry that the former California attorney general and senator is likely to perform worse than President Biden, especially in battlegrounds in the upper Midwest. They argue that Walz, 60, who spent 12 years representing a mostly rural, red district in southern Minnesota in Congress, can bring the vibe of a guy you’d meet at a backyard BBQ in the Midwest to the ticket. This could help stop another Democratic freefall in rural areas.
Walz “had to run tough races and I think that is a great compromise because Kamala has an impressive background but she has also been to California, which has been pretty blue. So it helps to have someone with experience in close races,” Iowa state rep. J.D. Scholten narrowly lost the conservative rural western Iowa seat to Democrats in 2018. He has said that Democrats should refocus on rural voters.
Walz began by using the tired “weapons-of-war” argument to incite fear about law-abiding citizens who own and carry firearms. Walz wants to give the impression that teachers and staff allowed to carry firearms will march through schools with their bazookas on their backs, ready to shoot anyone who appears suspicious.
In states that have passed legislation allowing teachers to carry guns, they can do so as long as they follow the guidelines and receive training. It is more important to find ways to deter would-be shooters than to try to disarm legal gun owners and pretend that this will somehow deter school shooters.
The “weirdness” argument has also backfired. Conservatives have noted that calling someone “weird”, when they believe men can become pregnant, was probably not the best thing to do. If they do not vote for Harris, perhaps Democrats should stick to calling everyone racist or sexist.