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Vice President Kamala Harris has tapped Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate, capping a historically compressed vice presidential search.
Walz rocketed up the list of finalists on the strength of his folksy relatability, gubernatorial experience and congressional record representing a conservative-leaning district.
"I am proud to announce that I've asked @Tim_Walz to be my running mate," Harris posted on X Aug. 6. "As a governor, a coach, a teacher, and a veteran, he's delivered for working families like his. It's great to have him on the team. Now let’s get to work."
Walz worked as a teacher and football coach and rose to the rank of command sergeant major over 24 years in the U.S. Army National Guard. (Walz retired as a master sergeant, one rank below command sergeant major, for benefit purposes because he did not complete additional coursework at the U.S. Army Sergeants Major Academy.)
He was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives by ousting a Republican incumbent in a heavily rural district in 2006. Walz was elected governor in 2018 and was reelected in 2022.
"He’s a smart choice if they deploy him in two specific ways," said Blois Olson, a political analyst for WCCO radio in Minneapolis-St. Paul. "Send him to rural areas to counter the polarization and the idea that only Republicans can win there. And have him keep the deep left base satisfied, which could be an issue with a very moody voting bloc."
Olson said Walz’s rural experience and regular-guy vibes might be able to shave 2 to 4 percentage points off GOP electoral performance in rural Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — three states considered crucial to a Democratic victory in November.
"The most recent Survey USA poll taken last month for KSTP-TV had Walz’ job approval at a healthy 56%," said Steve Schier, a political scientist at Carleton College in Minnesota. "That said, Minnesota is quite a polarized state, and Republicans in the state despise him. He initially campaigned as a moderate in 2018 but has governed as a progressive."
Walz was one of several potential vice presidential options floated since President Joe Biden announced he’d cede the nomination and endorsed Harris. Other frequently cited names were Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
Now that he is Harris’ running mate, we are on the lookout for claims by and about Walz to fact-check — just as we are for Harris and former President Donald Trump and his vice presidential pick, Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio. Readers can email us suggestions to [email protected].
Republicans have already begun to question Walz’s handling of the rioting following the murder of George Floyd while in Minneapolis police custody. Walz clashed with Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey over how to handle the unrest, but he sent the Minnesota National Guard to aid local law enforcement.
Walz grew up in Nebraska but moved with his wife, Gwen to Minnesota in 1996 to teach high school geography and coach football; his teams won two state championships.
He was 42 when he ran for Congress, a decision sparked by a 2004 incident at an appearance by President George W. Bush. "Walz took two students to the event, where Bush campaign staffers demanded to know whether he supported the president and barred the students from entering after discovering one had a sticker for Democratic candidate John Kerry," according to the Almanac of American Politics. "Walz suggested it might be bad PR for the Bush campaign to bar an Army veteran, and he and the students were allowed in. Walz said the experience sparked his interest in politics, first as a volunteer for the Kerry campaign and then as a congressional candidate."
Walz’s ideological profile is nuanced. The other highest-profile finalist for Harris’ running mate, Shapiro, was pegged as somewhat more moderate and bipartisan than Walz. An Emerson College poll released in July found Shapiro with 49% approval overall in his state, including a strong 46% approval from independents and 22% from Republicans.
When he was elected to Congress, Walz represented a district that had sent Republicans to Washington for 102 of the previous 114 years, according to the Almanac of American Politics. Representing that constituency, Walz was able to win the National Rifle Association’s endorsement and he voted for the Keystone XL pipeline — two positions that have become highly unusual in today’s Democratic Party.
During his first gubernatorial term, Walz worked with legislative Republicans, which produced some bipartisan achievements, including $275 million for roads and bridges, additional funds for opioid treatment and prevention, and a middle-income tax cut.
In 2022, Walz won a second term by a 52% to 45% margin. Democrats also flipped the state Senate, providing him with unified Democratic control in the Legislature. This enabled Walz to enact a progressive wish list of policies, including classifying abortion as a "fundamental right," a requirement that utilities produce carbon-free energy by 2040, paid family leave and legalizing recreational marijuana. He also signed an executive order safeguarding access to gender-affirming health care for transgender residents.
After Harris’ announcement, the Trump campaign attacked Walz’s legislative record in a campaign email: "Kamala Harris just doubled-down on her radical vision for America by tapping another left-wing extremist as her VP nominee."
Olson noted that Walz "only has one veto in six years. He doesn’t say ‘no’ to the left, after being a moderate. That’s a reason he’s now beloved by the left."
Democrats have controlled the Minnesota state Legislature’s lower chamber during Walz’ entire tenure. However, Republicans controlled the state Senate for his first four years in office.
Walz’s meteoric three-week rise on the national scene began after calling Trump, Vance and other Republicans in their circle "weird."
In a July 23 interview on MSNBC, Walz predicted that Harris would win older, white voters because she was talking about substance, including schools, jobs and environmental policy.
"These are weird people on the other side," Walz said. "They want to take books away. They want to be in your exam room. That's what it comes down to. And don't, you know, get sugarcoating this. These are weird ideas."
Days later on MSNBC, Walz reiterated the point: "You know there's something wrong with people when they talk about freedom. Freedom to be in your bedroom. Freedom to be in your exam room. Freedom to tell your kids what they can read. That stuff is weird. They come across weird. They seem obsessed with this."
Other Democrats, including the Harris campaign, amplified the "weird" message, quickly making Walz a star in online Democratic circles.
Walz also attracted notice for being a self-styled fix-it guy who has helped pull a car out of a ditch and given advice about how to save money on car repairs. He staged a bill signing for free breakfast and lunch for students surrounded by cheering children.
Schier said he expects Walz to be a compatible ticket-mate who won’t upstage the presidential nominee. "Walz will be a loyal companion to Harris," Schier said.
One thing Walz does not bring to the table is a critical state for the Democratic ticket. In 2024, election analysts universally rate Minnesota as leaning or likely Democratic. By contrast, Shapiro’s state of Pennsylvania is not only one of a handful of battleground states but also the one with the biggest haul of electoral votes, at 19. Another finalist, Kelly, represents another battleground state with nine electoral votes, Arizona.
We have not put Walz on our Truth-O-Meter. However, days after Floyd’s murder, we wrote a story about how a false claim about out-of-state protestors was spread by Minnesota officials, including Walz, and then national politicians, including Trump.
At a May 2020 news conference, Walz said he understood that the catalyst for the protests was "Minnesotans’ inability to deal with inequalities, inequities and quite honestly the racism that has persisted." But there was an issue with "everybody from everywhere else."
"We're going to start releasing who some of these people are, and they'll be able to start tracing that history of where they're at, and what they're doing on the ‘dark web’ and how they're organizing," Walz said. "I think our best estimate right now that I heard is about 20% that are Minnesotans and about 80% are outside."
The statistic soon fell apart.
Within hours, local TV station KARE reported that Minneapolis-based police tallies of those arrested for rioting, unlawful assembly, and burglary-related crimes from May 29 to May 30 showed that 86% of those arrested listed Minnesota as their address. Twelve out of 18 people arrested in St. Paul were from Minnesota.
Confronted with these numbers, the officials walked back their comments that evening or did not repeat them. In a news conference, Walz did not repeat his earlier 80% assertion. KARE-TV wrote that Walz said the estimate was based in part on law enforcement intelligence information and that the state would monitor developments.
At the Aug. 6 rally in Philadelphia, Harris and Walz appeared together for the first time as running mates offering an initial glimpse of how he, in particular, might message on the trail.
Often, he repeated claims Harris and Democratic surrogates have made during the campaign season.
For example, Walz said "violent crime was up under Donald Trump." It did rise in Trump's final year, 2020. However, the pandemic and the protests after George Floyd's murder, which happened in Walz’s home state, drove the spike, making it hard to assign blame to Trump’s policies. We rated a similar claim Half True.
Walz also said Trump will "gut Social Security." Despite some past comments expressing openness to cutting benefits or raising the retirement age, Trump has said consistently in the current election cycle that he won't do that. We previously rated a more measured claim by Harris Mostly False.
Finally, Walz challenged his opposite number, GOP vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, to "get off his couch" and show up for a debate. Walz’s use of the word "couch" harks back to a fake social media claim about Vance that has received wide circulation. We gave Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker a Pants on Fire for repeating the rumor.
UPDATE, Aug. 6, 8:00 p.m.: This article has been updated to include fact-checks of the Harris-Walz launch rally in Philadelphia.
EDITOR'S NOTE, Aug. 8, 2024: This story has been updated to specify Walz's rank at retirement.
Send fact-check ideas to [email protected].
RELATED: All of our fact-checks of Vice President Kamala Harris
Our Sources
The Almanac of American Politics, 2024
MSNBC, Transcript of interview with Gov. Tim Walz, July 23, 2023
MSNBC, Jen Psaki interview with Gov. Tim Walz, July 25, 2024
The New York Times, Minnesota’s Governor, a Harris V.P. Contender, Calls Trump and Vance ‘Weird People’ July 27, 2024
Chalkbeat, Tim Walz is Kamala Harris’ VP pick. Here’s what he’s done for education. Aug. 6, 2024
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, X post, July 23, 2024
Dexter Merschbrock, X post clip of Gov. Walz, Aug. 4, 2024
Devin Bartolotta, X post, July 30, 2024
David Hogg, X post clip of Gov. Walz, Aug. 6, 2024
Patriot Takes, X post of Gov. Walz, Aug. 6, 2024
Presidential race handicapping by the Cook Political Report, Sabato’s Crystal Ball, Inside Elections and U.S. News & World Report, accessed Aug. 6, 2024
PolitiFact, How a false claim about out-of-state protesters traveled from Minnesota officials to Trump, Pelosi, June 1, 2020
PolitiFact, Can Donald Trump really invoke the Insurrection Act to send troops into states? June 2, 2020
PolitiFact, Minnesota doesn’t have the highest unemployment rate in US history, May 26, 2020
PolitiFact, Scott Jensen conceded the Minnesota gubernatorial race. It wasn't 'stolen' Nov. 9, 2022
Email interview with Steve Schier, Carleton College political scientist, Aug. 5, 2025
Email interview with Blois Olson, political analyst for WCCO radio in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Aug. 5, 2025