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Harris, Walz emphasize ‘freedom’ and ‘joy,’ and press attacks on Trump, Vance in raucous first rally

Kamala Harris and Tim Walz standing onstage in a stadium, blue and white lights in the stands behind them
Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris rallies with running mate Tim Walz in Philadelphia on Tuesday.
(Matt Rourke / Associated Press)
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Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris introduced running mate Tim Walz at a rally Tuesday evening in Philadelphia, where the duo pledged to secure the freedom and hope that they contend would be stripped away if former President Trump were to win a second term in the White House.

The Minnesota governor, little known nationally before Harris named him Tuesday as her No. 2, told a raucous partisan audience that he is the product of small-town America, and believes in old-fashioned values.

“I was born in West Point, Neb., and lived in Butte, a small town of 400 where community was a way of life,” said Walz, 60. “Growing up, I spent summers working on the family farm. My mom and dad taught us to show generosity toward your neighbors and to work for the common good.”

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Walz said that communal strength looms large in Minnesota — the state he has governed since 2019 — and that he plans to bring that culture to the White House.

“Minnesota’s strength comes from our values, our commitment to working together, to seeing past our differences, to lending a helping hand,” he said.

Kamala Harris has selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate. The moderate Democrat demonstrated the ability to work with Republicans when he was in Congress.

In introducing Walz, Harris portrayed her running mate as a kind, common-sense alternative to Republican policies that she said had stripped away fundamental rights.

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“We fight for a future where we defend our most fundamental freedoms,” she said. “We fight for freedom to vote, freedom to be safe from gun violence, freedom to love who you love openly and with pride, and the freedom of a woman to make decisions about her own body, not having the government tell her what to do.”

Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz attends a campaign rally in Philadelphia.
(Matt Rourke / Associated Press)

Democrats have been buoyed by Harris’ entry into the race two weeks ago following President Biden’s withdrawal. Polls have shown a narrowing of an already tight race. Her campaign had reported more than $300 million in donations, and a spokesperson said an additional $20 million poured in after Harris announced on social media Tuesday morning that Walz would join her on the ticket.

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The new partners plan to visit battleground states in the Midwest before flying West to campaign in Arizona and Nevada. The two states are expected to hold the key to victory in the election along with the swing states of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan and Georgia.

Harris, 59, whipped through Walz’s resume Tuesday, depicting him to the crowd as an everyman who understands the travails of regular Americans. She described his youth on a family farm in Nebraska, his two decades as a high school social studies teacher and his work as an assistant coach for the school’s football team when it won the state championship.

She noted that Walz had simultaneously coached linebackers and supported students who wanted to start a gay-straight alliance at Mankato West High School.

“At a time when acceptance was difficult to find for LGBTQ students, Tim knew the signal that it would send to have a football coach get involved,” Harris said. “So he signed up to be the group’s faculty advisor. Students have said he made the school a safe place for everybody.”

His supportive stance led to a student vote that named Walz as the most inspirational faculty member, Harris said.

“We both believe in lifting people up, not knocking them down,” she said. “When we look at folks, our fellow Americans, we see neighbors, not enemies.”

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Walz said more than once that Harris had brought “joy” back to America’s public arena, but the folksy politician showed he also wasn’t above throwing a punch.

He chided his main vice presidential rival, noting that Republican JD Vance’s rural roots grew into a much different life than one Walz recognized from Middle America.

Teachers may be lionized by Hollywood, but in practice they’re underpaid, overworked and disrespected. As Kamala Harris’ running mate, the Minnesota governor could help change that.

“Like all regular people, I grew up with in the heartland. JD studied at Yale, had his career funded by Silicon Valley billionaires and then wrote a bestseller trashing that community,” Walz said, before throwing his arms wide and chiding: “Come on! That’s not what Middle America is.”

Walz drew knowing laughter from the crowd at the Liacouras Center arena at Temple University when he reprised one of his first attacks on the Republican ticket, calling Trump and Vance “creepy, and, yes, just weird as hell.”

He found another punchline in the multiple criminal cases against Trump.

Walz said the former president “froze in the face of the COVID crisis. He drove our economy into the ground. And make no mistake: Violent crime was up under Donald Trump.” After a round of applause, he added: “That’s not even counting the crimes he committed.”

Saying he welcomed a chance to debate Vance, Walz then made a thinly veiled reference to a prurient and apparently unfounded rumor involving his rival and certain living room furniture.

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“I can’t wait to debate the guy — if he’s willing to get off the couch and show up!” Walz said.

Harris and Walz both suggested that a second Trump term would strike a crippling blow against progressive government programs.

They said that the Republican would again try to gut the Affordable Care Act, the law known as Obamacare that brought healthcare coverage to millions of uninsured Americans; that he would “gut” Social Security and Medicare; and that he would continue to crack down on abortion, a procedure that is much harder to obtain after Trump-appointed Supreme Court justices helped reverse Roe vs. Wade’s longstanding right to end one’s pregnancy.

“Today in America, one out of three women live in a state with a Trump abortion ban,” Harris said. “Some of those bans go back to 1800s, before women had a right to vote.

“We have a message for Trump and those who want to turn back our freedoms,” she continued: “We’re not going back!”

That led to a prolonged chant from the crowd: “Not going back!”

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