Tim Walz froze like a deer in headlights when asked one simple question

Office of Governor Walz & Lt. Governor Flanagan, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Kamala Harris picking Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as her running mate was the first sign she would flop badly as a Presidential candidate.

But Walz hasn’t faded from the stage.

And Tim Walz froze like a deer in headlights when asked one simple question.

The Democrat Party is sitting idly by and watching Donald Trump implement his agenda of slashing regulations, cutting spending, shutting down government departments, and securing the border.

Left-wing activists and the media are openly stressing about who will pick up the mantle of resistance leader to President Trump.

CNN’s Kasie Hunt put that question to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.

“Who do you think the leader of the Democratic Party is right now?” Hunt inquired.

Walz sat in dumbfounded silence for several seconds before offering an answer.

“I think the voting public, right now, is what I would say,” Walz began.

Walz admitted of Democrats that “we’re not going to have a charismatic leader right in here and save us from this,” and should instead be “out there standing alongside” voters.

Walz’s horrendous media skills were one reason he bombed so poorly on the national stage.

The Minnesota Governor was supposed to be the all-American dad but instead waved around jazz hand gestures and made bizarre comments like how he was friends with a school shooter that creeped out Americans.

Had Walz and Kamala Harris been appealing candidates with an appealing message, they would be the leaders of the Democrat Party as they would have won the election.

But since they were personally off-putting and ran on open borders and the Biden economy, they lost in a landslide.

Hunt then asked Walz if he thought Kamala Harris should run for President.

Walz – like every other Democrat – can’t say that Kamala Harris is an unqualified disaster and even praised the message Kamala campaigned on that voters rejected in emphatic fashion.

“I think she had a positive message,” Walz replied. “I think I own this with her. Were we able to deliver that? Obviously not. Not as effectively as we should have, but I think the ideas that she was bringing up about an economy that works for everyone, expanding the idea of health care and affordability, making sure that Medicare and Medicaid and Social Security were protected — she shares the values of the bulk of the American public. In 100 days, I think she was articulating that.”

The Democrat Party’s refusal to sideline Kamala is why polls show her as the frontrunner for the 2028 Democrat Party nomination.

And as if Walz hadn’t done enough to cheer Republicans spirits, Walz held open the possibility that he would run for President in 2028.

“Are you going to run for president?” Hunt wondered.

“I don’t need to be on the ticket, but I do need to be there, I believe, because what I saw in the country and what we’re able to do,” Walz stated.

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