• Suavevillain@lemmy.world
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    Walzamania is running wild. I checked out his resume and background. He is the best choice and a decent human. Which is rare in these times. I give props where it is due for Dems not fucking up here.

    • mitchty@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I’m sad cause the dude managed to get a ton of shit through with a one vote majority here. He’s a good politician that doesn’t bs too much. Course the right here is as crazy as anywhere, if more democrats in the us were like mn democrats more shit would get done ignoring the cheese and wine coalition.

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        There’s a reason why we are a consistently blue voting state in presidential elections. The vast majority aren’t wealthy landowning types. We also have a very educated population. Is it more educated than other states? I don’t know, but we pride ourselves on it.

        I’m gonna miss him as governor, but damn if he doesn’t solidify the ticket.

    • MermaidsGarden@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I had the privilege of hearing him speak to the Kansas Democratic Party earlier this year and was kind of blown away by him. She made the right choice.

  • PLAVAT🧿S@sh.itjust.works
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    Wondered where I remembered him from, it was this juxtaposition of photos:

    Additional context: around the same time Governor Walz (upper) was signing a bill for guaranteed school lunches the Governer of Arkansas (lower) was signing a bill rolling back protections on child labor.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/gov-tim-walz-signs-universal-school-meals-bill-into-law/

    https://www.npr.org/2023/03/10/1162531885/arkansas-child-labor-law-under-16-years-old-sarah-huckabee-sanders

        • eestileib@sh.itjust.works
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          I’m shocked, honestly. Shapiro is the canonical post-Clinton Democrat, all the consent manufacturers were clearly pulling for him.

          As one of the leftmost members of the D voting coalition its a strange feeling to not be getting continuously shat upon.

          • Fredselfish@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Yeah well lets hope this all true. All the articles are saying "sources close to " I want to hear it from her mouth. Regardless I am excited about voting for the first time since 2016 when Bernie first ran. Lets fucking go! Only thing stopping us now is if the GOP cheat which I hear they already planning a coup using the courts so lets make it such a huge landslide they can’t win that way.

          • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            No way in hell they would have picked Shapiro. People would get him mixed up with Ben Shapiro. It’s absurd he was even in the running.

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            Well then every gd progressive who says there are so many better get off their asses and vote then.

            Not upset about the pick in the least but this is progressives time to shine.

            Edit- you all act as if Im rooting against that. I actually want a ton of normal non-voters to actually come out and vote for Harris-walz

      • dvlsg@lemmy.world
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        Whoa whoa whoa. So Harris is laffin, and Walz is smilin??? Too much happiness.

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        1 month ago

        They want to be at home playing Roblox, but their parents made them wear ties and have their hair slicked into place. All to support a bill where they’re going to be playing less Roblox.

      • PLAVAT🧿S@sh.itjust.works
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        I would also point out, not to give Huckabee any credit, but the silver lining of that bill might allow kids trying to gain freedom from abusive homes, permitting them to go job hunting on their own (although 14/15 seems super young regardless - they couldn’t without someone signing off otherwise). The downsides is parents forcing kids to go to work in dangerous jobs (to your point).

        • the post of tom joad@sh.itjust.works
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          freedom from abusive homes, permitting them to go job hunting on their own

          While i see what you’re saying, i think the lede is buried. the important change in law is here:

          The state also no longer has to verify the age of those under 16 before they take a job.

          The state isn’t even checking how old these children are. And the younger a kid is, the more easily they are exploited. And the power dynamic between boss and kiddo is worse. All this will do is make kids easy to exploit

          I don’t have to tell y’all, right? How many hours got stolen from you as kids? Or what kind of crap did you put up with before you knew better?

        • IonAddis@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Without laws letting child workers maintain their own bank account in their own name without parents being co owners allowed to drain it at any time, children working become money pinatas for abusive parents.

          I say this as someone who would have benefitted from being independent earlier. My uncle did have me work at 14, and when I went to the bank I found he had stolen every penny, and because I was a minor I had no legal recourse to get it back.

          A few years later the courts emancipated me, but it didn’t return the money he had stolen. Mind you, he was not working at the time himself and he got a few hundred from the state a month to care for me, and he spent what he stole on computer parts so he could game.

          Children working only is in the child’s benefit if there are ironclad laws allowing them to keep their money, and right now there is not.

    • danc4498@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Gov. Tim Walz signs universal school meals bill into law

      vs

      Arkansas Gov. Sanders signs a law that makes it easier to employ children

      I literally laughed out loud when I read the second headline. The kids faces says it all.

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      1 month ago

      Is he in the Sarah Huckabee photo? I don’t recognize him if he is. That article doesn’t even mention him.

      • Vox@lemmy.world
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        No he isn’t, it’s comparing the two, one is Walz (D) signing a law to bring free lunches for school children in his state, the other is sarah huckabee ® signing a law to claw back child labor laws in her state

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          I’m not really sure why that would be relevant in this context. Was Huckabee running for VP? Why include her?

          • PLAVAT🧿S@sh.itjust.works
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            1 month ago

            Primarily because I was sharing how the photos are linked in my memory.

            They’re also chronologically similar, happening within a week of each.

            Lastly, they demonstrate stark differences in policies: a win for the new VP pick who, in my opinion, shows someone who actually cares about children and families.

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              Ok but do you know how many US Governors there are? 55. You picked one at random and threw it into a comment about a totally different person, place, and circumstance. People might mistakenly think Walz was somehow involved in that shitshow.

              • PLAVAT🧿S@sh.itjust.works
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                I can see this from your perspective now, perhaps my context was lacking. I felt it evident as a recollection but those without the context may misinterpret.

                Edit: I’ve added context, thanks for pressing your point!

                • 5too@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  As another perspective - it took me a moment or two to work out what was happening in the second picture, but then the whole tableau made sense to me!

              • odelik@lemmy.today
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                It took me a bit of morning brain fog processing to understand the context. But then it hit me.

                Tim Walz has a history of delighting and helping people, and the excitement of the people (especially the kids) in the room we elated and the picture captured that.

                In the other picture, the people that were being "helped’ (again the kids) looked unimpressed and even a little letheragic.

                It’s a comparison of how one person & their party can excite & delight while the other person & their party depress.

            • odelik@lemmy.today
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              There was a ton of ambiguity in the initial statement. I had to read the statement twice and look at the pictures for a moment before I understood the context in my daily morning brain fog. So I don’t fault them for asking their initial question.

              What I do fault them for is doubling down after the explanations.

  • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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    1 month ago

    Brilliant pick. This is the kind of energy that will get the Midwest to drive this national election and bring enough casserole for everyone at the potluck

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    Everybody anxious about a VP Shapiro can finally get a little bit of sleep now lol

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        He has a lot of baggage that has the potential to tank the ticket and stifle the positive trajectory Kamala has going. Part of her momentum is hoping for a better stance on Gaza compared to Biden and Shapiro would be harmful for that image. You can argue some of it isn’t justified, but politics is more emotional than rational and even past that some of his negatives are tough to swallow - like response to protestors, school vouchers, potential cover-up of an aides sexual misconduct…

        It’s just an unnecessarily vulnerable pick.

        • firebyte@lemmy.world
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          So assuming Harris and Walz are going to be more difficult for Netanyahu to negotiate with, does this increase chances of a ceasefire in Gaza?

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            I would think that it is more likely for Netanyahu to do something desperately stupid before the US election to try to change the conversation. Like start a war with Iran as the October surprise…

          • kava@lemmy.world
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            Waltz is a Zionist too, just not as zealous as Shapiro. I see no reason to believe the future will look any different from the current administration’s policies. Aka unconditional support for Israel with a couple strongly worded statements every once in a while

            When he served in the House from 2007-2019, he frequently took pro-Israel votes, including voting to condemn a United Nations resolution affirming that Israeli settlements in the West Bank are illegal

            Mark Mellman, the chairman of Democratic Majority for Israel’s super PAC, praised Harris’ selection of Walz in a statement, calling him a “proud pro-Israel Democrat with a strong record of supporting the U.S.-Israel relationship.”

            Walz has never diverged from the party line of unconditionally supporting Israel, a position illustrated by his comments earlier this year at an event held by the Jewish Community Relations Council.

            “The ability of Jewish people to self-determine themselves is foundational … The failure to recognise the state of Israel is taking away that self-determination. So it is anti-Semitic,” he said.

      • someguy3@lemmy.world
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        Mostly about Gaza. Iirc he was rough on shutting down protests and is pretty pro Israel in general. Not sure if he ever commented on Palestinian civilians directly.

    • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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      Yeah people were assuming it was him because of the announcement being in Philly when it’s probably just a scheduling question

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    1 month ago

    Just took a stroll through his Wikipedia page and he does seem a better than average politician

    • Has a record of defeating incumbent Republicans

    • Seems to be on the proper side of most policy

    • But more importantly, by far, seems to be a guy actually capable of learning from his mistakes

    • 5oap10116@lemmy.world
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      But more importantly, by far, seems to be a guy actually capable of learning from his mistakes

      Unfortunately many people like when their guy never makes mistakes (or at least convinces you that all of their egregious mistakes are someone else’s fault or were never actually mistakes to begin with)

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        Exactly, and often “we” even fault them from changing opinions which renders politicians unable to correct any stance

        There is a huge difference between a flip flopper and someone who actually learns from the nuance of the issues and shifts their stance

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      I’m a registered libertarian. Despite the craziness, I don’t plan on changing that. I wouldn’t have voted for Biden, strictly because I live in a state that has 0% chance of flipping, BUT I routinely vote for democrats in senate/house/local races where my vote actually does make a difference. I also encouraged friends with similar mindsets in battleground states to vote Biden.

      I think the democratic party needs to fracture, it just needs to fracture AFTER the republican party.

      All of that is a setup to say: I also am excited, and if someone like me is excited, I think that’s a DAMN good sign. I cannot wait to piss and moan about a Harris admin. It is a big damn country, I look forward to disagreement returning to the point it doesn’t result in erosion of fundamental rights and democracy itself, not to mention godamn violent insurrection.

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          The problem is that FPTP massively benefits democrats and republicans so they’re unlikely to want to vote against it. So, to get it passed you’d need to get a third party in power that doesn’t benefit from FPTP. But, you can’t get a third party in power because FPTP makes it virtually impossible to elect third party candidates.

          It’s a catch-22 situation.

          In Canada the Liberal party made an election promise that they would scrap FPTP if elected. They’re one of two main parties in Canada, along with the Conservatives. Of course, as soon as they won the election, they backed out of that promise.

        • batmaniam@lemmy.world
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          And I can’t wait. I am firmly in support of ranked choice. I think it’s absence is the root cause of a lot of issues and should be a single issue voter issue… second ONLY to the fact that there is a “candidate” in the running who is responsible for a Temu quality coup.

          Again (not for you but others), I know the issues of my party. It’s my party not my religion. I am uncomfortable with the compromises democrats make. The thing about coalition governments and multi-party systems is they allow compromises to happen while keeping support and acknowledging they are compromises in the name of pragmatism. It’s the way it should be, it’s how we get the best of all ideas.

          There are things that should never be compromised. I’m a libertarian because Obama was in favor of “strong civil unions”, renewed the patriot act, and kept Guantanamo open. In a coalition government, I maybe could have understood that, but that’s the issue: without a coalition, and without ranked choice, those are now principles of the democratic party.

          And again, it’s all secondary to being able to vote at all in 2028. Harris is going to have a hell of a time, but I’m excited for it.

          • GaMEChld@lemmy.world
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            In the the absence of Ranked Choice, we likely would need to get involved at the Primary level in order to fundamentally change the party. Primary turnout rates are like 10% or something absurdly low.

            • batmaniam@lemmy.world
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              Giddyup. In the meantime I’ll vociferously vote for the folks who 1) aren’t seditionist assholes who call my friends non humans 2) don’t use passing point 1 to do other heinous shit. Voting in primaries is paramount, it makes people scared.

        • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          that is not the correct analysis. the correct analysis is that strategic voting in a fptp system leads to party consolidation. the solution is values voting

      • Scallionsandeggs@lemmy.world
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        Killing the GOP is in your best interest if fracturing the Democratic Party is what you want. Progressives have been ready to bail since 2016. It’s not likely to make American politics any less statist, though.

        Significant electoral reform is the only other path, and any constitutional amendment is not happening without a major cultural shift in partisanship.

        By the way for anyone reading that wants the end of the Trump era, I’m also in a 0% chance state, and this will be the first time I vote for the Democrat on the presidential ticket since moving here, and I encourage others in similar positions to turn out and do the same. I always vote third party to give them extra relevance, but this is a year where the popular vote total will matter. Running up the score will be necessary to make false election integrity claims irrelevant.

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          Killing the GOP is in your best interest if fracturing the Democratic Party is what you want. Progressives have been ready to bail since 2016. It’s not likely to make American politics any less statist, though.

          'nuff said. Right there with you. As per the rest, like I said I vote out idiots when I can, and I’m avoiding naming the state because it’s the internet, but we do pretty well in terms of workers rights, civil rights, and healthcare (yes there are libertarians who support MFA etc), so I think it’s important to indicate that, especially for local issues, the national issue of the party means less.

          But I hear you and you do you. I’m pretty damn far from accelerationist, but if we really can’t keep to clear cut things like the EC… well… we’ve got far bigger issues.

    • Aniki 🌱🌿@lemmings.world
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      I am too. I went from being convinced we were heading straight to tyranny and now I am excited for a potential future with actual liberals at the helm.

    • Keineanung@lemmy.world
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      Pleasence check your voter registration status, even if you always vote. They are doing what they can, to keep good people from voting.

  • Scallionsandeggs@lemmy.world
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    Between the response to this ticket and the big antitrust win today, this is the most optimistic I’ve been about the direction of American politics in a very long time.

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    My sister used to be the head of the environmental department of one of the suburbs of Minneapolis. She’s met Tim Walz a few times, and has had nothing but good things to say about both his personality and his attitude toward the environment. The US has pretty slim pickings for good politicians these days, but I really feel that Tim is on that list. I’m feeling hopeful about American politics for the first time since I learned about how American politics works!

    • pingveno@lemmy.world
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      There are some people who actively try to make you feel like politics in the US is hopelessly broken and you might as well just give up. There are many, many people who just want to make things better, whether that’s at the federal, state, local, or hyperlocal level. They might disagree on how to do it, and the best ones are the ones that know how to come up with a reasonable compromise when disagreements arise. If you’re interested, always look for opportunities.

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    I loved this guy since the juxtaposition photos between him and the child labor folks. I wonder if Harris campaign is getting to make decisions because this whole situation blindsided DNC officials/strategists who have historically made stupid calls. They haven’t had 4 years to overthink a campaign.

    As cynical as I am, I think laughing Harris just felt a good feeling about smiling Walz that she just didn’t get from Shapiro, and no strategist hack was able to convince them otherwise.

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      DNC sucks at strategy. I think making quick decisive moves, especially with the public’s diminished attention span is proving very effective. Campaigns should probably focus on being like 3 months before the elections in this era.

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        Should Harris win (and especially if she wins big), I could see it changing the nature of campaigning here. Three months goes against all the conventional wisdom.

        The media won’t be happy about it, but it’s past time we bring the press back to public service and away from profiteering anyway.

    • fluxion@lemmy.world
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      I suppose this is a good time for me to send that nice donation I’ve been putting off and hope it helps to let the DNC see what happens when they don’t disenfranchise progressives.

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      Harris’s primary campaign seemed to be defined by Harris herself taking progressive-ish positions and then later walking them back after someone in her orbit convinced her she had to be more status quo. Maybe that campaign flaming out has taught her to stop listening to those people.

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    I was hoping it was Kelly or Walz over Shapiro.

    To me, as Bernie Sanders flavored “Socialist”, Walz is an amazing pick.

    However I had a preference for Kelly since I strongly believe that his history as an astronaut and his popularity in a state like AZ could help drive a lot of independent voters to the Democrat’s platform come November.

    All that said, progressives know that progressive policy is also extremely popular when messaged broadly and communicating the benefits to the invidual and country. Hopefully Kamama & Walz use their experince with their A* campaign team to drive that home. And then fucking deliver.

          • pingveno@lemmy.world
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            Apparently Hillary Clinton really likes spicy foods. She ate raw jalapenos like potato chips on the campaign trail, according to one aid.

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              For some reason this just makes me sad I love spicy food too, not make her more likeable… That’s almost definitely on my biases against her from the '16 primaries tho.

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                Who knows, maybe if you had a chance to chat with her over a nice meal of spicy food, you could find some common ground (besides the food). Or if nothing else, she has some interesting stories. Like, when she was starting out she worked as a civil rights activist in Alabama proving that “segregation academies” were discriminating against Black applicants in violation of the law. They openly assured her that they would not let Black students in. More broadly, this proved that the Nixon administration was not enforcing the law.

                Health care, I’m sure she has plenty to say that is far more nuanced than the sound bites that get posted to social media. Social mobility, educational opportunity, racial justice, the justice system, foreign policy. I would love to hear her thoughts, even if I don’t agree with everything.

                • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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                  Dude, dinner and a frank conversation with Hillary Clinton would be one of the highlights of my life. She has seen some shit.

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                  It really says a lot that all you did was mention a progressive thing she did and this seems to have upset several people who still want to cling to their GOP implanted delusion that she is the neoliberal devil.

    • Bamboodpanda@lemmy.world
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      I think Kelly was the best political pick for sure. But Kelly is sure to win again in AZ. They need his vote in the Senate.

      • fluxion@lemmy.world
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        And that’s McCain’s seat; not a safe blue one. It’s the right call. Everyone is good moving into the election. Smooth, competent, unified as everything needs to be to ensure our democracy survives Trump and his MAGA cult.

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      I believe Walz is a good pick because he’ll drive the more apathetic voters into the voting booths. He helps keep the momentum of hope Harris has going for her right now. Plus Kelly will hop onboard anyway.

      This is a side of the old Blue buffoons I wish we had seen years ago.

    • GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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      However I had a preference for Kelly

      They didn’t want to pull an incumbent Democratic Senator in a swing state. Too risky.

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      1 month ago

      It’s an interesting pick for sure. I was also thinking Kelly as the obvious, safe answer to score cheap points and also maybe shore up AZ. Walz is more of an optimistic, less cynical pick that leans into the progressive side further. It’s possible that’s what’s needed to keep the momentum going.

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Kelly would have been a political disaster. His gun control stance would alienate a lot of pro-gun moderates and his Senate seat would almost certainly end up going to a Republican.

      Shapiro would have been the politically safest choice because he’d all but guarantee Pennsylvania, which Harris needs to win. But his handling of college protests has been disgusting.

      Walz is a great pick. Veteran, teacher, football coach, Congressman, and Governor is a heck of a resume. He was also the highest-ranked enlisted man to ever serve in Congress.

      He has also been willing to defy his party. He sided against the party with the bank and GM bailouts, and was even endorsed by the NRA until they became 100% partisan.

      He’s like a less-privileged, Democratic John McCain.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      1 month ago

      I really like Walz partially because he’s not the obvious pick for political maneuvering. It indicates he was picked because he was the right choice, not just because it was politically expedient. Shapiro and Kelly could both be dismissed as just chosen to win a state, not because they’re actually the best choice to serve as VP.

    • demizerone@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      It was an off the cuff remark that struck a nerve. We’ve all been there with that weird relative that is decked out in MAGA gear.

      • Wirlocke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 month ago

        Exactly why he feels like a great pick. He didn’t over engineer some tagline to game the attention economy.

        He just said what the silent majority is thinking in a down to earth “this is so obvious” kind of way. These people are just weird and ruining the family gathering.

  • Codex@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Yeah! I was so worried she’d tank her momentum by picking Shapiro and ham-handedly presenting it. I continue to be impressed with the Harris team’s ability to both politic and stay tapped into the people’s sentiments.

    • echo@lemmings.world
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      1 month ago

      Except they missed the part where we need someone young instead of a geezer…

        • echo@lemmings.world
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          1 month ago

          Exactly… he’s a geezer. She needed to go with someone younger. If we assume she wins (twice), then Walz will be close to 70 before it is ‘his turn’. What a waste. If Dems had gone with someone younger then they could keep the momentum of the youth support AND they’d have someone ready to take over when Harris is done. Now, they’ll have to start over in 8 years.

          • Triasha@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            I read that he doesn’t want to take his shot at the White House. If Harris wins the election he plans to retire after her second term. She didn’t want a veep who saw her as a stepping stone to the Oval Office.

            Whether that is wise we will figure out on 2028 (hopefully) but if it’s true it provides some context.

      • Codex@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I don’t necessarily think that the VP spot being a lead-up to a presidential run should be one of the top considerations right now. We need to win this race, 2028 and 2032 can wait their turn.

        Beyond that critique, there’s a lot the Harris-Walz ticket can do to line up future Dem candidates for many races. For one, this is a big leftward shift for the Dems. That opens up the board for the Squad to make a run in the future. That opens up a path for other, more progressive candidates to fill other positions. We have no idea what the Harris cabinet will look like and a strong cabinet position is also an excellent prelude to a presidential campaign.

        Plus, I don’t want to get my hopes too high here and indulge in fantasy, but look at what this is doing to Republicans. What if that party shatters post-Trump? Maybe in two: a returning center-right party and an actual fascist party? If the Republicans try to retake the center, that could drive the Dems further left longterm.

        tldr, a Harris presidency could go many ways, and I’m not ready to be a pessimist yet! I think this is a good thing especially because it sets us up to do even better in the future!

        • echo@lemmings.world
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          I don’t necessarily think that the VP spot being a lead-up to a presidential run should be one of the top considerations right now. We need to win this race, 2028 and 2032 can wait their turn.

          That is where I’m finding any comfort in the decision. I totally agree that #1 priority has to be getting elected.

  • paddirn@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Half the pictures I see of him, he reminds me Jeffrey Lebowski (David Huddleston).