Gov. Tim Walz takes the DNC stage and accepts VP nomination: ‘Never underestimate a public school teacher’
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(Reuters) - Vice presidential candidate Tim Walz took the stage on Wednesday night, joined by a litany of Democratic luminaries, and together they urged Americans to electKamala Harrispresident and stave off a return ofDonald Trumpto the White House.
"We're all here tonight for one beautiful simple reason: We love this country," the 60-year-old Minnesota governor said to cheers from assembled Democrats on the third night of the Democratic National Convention.
Republican deserters joined Democratic stalwarts in supporting the Harris-Walz ticket.
"Next time you hear him, don't count the lies. Count the I's," former President Bill Clinton, 78, told a cheering crowd in Chicago on Day Three of the Democratic National Convention, his 12th such event.
Media personality Oprah Winfrey joined Clinton and others to press the case that while Trump was for himself, Harris was for the country. Delegates sprang to their feet, cheering loudly when she entered the stage, a surprise addition to the program.
"I’m calling on all you independents and all you undecideds,” Winfrey said, describing herself as an independent. “Decency and respect are on the ballot in 2024.”
Walz, Harris' running mate in the race against the Republican Trump, was joined by a star-studded lineup of politicians and musicians in his first high-profile address.
Vice President Harris emerged as the 2024 Democratic candidate last month following President Joe Biden's exit from the Nov. 5 race and brought the lesser-known Walz to the national stage only 15 days ago.
American singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder performed, actress Mindy Kaling joked about cooking with her friend Kamala.
Singers John Legend and Sheila E. were due to perform a tribute to the late music star Prince, who was born in Walz's home state Minnesota, and died in 2016, campaign officials said.
Each night of the convention has featured Republicans who have turned against Trump, who was president from 2017-2021.
On Wednesday, the Democrats put the spotlight on Jan. 6, 2021, with a video that showed Trump exhorting supporters to be strong and fight before they stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to block Biden's 2020 victory.
The delegates sat in stunned silence, a sharp contrast to their roars and applause throughout the night.
Olivia Troye, who quit her White House national security job under Trump after Jan. 6, said the Republican candidate was laying the groundwork to undermine the 2024 election.
Geoff Duncan, the former lieutenant governor of Georgia, spoke directly to the camera to tell fellow Republicans watching from home that they needed to "dump Trump."
Item 1 of 11 U.S. Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Governor Tim Walz does a walk through at the United Center, on Day 3 of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., August 21, 2024. REUTERS/Kevin Wurm
[1/11]U.S. Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Governor Tim Walz does a walk through at the United Center, on Day 3 of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., August 21, 2024. REUTERS/Kevin Wurm Purchase Licensing Rights, opens a new tab
"If you vote for Kamala Harris in 2024 you're not a Democrat, you're a patriot," he said.
Democrat Nancy Pelosi, who was House speaker on that day, said: "Let us not forget who assaulted democracy on Jan. 6: He did. But let us not forget who saved democracy that day: We did."
WALZ TO DISCUSS HIS BACKGROUND
Walz, 60, who has been praised by Democrats for his support of Harris and other women, will talk about growing up on a Nebraska farm, his family, and freedoms that Democrats say are under attack from Trump, who is making his third major party run for the White House.
The Minnesota governor's jovial manner belies a sharp tongue that he quickly turned on Trump and his running mate, JD Vance. Democrats eager to coalesce behind a candidate they consider more viable than Biden, 81, have donated a record $500 million to the fledgling campaign led by Harris.
Harris, 59, will address the gathering on its final night on Thursday.
Biden's support for Israel's assault on Hamas-ruled Gaza, one of the most divisive issues in the party, has not featured prominently at the convention. Health officials say the offensive has killed more than 40,000 people.
The parents of Israeli hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Jon Polin, and Rachel Goldberg, received a standing ovation and chants of "Bring Them Home" when they took the stage. Goldberg-Polin, 23, was among more than 200 hostages taken by Palestinian Hamas militants in their Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
"Bringing the hostages home is not a political issue. It is a humanitarian issue," Polin said.
Leaders of the Uncommitted National Movement, which mobilized nearly 750,000 voters during the primary elections to protest U.S. support for Israel's war in Gaza, have lobbied the DNC for months to include a Palestinian speaker in its program.
A handful of allies began a sit-in outside the convention center to protest the exclusion, vowing not to move until they get a speaking slot.
'JOYFUL WARRIORS'
Walz's keynote address follows rousing appearances by Democratic powerhouses including former President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle and Hillary Clinton, a former presidential candidate, U.S. senator, and secretary of state.
Walz has brought a folksy charm to the campaign trail, describing himself and Harris as "joyful warriors" focused on a brighter future and accusing Republicans of stoking fear and division.
Harris campaign officials are counting on Walz's Midwestern roots and plain-spoken style to appeal to some of the white men in rural areas who voted for Trump by huge margins in the last two elections - and help deliver battleground states like Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy is hoping to cut a deal with Trump whereby he would quit the race in exchange for a job in a new Trump administration, a super PAC supporting Kennedy told Reuters. Kennedy's endorsement could help Trump in an election that opinion polls show is likely to be close. Trump met with Kennedy last month to discuss a possible endorsement.
Polls showed Biden trailing Trump before the Democratic president ceded the party's top spot to Harris; polls now show her besting her Republican rival in several of the states that will decide the election.
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel had a pointed message to any Republicans, or anyone on the U.S. Supreme Court for that matter, who might be thinking about reversing same-sex marriage protections.
"You can pry this wedding ring from my cold, dead, gay hand," said Nessel, ad-libbing a line to the prepared text for a short speech she gave in support of Vice President Kamala Harris' election at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
"And I'm retaining a lot of water, so good luck."
Nessel's speech came shortly after a series of clips that showed Harris, the Democratic nominee for president and a former prosecutor, sharply questioning bureaucrats and then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh before the Senate Judiciary Committee as a U.S. senator from California.
Michigan's attorney general noted that, in 2011, Harris, then California's attorney general, refused to defend that state's same-sex marriage ban.
"She refused to argue that some families had fewer rights than other families," Nessel said. "It meant a lot. She was fighting for families like mine."
At the time, Michigan had a same-sex marriage ban as well. But it was overturned in June 2015 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a handful of cases, including one from Michigan involving a Hazel Park couple, April DeBoer and Jayne Rowse, that same-sex marriage bans across the U.S. were unconstitutional. One of DeBoer and Rowse's chief lawyers was Nessel, who was then in private practice.
The Supreme Court earlier had found a same-sex marriage ban in California violated the Constitution. At least one conservative on the court, Justice Clarence Thomas, has written about possibly revisiting and overriding the same-sex marriage decision.
Nessel said she faced a similar circumstance to Harris' as attorney general when the U.S. Supreme Court, having a 6-3 conservative majority, in 2022 overturned the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision guaranteeing a right to an abortion. Michigan, at the time, had a longstanding − and long inactive − restrictive abortion law.
Photos capture the daily sights and events surrounding the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
But Harris, who was then a senator, "had my back," Nessel said. "She reminded me, 'Protecting people's lives and defending their rights is our job." Nessel refused to enforce the 1931 law and Michigan would go on to enshrine a right to abortion in its state constitution in a referendum vote passed overwhelmingly later that year.
Nessel also touted Harris' record as attorney general, noting she went after polluters, sexual abusers, and transnational gangs. "But what really stands out is when she stood up and protected her constituents' freedoms."
"We know when she takes an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution, she's actually read it," said Nessel. And at a swipe at her opponent, Republican former President Donald Trump, who has been convicted on charges in a New York hush money trial and still faces other legal counts against him, she added, "Kamala knows you go from the court house to the White House, not the other way around."