Tim Walz May Run, But He Can’t Hide His Drunken  Dangerous Past

Kamala Harris and the Obama puppet masters seem to be scraping the bottom of the Democrat barrel by even considering Minnesota’s controversial governor Tim Walz as a vice presidential pick. Even disgraced former US Rep. Beto O’Rourke of Texas supports him.

Walz

“I know some of his relations,” a Nebraska resident informed me.  “Their family side was considered wacko.  The family tree I know are great patriots, salt of the earth (however, the) Walz family side was not favorably looked upon.”

“People in Minnesota so do not like him,” the Nebraskan continued. “He was brutal to the people!  People are fleeing the high taxed state of Minnesota including family of mine are trying to relocate!”

In June, Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty accused Walz of meddling in the prosecution of a state trooper by saying Walz said murder charges should have never been filed. 

“Have you ever seen this governor intervene in any case, involving a defendant in his entire tenure? Ever?” Moriarty asked the public. “Why is it appropriate for a governor — who has never picked up the phone to call me, who is not a lawyer, who does not understand the nuances of this case — to talk about it publicly?”

Moriarty and Walz have bad blood between them over him stepping in to reassign the prosecution of a Hennepin County homicide case in 2023, due to concerns over plea deals Moriarty’s office had offered.

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Waltz grew up in Valentine, Neb. He later taught English in China in 1989. His wife, Gwen, a teacher once upon a time, was first annoyed with him because he was so obnoxiously loud in his classroom next to hers. 

In previous political campaigns, Waltz claimed that he was not really drunk when he was pulled over for driving under the influence in 1995. His problem grew when a court transcript from the case reveal he lied.

Walz was working as a teacher in Alliance, Neb., his home state, when he was pulled over Sept. 23, 1995 for going 96 mph in a 55-mph zone.

“A strong odor of alcoholic beverage was detected emitting from Mr. Walz[‘s] breath and person,” wrote a Nebraska state trooper’s report on the incident.

Walz submitted to and failed both a field sobriety test and a preliminary breath test, according to the report. He was then transported to Chadron Hospital for a blood test before being booked into the Dawes County Jail.

He was initially charged with driving under the influence and speeding, but the charges were reduced to a lone count of reckless driving under the terms of a plea deal.

The issue emerged during Walz’s successful 2006 campaign for Congress in Minnesota’s First District. Mainstream  legacy liberal media try to cover for him by either not covering or minimizing his troubled past.

The results of the blood test were later suppressed, but they were still referenced during a March 13, 1996 hearing on a plea agreement.

During that hearing, former Dawes County Attorney Rex Nowlan said that Walz had a blood alcohol concentration of .128 at the time of the incident.

“Mr. Walz was driving south of town on 385 in Dawes County at a high rate of speed. Actually, he was driving away from the police officer. I think that he eventually hit a speed of over 80, as I recall. When he was stopped, he was given a blood test which did show a .128 blood alcohol,” Nowlan said, according to a court transcript.

Walz’s attorney, Russell Harford, later admitted that Walz “had been drinking” but said he was driving away from the state trooper because he “thought somebody was chasing him.”

Harford further admitted that Walz had “a .128” but described this as a “relatively low test.” At the time, the legal limit in Nebraska was .10 but, like many states, has since been lowered to .08.

● According to the American Addiction Centers, a BAC of .10 or higher results in reduced reaction time and control, slurred speech, slower thinking and reasoning, and an inability to coordinate arms and legs.

● The University of Notre Dame reveals this level of intoxication can cause “significant impairment of motor coordination and loss of good judgment.”

Later that year, Walz left Nebraska to start a new life in Mankato, Minn., where he began teaching and coaching at Mankato West High School.

He was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2006 before being elected to the state’s highest office in 2018 as a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) party.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Walz was considered a loyalist to Deep State leftist controlled politics in the vein of California’s Gavin Newsom and New York’s Andrew Cuomo. He received much criticism of the number of COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes and the harm he caused to schools and businesses through his shutdown orders. 

He obediently conformed to other far left politics and narratives in regard to the destructive riots that occurred in May 2020 after former Minneapolis Police officer Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey revealed months after the riots, that Walz didn’t take his requests for assistance seriously until it was too late. Frey said Walz hesitated to send in the Minnesota National Guard.

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After the Supreme Court decision in June 2022 to overturn Roe v. Wade, Walz signed an executive order that offered legal protection to those coming in from out of state seeking abortion care. 

Walz led Democrats to set new climate goals, pushing Minnesota to have 100% clean electricity by 2040, while creating a statewide paid leave program, legalizing marijuana for adults, passing stricter gun laws, and giving unauthorized immigrants access to driver’s licenses.

Walz appointed a supporter, a hemp shop owner to be his top cannabis regulator. The next day, cannabis entrepreneur Erin DuPree stepped down from the role after a local newspaper reported she had sold illegal products at her hemp shop and had federal tax liens and judgments against her.

Minnesota’s nonpartisan government watchdog, the Office of the Legislative Auditor (OLA), found Walz’s disturbing connections with Feeding Our Future, which was  orchestrating one of the nation’s largest pandemic frauds.

Auditors found the Education Department “failed to act on warning signs,” and that the agency’s inadequate oversight of a federally funded meals program for children created opportunities for Feeding Our Future to steal $250 million.

The Department of Justice indicated the $250 million was definitely fraudulent funds.

☆☆☆☆☆

IN GOD WE TRUST

Loralyn ‘Dodie’ & Jack Dennis

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4 comments

  1. The truth is coming out about this ticket, and it makes Trump look like a saint. Kamala’s husband has a love child, Kamala flunked her bar exam in California after attending a prestigious law school, and Walz is a reckless, defiant, drunk driver. This is the best they got?

    Liked by 3 people

  2. These people aren’t interested in being upright; they trust lying will get them what they want, and they need mean, nasty people who will obey the Party line to carry out their sordid plan to destroy America. Walz is a perfect fit; Kamala is itching to have the power to carry out her threat “we’re coming after you, and we will leave no stone unturned.” Remember, she called the Presidency their “rightful place.” It’s not like they picked him for his looks or his charm; they don’t care anymore; they are desperate.

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