Walz: Democrats shouldn't have played 'so safe' in 2024

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) is reflecting on his and former Vice President Kamala Harris's loss in last year's presidential election, and he said he thinks Democrats should have been bolder in their campaign to hold onto the White House.
“We shouldn’t have been playing this thing so safe,” Walz, 60, told Politico in a recent interview from Montana. “I think we probably should have just rolled the dice and done the town halls, where [voters] may say, ‘You’re full of shit, I don’t believe in you." ... I think there could have been more of that.”
Walz, who was a member of Congress before he became governor in 2019, was tapped to become Harris’s 2024 running mate in August — just two weeks into an accelerated campaign overhaul that followed then-President Biden’s decision to drop out of the race. Harris, with Biden’s backing, quickly moved to the top of the ticket with fewer than four months to campaign, becoming the first Black woman to run as a major party’s presidential nominee.
"In football parlance, we were in a prevent defense to not lose when we never had anything to lose because I don’t think we were ever ahead," Walz, a former high school football coach, said.
In a previous interview — his first after their loss, Walz told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow he was still "soul-searching."
He hasn't ruled out a potential top-of-ticket presidential campaign in the future and reiterated what he told The New Yorker in an interview last week.
"I will always say this, I will do everything in my power [to help], and as I said, with the vice presidency, if that was me, then I’ll do the job," Walz told Politico.
He also is leaving the door open to a third gubernatorial term in Minnesota next year, but he won't seek an opening U.S. Senate seat.
He's been making the rounds on cable television, podcasts and other media outlets to discuss his and the party's future after President Trump's return to the White House and the sweeping changes the new administration has made to international policy and the federal workforce.
"I’m staying on the playing field to try and help because we have to win," Walz said.
Walz acknowledged his role in the Democrats' loss last year.
“When you’re on the ticket and you don’t win, that’s your responsibility," he said.
But other Democrats close to the campaign lamented that Walz didn't have a chance for a bigger role.
“He was underutilized and that was the symptom of the larger campaign of decision paralysis and decision logjam at the top,” one former senior Harris aide told Politico.
Democratic critics at the time accused Harris of picking a "safe" option in Walz, who was not widely known, was from the Midwest and had displayed a folksy, pithy public persona as a campaign surrogate. But his specific critique in the Politico piece is that Democrats were trying to
But Walz has called the experience “the honor and privilege of my life” and continues to address the Democratic Party’s future.
With a concerted effort among Republicans to avoid town hall meetings and backlash from the threat of deep cuts to federal programs in the Trump administration, the Minnesota governor has offered to hold sessions with their constituents.
“If your Republican representative won’t meet with you because their agenda is so unpopular, maybe a Democrat will,” Walz said in a post on the social platform X last week. “Hell, maybe I will.”
-
Tim Walz says he and Harris were too ‘safe’ during 2024 presidential campaign
Former vice-presidential candidate claims pair should have held more in-person events around the US. Tim Walz has said he and Kamala Harris were too “safe” during their 2024 election campaign, with ...The Guardian - 2d -
Senate Democrats' impending choice: Shutdown or surrender
House Democrats say they won't vote for the House GOP's spending plan. Democrats across the Capitol aren't so sure.Politico - 3d -
James Carville is wrong. Democrats should fight, not ‘play dead.’
Democrats must fight back against Trump and his agenda, as a lack of action will make them appear weak and Americans will despise weakness.The Hill - 2d -
Schiff on transgender athletes: Confident that 'local communities' can 'make decisions' to ensure sports 'safe,' 'fair'
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said Sunday he’s confident local communities can make their own decisions about whether to let trans athletes participate in women’s sports in a way that is “safe” and ...The Hill - 1d -
'Does it always have to be so dramatic, Scotland?'
Scotland earn their second win of the 2025 Six Nations, but only after doing things the hard way, writes Tom English.BBC News - 1d -
Suozzi slams Trump over Ukraine, says Putin shouldn't be awarded for 'awful things' Ukrainians have faced
Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) slammed President Trump over the war in Ukraine on Sunday, also saying that Russian President Vladimir Putin shouldn’t be awarded “for all the awful things that have ...The Hill - 23h -
The Sussexes have to earn their bread somehow, so let them make cake | Martha Gill
With Love, Meghan is bad TV, but there are worse ways for a former royal to bring in the bucks than cooking up crostini. So what is it, exactly, that we want from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex ...The Guardian - 2d -
Why Trump’s war on DEI is so diabolical
Trump and his allies have flaunted their support for far-right movements at home and abroad. We cannot allow them to succeed.The Hill - 1d -
Firing Kevin Keatts now was cold-blooded, but urgently needed by NC State in face of clear deterioration
Keatts was on the hot seat prior to reaching the Final Four in 2024, so his dismissal should not be a surpriseCBS Sports - 2h
More from The Hill
-
How federal lands can be used to ease the housing crisis
President Trump's pledge to open up federal land for housing construction could alleviate the housing market's top financial worry, which is inflation, by making homeownership more affordable.The Hill - 20m -
Hamas offering five- to ten-year truce with Israel: US official says
Hamas offered to hand over governance of the Gaza Strip in exchange for a five- to 10-year truce in its war with Israel, President Trump’s special envoy for hostage negotiations said on Sunday. ...The Hill - 21m -
Ex-Social Security official describes ‘significant’ risk of sensitive data going to wrong hands under DOGE
Tiffany Flick, a former Social Security official, detailed what she sees as a “significant” risk of sensitive government data heading into the wrong hands under Elon Musk’s Department of Government ...The Hill - 34m -
Musk blames 'massive cyberattack' for X outage
Elon Musk said his social media platform X was targeted in a "massive cyberattack" on Monday, prompting outages for thousands of users. "There was (still is) a massive cyberattack against X," Musk ...The Hill - 38m -
US added to human rights watchlist over Trump moves
The United States has been added to CIVICUS's monitor list of potential human rights threats due to President Trump's restrictive executive orders and institutional cutbacks, which are creating an ...The Hill - 46m
More in Politics
-
How federal lands can be used to ease the housing crisis
President Trump's pledge to open up federal land for housing construction could alleviate the housing market's top financial worry, which is inflation, by making homeownership more affordable.The Hill - 20m -
Hamas offering five- to ten-year truce with Israel: US official says
Hamas offered to hand over governance of the Gaza Strip in exchange for a five- to 10-year truce in its war with Israel, President Trump’s special envoy for hostage negotiations said on Sunday. ...The Hill - 21m -
Ex-Social Security official describes ‘significant’ risk of sensitive data going to wrong hands under DOGE
Tiffany Flick, a former Social Security official, detailed what she sees as a “significant” risk of sensitive government data heading into the wrong hands under Elon Musk’s Department of Government ...The Hill - 34m -
Musk blames 'massive cyberattack' for X outage
Elon Musk said his social media platform X was targeted in a "massive cyberattack" on Monday, prompting outages for thousands of users. "There was (still is) a massive cyberattack against X," Musk ...The Hill - 38m -
US added to human rights watchlist over Trump moves
The United States has been added to CIVICUS's monitor list of potential human rights threats due to President Trump's restrictive executive orders and institutional cutbacks, which are creating an ...The Hill - 46m