Harris and Walz hold first rally together as new Democratic ticket

Tim Walz touted his rural roots and said Donald Trump would take the US “backwards” as he appeared for the first time as Kamala Harris’s running mate
U.S. Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and vice presidential running mate Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.

PHILADELPHIA: Tim Walz touted his rural roots and said Donald Trump would take the US “backwards” as he appeared for the first time as Kamala Harris’s running mate at a raucous Democratic Party rally.

At the event in Philadelphia on Tuesday night, the party’s new nominee for vice-president said their Republican rivals in November’s election were “weird as hell”.

The Minnesota governor spoke in front of thousands of supporters just hours after he was announced as Ms Harris’s pick for the role.

Advertisement

The Trump campaign, meanwhile, was quick to attack Mr Walz as a “dangerously liberal extremist”.

The 60-year-old is billed as someone who could win back rural and working-class voters who have gravitated to Donald Trump in crucial midwestern states.

At the rally in the key swing state of Pennsylvania, Ms Harris, currently the US vice-president, said she and Mr Walz were the “underdogs” in what is expected to be a close election but had the momentum.

She introduced her running mate as “a fighter for the middle class, a patriot”.

Mr Walz then recounted his small-town roots in Nebraska and his career as a national guardsman and teacher, before attempting to draw a contrast with Trump.

ALSO READ: Bangladesh PM Hasina quits and flees as protesters storm palace

“He doesn’t know the first thing about service – because he’s too busy serving himself,” said the former army sergeant and football coach.

He got some of the loudest cheers of the night when he took aim at the former president’s criminal record, with chants of “lock him up” from those in the arena.

He also sparked applause when he invoked a viral attack line that caught the eye of the Harris campaign as she considered who would be her running mate.