
By:Michelle Griffith
Minnesota Reformer
Gov. Tim Walz typically treats the Minnesota State Fair like his personal Super Bowl ā trying new foods (this year the Uncrustaburger), touting one of his favorite rides (the Ye Old Mill) and making the rounds at TV and radio station booths for softball interviews.
Walzās State Fair interviews this year centered around one question: Will you run for reelection? The governor was coy and reserved. He said he was taking his time assessing what was best for Minnesotans. Also, he said, the June death of his friend and close governing ally Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman weighed on him and delayed his reelection announcement.
āThis one about broke me,ā Walz told WCCO at the fair on Aug. 24, referring to Hortmanās death.
Nine days later, Walz was speaking in front of Deerwood Elementary School in Eagan. This time, he seemed more determined and animated, promising he was going to make Minnesota safer for children by pushing for gun control measures like a ban on so-called assault weapons.
What happened in those nine days? Yet another crisis that Walz had to manage, this time the killing of two children and wounding of 21 others in the Church of the Annunciation mass shooting.
The second-term DFL governor announced Tuesday that heāll seek a third term, launching a campaign that will require him to convince Minnesotans that heās been a steadying hand in the face of the multiple crises that have enveloped the state in recent years, including a once-in-a-century pandemic, civil unrest after the police murder of George Floyd, emerging fiscal instability and shocking political violence.
āWeāre not done yet. And thatās why Iām running for reelection. I want to make Minnesota a place where everyone has a chance to succeed ā in every corner of the state,ā Walz said in his campaign launch video.

Another crisis has been state governmentās own making: A wave of fraud in public programs is sure to be a centerpiece of the Republican campaign against him.
Heāll also need to persuade skeptical Minnesotans that he has a vision for another four years ā a June KSTP poll found that just 43% of Minnesotans surveyed say Walz should run for a third term even though he remains broadly popular. The last time Minnesota voters were faced with a governor seeking a third term, they rejected Iron Range Democrat Gov. Rudy Perpich in 1990.
West metro Republican Rep. Kristin Robbins, 2022 GOP nominee for governor Scott Jensen and Kendall Qualls, an army veteran and health care executive, are challenging Walz. If they can raise money and blanket the media, theyāll have plenty to work with to attack Walzās nearly eight years in office, from flagging school test scores to fraud-riddled public programs.
āMinnesotans cannot afford four more years of higher taxes, failing schools, unsafe streets, fraud and policies that undermine fairness for women and girls,ā said Minnesota Republican Party Chair Alex Plechash in a statement. ā⦠Minnesota families are worse off under his leadership. Itās time for new leadership and a fresh direction. Minnesota deserves better.ā
Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, who is leaving Walzās side to run for U.S. Senate, said Walz has a strong record to run on ā Minnesotans make better wages and live healthier, longer lives than other Midwesterners ā and an energetic personality thatās repeatedly won over Minnesotans.
āHeās an incredible effective campaigner, and I think once heās on the road, heās unstoppable,ā said Flanagan, who added that āof courseā sheāll endorse him.
Running in a midterm election during President Donald Trumpās second term, Walz also has an ace: He can sell himself as a Democratic bulwark against an increasingly hostile federal government led by a president Minnesotans have rejected three times.
āMinnesotans trust that Tim Walz is ready to stand up for them, for their liberties and their constitutional rights and defend them from an authoritarian in the White House. People are going to look to Tim Walz for that leadership,ā said DFL Chair Richard Carlbom, whoās worked for Walz off-and-on since 2007.
A tenure defined by crises
The governor was elected in 2018, campaigning under the slogan āOne Minnesota.ā Walz represented a purple district in Congress for more than a decade and when first elected he was seen as a centrist bridge-builder.
But heās become a champion of progressive policies ā in 2022 with Walz at the top of the ticket, Democrats swept control of state government and passed one of the most significant progressive agendas in the nationās recent history with just a single-seat Senate majority. Walzās signature is on laws providing all students with free lunch, legalizing marijuana, codifying abortion rights, providing drivers licenses for undocumented immigrants, creating a paid leave program, mandating paid sick leave, restoring voting rights to people after they serve prison sentences, protecting warehouse and meat processing workers, creating a free college program for working class families and requiring universal background checks for gun purchases, among many others.
Republicans were aghast, both by his policies and also his management of several crises.
Like many Democratic governors in 2020, Walz put in place a stay-at-home order at the beginning of the pandemic, and later an indoor mask mandate and restrictions on schools and churches at the urging of public health authorities and institutions like the Mayo Clinic.
He required state workers to be vaccinated before they could return to the workplace.
The pandemic decisions were polarizing and at times faced legal challenges. By the time the worst of the pandemic was over, Minnesota had lower COVID-19 death rates than most other states.
The aftermath of the police murder of George Floyd in 2020 presented another political and governing challenge. The widespread destruction of the riots, which followed decades of police abuses, created a lasting liability for him.
In 2018, Walz, alongside Flanagan, won 21 of 87 counties. In 2022, Walz won 13.
āāOne Minnesotaā means working together across lines of difference to get good work done for people,ā Flanagan said, acknowledging that the country is more divided now than when the duo was first elected.
āWe are in a time when people feel incredibly divided, which means this requires us to lean in even more, to listen to folks, to hear their concerns and take action whenever and wherever we can. And I think that is what Gov. Walzās reelection will be grounded in,ā Flanagan said.
One year ago, Walz was thrust into the national spotlight after Vice President Kamala Harris picked him as her running mate. Harris had hoped that Walzās rural background, Midwest demeanor and military, teaching and coaching resume would win over working-class voters.
Republicans and the national press during the accelerated campaign scrutinized Walzās past and propensity to misspeak ā what he called āknuckleheadā misstatements.
After a resounding defeat on the national stage, Walz returned to a different Minnesota, one with a divided Legislature after Republicans won seats for shared control of the Minnesota House. The state was also facing a long-term deficit.
Walz spent weeks negotiating with legislative leaders of both parties to come to a two-year budget agreement, requiring him to acquiesce to the GOPās top demand: Eliminate state-funded health insurance for undocumented adults. The progressive Democratic base was outraged.
Just days after the Legislature passed the two-year budget, a man shot and killed Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark in their Brooklyn Park home and shot Democratic Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette. Walz oversaw the two-day manhunt to apprehend the shooter of his friend. Hortmanās assassination gave Walz pause about whether he wanted to continue to serve as governor.
This summer was bookended by tragedies after a shooter opened fire outside of Church of Annunciation last month. Walz again headed the response to the mass shooting and is now pushing lawmakers to return for a special session to get Republicans on the record regarding gun control.
Walzās vision for the next four years
In 2023, Walz began the historic legislative session under the DFL trifecta by saying that Minnesota was going to become āthe best state in the country to raise a family.ā
That year, the governor shepherded legislation that he frequently brags about to this day: the school meals program and a child tax credit that could slash childhood poverty by 33%.
But Walzās lengthy record may fade into the background in the face of the second Trump earthquake and the administrationās aggressive incursions into state policies.
Attorney General Keith Ellison, who has sued the Trump administration some 30 times so far, said that Walz is the right person to stand up to Trump.
ā(Walz) has been a real asset in my opinion, and heās been a great partner,ā Ellison said. āThe governorās office and the AGās office historically have not always worked well together, but me and Gov. Walz work seamlessly, and Iām glad to keep him as a partner.ā
Paradoxically, Trump is both a challenge but also a political gift to Walz ā an easy foil.
Voters will go to the polls next year with Trump top of mind, said Jeff Blodgett, who was chief strategist for Sens. Paul Wellstone and Al Franken.
āThis is going to be a much bigger election about how our state is faring in the midst of Donald Trumpās presidency,ā Blodgett said. āIt will be a contrast between Trumpās style and Tim Walzās style and the fact that heās ushered the state through many, many crises and come out on the other side stronger and better ā I think that will only help him.ā



