Tim Walz Crumbles Under Pressure When Confronted About Lies and Far-Left Agenda

Well, well, well. Minnesota Governor Tim Walz found himself in the Fox News hot seat with Shannon Bream, who didn’t hold back from grilling him on some rather “creative” claims. One of the highlights? His bizarre story about being in China during the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. Spoiler alert: he wasn’t. But hey, maybe in his version of events, he was. Who knows? That’s just the kind of imaginative storytelling we get from the guy who wants us to trust his judgment on things like abortion and state governance.

Let’s dive right into the abortion question that really lit up this interview. Walz’s Minnesota has one of the most extreme abortion laws in the country—there are literally zero restrictions. Not one. Bream pointed out that a woman can legally get an abortion at any point during pregnancy in Minnesota, all nine months of it. And when she pressed Walz on whether he thought unrestricted abortion should be the norm nationwide, he danced around the question faster than Fred Astaire. He insisted that he just wants to “restore Roe v. Wade.” Now, correct me if I’m wrong, but even Roe had some limits. What Walz is championing here goes way beyond that, which Bream didn’t hesitate to point out. Nice try, Tim.

But that’s not all. Walz also got tangled up in the abortion debate by falsely claiming that Trump and others are pushing for a national abortion ban. Ah, the old bait-and-switch! Here’s the thing, though—Trump has repeatedly said he won’t sign a national abortion ban, but Walz just couldn’t resist throwing out that well-worn talking point. When Bream called him on it, he doubled down, as if repeating it would magically make it true.

Then there’s the issue of Walz’s…let’s call it “embellished” resume. He’s taken some liberties with his military service record and even claimed to have wielded “weapons of war” in combat zones he never actually set foot in. I mean, it’s almost comical. The governor even claims to have been in China during Tiananmen Square. It’s like he’s trying to collect all the falsehoods like Pokémon—gotta catch ’em all! Bream called him out on this, too, but Walz brushed it off as if the details don’t matter. “They heard me speak passionately,” he said, as though passion and truth are interchangeable.

Let’s be real here. If the guy can’t even keep his own life story straight, how on earth are we supposed to trust him on the issues that actually impact us? There’s a saying that goes something like this: if you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with—well, you know the rest. And Walz seems to be all in on the latter strategy. With a track record like this, maybe it’s time to consider whether Governor Walz is in over his head. Bream’s interview certainly suggests as much.

Sponsored