In her latest post on her blog “Dirt Road Democrat,” Jess Piper expresses her joy at Kamala Harris’s choice of Tim Walz to be her Vice-Presidential nominee. She opens by describing her return from a vacation in Maine, where she ate her first lobster roll and checked off her bucket list. Maine was everything she imagined it would be.
When she woke up this morning, like the rest of us, she was thrilled with the news. She wrote:
I woke up to some of the most hopeful and exciting news…Kamala Harris picked Tim Walz as her VP. From the day I saw his name on the short list, I was rooting for Governor Walz.
He is a former Social Studies teacher and he understands the assignment.
Walz is so perfect for the job of VP. He’s a rural progressive. He’s my people. A dirt road Democrat. He’s a liberal guy who lives among conservative folks. He’s a veteran, a teacher, a lawmaker, and a dad. Walz can speak to Republicans and can likely help pull in Independent votes.
He can show up to an event in a tee and a hat and a Carhart jacket and not look like he’s trying to be something he isn’t.
Walz is the guy who could install your gutters and snake your drain and patch a hole in your drywall. He can also sign a bill into law to feed every kid in your state breakfast and lunch for free. How can you not love the guy?
Here are just a few of his education and child-centered accomplishments:
As governor, Walz took advantage of a Democratic trifecta in state government to push through a progressive policy agenda that included free breakfast and lunch for all schoolchildren. Minnesota was the fourth state to offer school lunch to all students, an early adopter of a policy that has become a growing national trend.
The budget he signed in 2023 included a major funding boost for Minnesota schools and a $1,750 per-child annual tax credit that aimed to reduce childhood poverty. Congress has failed to reinstate the pandemic-era federal child tax credit that dramatically cut childhood hunger and poverty.
Walz also signed a free college tuition program for Minnesota families earning less than $80,000 a year. The program provides last-dollar scholarships that close gaps between students’ financial aid packages and the actual cost of attendance.
Tim Walz was my pick from the short list because of what he has done for kids in his state. I can’t tell you how heartwarming it is to see a person who actually cares for kids enact policies. In a time in which I am overwhelmed with mailers for political candidates who claim to be “pro-life” or “pro-child” but who are really just about abortion bans and anti-LGBTQ rhetoric, Governor Walz is a breath of fresh air. He’s the real deal.
His Midwestern dad vibes are true.
Here’s the fun part though: Gov Walz is speaking on a call tonight — Rural Americans for Harris. I started talking with a few rural organizers two weeks ago about setting up a call to mimic many of the others supporting our next President, Kamala Harris. We worked to get several rural folks and lawmakers on the call and Gov Walz agreed to speak last week. I’m crossing my fingers that he can still make it since he’s had some big news today.
Here is the invitation below and here is the link. I will be on the call as well. I would love to see you there.

I feel so hopeful, friend. I feel so excited for our country.
Seriously, I have not been this pumped for national candidates in such a long time. You know I try to stay Missouri-centered because that is where the nasty policies for my state originate, but I am going to bask in the warmth of a woman Presidential nominee and her Social Studies teacher VP for a few minutes.
LFG.
~Jess
P.S. Missouri has the chance to elect our first woman Governor, Crystal Quade, and I am on my way to vote for her in the primary as soon as I hit send!

Diane, did autocorrect turn the word bucket into bullet?
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Thank you, Frances. I fixed it! Bucket list.
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Walz is the obvious choice if the Democrats want to contrast their own belief in public education with the Republicans’ hatred of it. Dare we hope that such a thing is forthcoming?
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Walz is an excellent VP choice for so many reasons. We now know something about his life and accomplishments. What I find impressive is that both in Congress and as governor, he has a record of getting things done despite challenges. He knows how to work with people and build consensus, and he has successfully sponsored bills with members of the GOP. When he was in The House, he sat on committees to improve veteran benefits. Nancy Pelosi is a big Walz supporter. As a governor, he has always made working families his priority. https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/minnesota-governor-tim-walz-accomplishments-setbacks/
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I watched the Philly rally. Harris and Walz make a good team. I learned a few new things about Walz. His students encouraged him to run for Congress. Walz said, “Don’t underestimate teachers.” The district in which he ran had not elected a Democrat since 1892, but he won anyway. Walz won the Congress sharp shooting contest they hold in each year he served in Congress. Also, he and his wife had their two children through IVF. Walz’s dad was a teacher, and so are a sister and brother. Walz used the GI Bill to go to college. He is a very good choice for Harris.
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Walz is a solid middle-class, regular guy from the heartland.
Can’t wait to see him debate Vance.
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Walz is also a member of AFT and NEA. Great to see that!!!
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Retired: I think Harris and Walz bring what we used to think of as “normal,” but also transcendent, back into the spotlight of national attention. It seems to me that they both embody what “authentic person” means and are the anti-thesis of the extremes that have emerged in political discourse since Trump came on the scene (and before) and that tend to put us on a spiral downward. Those extremes are, by definition, not normal but have become normative.
What a breath of fresh air both of them are. It’s like a light has been switched on in the American spirit–and in my American spirit.
I hope they never put both of them on the same airplane. CBK
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CBK,
They won’t!
And I agree: they are normal.
In contrast with the two men who are hateful, divisive, and…yes, weird.
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Hi Diane: My guess is that so many are SO attracted to Harris, and now to Walz, precisely because what is actually and happily normal in the deeper sense of that word–to the inborn order and needs of the human spirit–has been forced into consciousness by the several-year exhaustive presence of what truly “goes against the grain” of most or even all of us–when you take away all of the diversions and derailments.
Like the arch of history that bends towards justice, that reality has a way of saying “enough,” and so what we took for granted for so long we finally realize is, in fact, on its way to becoming lost; and so, the wherewithal to righting the ship on its journey at least comes into view and it attracts us like moth to flame. Whatever we do and whatever happens now, I really do think that’s what we are presently involved in and witnessing.
Of course, that doesn’t mean that the other shoe is not out there waiting to be dropped. CBK
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CBK,
I find it amazing that with all we know about Trump, he still has a huge number of followers. He has succeeded in persuading about 43% of voters that all the horrible things he has done are lies, that truth is false, that facts are lies, that his crimes are not crimes.
Half his cabinet—his closest advisors—are not supporting him. They know more than anyone how lazy and unhinged he is.
I don’t know of a single member of Biden’s cabinet who will switch to Trump. Not one.
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Diane: . . . about Trump’s voters, and still they stay, though if my calculations are correct, there are signs of a drift away from that maniacal interest and solid support.
But still, where, before Trump, one small quirk could kill the chances of someone running for office, now a flood of mendacity and downright evil-doing changes nothing–as long as it’s couched in a made-up sense of justified vengeance against those lily-livered leftists. Trump has made fools of almost half of the American public but, of course, they let him.
BTW, I watched a bit of Vance’s talk this morning–to understand what he is doing, one needs a full-time translator to go FROM what he says about his opponents, and what he wants to do, TO what his opponents actually are and do, and what his actions and policies say he is about and wants to do.
Apparently, Vance’s ivy league education made him into a genuine sophist . . . which may be a contradiction in terms . . . but if they lose, there’ll be a place for him in advertising. CBK
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Can’t beat a lobster roll, although every time I have one the price almost makes me spit take.
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Oh yeah ya can beat a lobster roll. . .
. . .a straight up boiled lobster please! With melted butter to dip it in!
Used to love it when folks came from Missouri to visit us in Worcester/Oxford MA as it gave us a perfect reason to boil up some lobsters.
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Well now that it’s out in the open—a crawfish boil.
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I deny having anything to do with the live crawdads that somehow ended up in the nun’s desk in grade school
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You’re a good guy, Duane.
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FLERP!– Oh, yeah. Our upstate-NY cricks were full of them, and grade-school friends would catch them with strainers to bring home for a broil…
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Had a creek running through our back yard which we had to cross to go through the woods to the school, yes uphill. . . but down hill on the way home.
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Flerp: I can attest to Diane’s being the best maker of squash pickle in Missouri
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That’s gotta be a different Diane. Never had a squash pickle.
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Diane, he meant Duane. They were good. Gotta do something when the zukes are producing out the ying yang.
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autocorrect changed Duane to Diane. What does that mean?
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Well, considering I don’t have any surgery set up to change my gender, I have not a clue.
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I like lobster but NOTHING can beat steamed Maryland blue crabs or a MD crab cake!….and no butter needed!
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Have to disagree with ya, Lisa. Alaskan King Crab is the #1 seafood in my mind. Main lobster #2. Have not had a blue crab so. . . .
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I think Walz has unique political skills, largely through his public speaking skills. Some of that is unique to Walz and can’t be imitated. But I think a lot of it comes from (1) being a teacher and (2) being a football coach.
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I came here to post this exact link to Jess Piper’s substack. I am delighted it won’t be Josh Shapiro for the role of Veep. Imagine real school people in the White House!
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Great Vp. This guy signed a bill to allow illegals to get driver’s licenses (cheat in election). He allowing kids to be removed from parents if the parents refuse to allow kids to castrate themselves.
He quit the national guard and didn’t go to Iraq. Allowed the worst riots for BLM. The squad loves him so he’s radical. Best of luck with two far left candidates that middle America could care less for.
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All this is coming from Dan Holloway…..host of Drinkin’ Bros Podcast and the Citizens Podcast. Yeah, like the public should be getting its important information from a guy who likes to drink and promotes drinking….SMH! Swing and a miss…..try a little harder next time.
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Heather Cox Richardson gives some interesting biographical information. Walz was a football coach in Alliance, Nebraska. For those of you who have never been to the Sandhills of Nebraska, Alliance sits on its western edge, famous for wheat and carhenge, a quirky re-stating of the Stonehenge motif out of junk cars. I am not sure whether Alliance has enough population to support 11 man football. Across the plains, towns celebrate their victory in the state tournament in 7, 9, and 11 man football.
This guy is from a rural area and was a rural area football coach. This is both the best of all possible occupations and the most challenging. When you are a rural football coach, you have a constituency that is often difficult to deal with. Everybody thinks they know football. I bet he went into politics to catch a break.
Richardson says he got his education in part from a local community college in Chadron. This western gateway into the vast Sandhills region is a struggling community with a big heart, scattered cattle ranches, and one of the most beautiful state parks you have ever seen (if you like badlands, wildflowers, birds, and lonely places). For those of you who have never gotten off I-80 or who have only flown over Nebraska, a visit to this part of the world will fill you with an appreciation for how people really feel about home and place. It is a small wonder that the Souix fought so hard to preserve their grip on the territory just south and west of here, for a visit here will make you understand. Here human history manifests itself as an adjunct to the vast landscape. Little town museums, maintained by the local retired history teachers, preserve fragments of a past that is more recent than it is in other parts of the country, for this was the last part of the country to fill with Europeans.
I do not know what all this says about Tim Walz, but this background, his penchant for deflecting silly barbs, and his rather paltry financial condition (he reports a rather meager portfolio for a man of 60) make him a hard target.
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I thought he coached football in Minnesota
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He coached football wherever he taught—in small towns in Nebraska and Minnesota.
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Loved that Walz coached a football team to the state championship. I immediately thought, Ted Lasso.
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