Tim Walz’s wife, Gwen, said she kept windows open
during BLM George Floyd riots. Said she liked to smell ‘burning tires’
new york post ^ | Aug. 7, 2024 | Olivia Land
Posted on 8/8/2024, 9:45:58 AM by ding_dong_daddy_from_dumas
Minnesota Gov Tim Walz’s wife once admitted she kept the windows of the governor’s residence “open as long as [she] could” to smell the burning tires from the violent BLM 2020 riots in the wake of George Floyd’s death — as her husband’s handling of the protests is back in the spotlight.
Gwen Walz described her husband’s struggle to grapple with the outcry following the May 25, 2020, murder of Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer in a sit-down with KTSP in June of that year.
Gov. Walz’s response to the fiery Black Lives Matter riots in the Twin Cities is facing scrutiny again after the former National Guardsman was picked to be Kamala Harris’ running mate on the Democratic ticket.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Gov. Tim Walz Raised Taxes as Most Governors Cut Them
Did this clinch Harris’ decision to pick him as her running mate?
August 6, 2024, By: Jared Walczak, taxfoundation.org
Most states have cut taxes at least once since 2021, with a renewed emphasis on tax competition taking hold in red and blue states alike. Twenty-eight states have cut individual income tax rates, fifteen states have cut corporate income tax rates, and other states have cut sales tax rates or focused on property tax relief. Under Gov. Tim Walz (DFL), Minnesota has been an outlier, one of the few states to raise taxes in recent years—despite the state posting large surpluses.
With her selection of Minnesota Gov. Walz as her running mate, Vice President Kamala Harris has chosen from a pool of prospective candidates—sitting governors—that seems obvious but has not historically been well-represented in the second slot on presidential tickets. Former President Donald Trump’s selection of Indiana Gov. Mike Pence and Sen. John McCain’s choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin may suggest that governors are gaining ground as vice presidential nominees, but before that, stretching back a century, the only others are Spiro T. Agnew, Earl Warren, and John W. Bricker.
Governors bring executive experience. They also bring policy records that are more concrete than those of legislators, in the sense that a governor’s signature or veto makes (or prevents) law in a way that one vote in Congress rarely does. Observers will doubtless scrutinize Walz’s record as governor to get a sense of what policies he may favor at the federal level and what that may say about the Harris-Walz ticket.
Whereas other potential running mates charted moderate courses on state taxation, with Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro advocating for the acceleration of cuts to the Commonwealth’s high-rate corporate income tax and signing legislation improving its structure (specifically by better aligning treatment of net operating losses with national standards), and Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear signed a bill authorizing an individual income tax rate cut (albeit after vetoing a larger prior-year package that set those rate cuts in motion), Walz has presided over several tax increases, focused on businesses and high earners.
This makes Walz an outlier among contemporary governors, though perhaps not an outlier in his own state, which has a tradition of progressive fiscal policy that runs from the early 20th-century Progressive era through such progressive stalwarts as Eugene McCarthy, Walter Mondale, and Paul Wellstone.
Under Walz, Minnesota became the only state to impose a surtax on the long-term capital gain income and other net investment income of high earners (all other states tax long-term capital gains at ordinary income tax rates or even preferential rates).
Walz also signed legislation partially phasing out the benefit of standard and itemized deductions for high earners, and later had to sign legislation fixing a drafting error that accidentally reduced the standard deduction for all taxpayers in what would have been an unintended $350 million tax increase.
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