“We see it now: The hate has shifted to the trans community,” Walz said. “They see that as an opportunity. If you’re watching any sporting events right now, you see that Donald Trump’s closing arguments are to demonize a group of people for being who they are.”

“We’re out there trying to make the case that access to healthcare, a clean environment, manufacturing jobs, and keeping your local hospital open are what people are really concerned about,” he continued. “They’re running millions of dollars of ads demonizing folks who are just trying to live their lives.”

  • usernamesAreTrickyOP
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    2 months ago

    Walz promptly responded by discussing possible actions that he and Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris could take.

    He talked about antidiscrimination laws he wanted, judge appointment, helping education about LGBTQ related topics, etc


    Mind you that Walz got a lot of policies through to help trans and queer people in Minnesota with a single seat majority

    He also was a founding faculity advisor of a gay-straight alliance in the early 90s when it was very not socially acceptable at all. He supported same-sex marriage before it was legalized nationally when running in a deep red seat despite that not really netting him any political points there

    • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      The deep red seat can’t be understated. That part of Minnesota makes absofuckinglutely no sense in its political distribution. It’s got what, two or three college towns, the Mayo Clinic, and the rest is a mix of redneck “country types” and farmers.

      Super highly educated area, but not densely populated. Big ol bunch of religious types too.