Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz fearmongered about former President Donald Trump on ABC's The View Monday, ABC News reported. Walz was attempting to salvage Vice President Kamala Harris' floundering presidential campaign with his rhetoric about how dangerous Trump is.
Walz sat down with the leftist ladies to dish about the campaign to the fawning hosts. Predictably, Walz returned to the well of "orange man bad" for the low-information audience and confessed that he did not appreciate a joke Trump recently made about Arnold Palmer.
"It's very clear that, as you said, Donald Trump is spiraling down, unhinged. What worries me about these comments, some of these are just so strange that they're hard to imagine, are the dangerous ones in the middle of that -- the 'enemy from within' and some of that," Walz claimed.
Leftists have been painting Trump as a crazy extremist for almost a decade now. Walz is returning to this narrative because Democrats have nothing else but a terrible candidate and even worse running mate in the Harris-Walz ticket.
In fact, Walz's appearance on the daytime talk show was meant to give the campaign another chance to answer a question that Harris flubbed. When the vice president was previously asked about what she'd do differently than President Joe Biden, she gave the worst answer the vice president to an unpopular president could give.
"There is not a thing that comes to mind," Harris said during her interview. Walz tried a little harder this time by sharing Harris' proposal to beef up Medicare and childcare handouts. He siad the Biden administration was too busy "tackling the issues that they need to" to do it already.
"Those are pretty big differences, and I don't think that's -- that's a pejorative towards it. There were other issues that were being dealt with. And she's her own leader," Walz claimed.
"She's got her own path, a new way forward. They came out of a pandemic that Donald Trump had left, a mess for an economy with supply chains that were broken," he said to excuse Biden and Harris' abysmal administration.
Walz also touched on the perennial theme of Trump as a Hitlarian leader even after there were two attempts on the former president's life and a four-year track record in the White House. Nevertheless, Walz said that Trump uses the "talk of dictators" and warned about his extremism.
"And I just tell Americans if, if you're tired of that chaos. And I know that Donald Trump's handlers are saying he's exhausted. So are we Americans are exhausted with the stuff that he does -- the chaos," Walz claimed.
"I think this one is, don't risk it with this. This is dangerous talk. This is the talk of dictators," Walz continued.
"And I think Kamala Harris clearly understands that the separation and the, you know, the separation of powers, is the genius of this country. And the military -- military is responsible to the Constitution and the American people, and not the president," Walz added later.
Democrats have been trying the same playbook on Trump for as long as he's been involved in national politics. This kind of talk about Trump may have energized some voters in the past, but it's tired, worn out, irrelevant, and dangerous -- just like Harris and Walz.