Vice President Kamala Harris disclosed on Monday that she had insomnia following President Joe Biden’s endorsement of her as his successor. She also revealed that she was sleep-deprived on the morning she selected her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
According to Harris, 59, her decision to select Walz was largely intuitive, made after a sleepless night. “From the time that the president called me and told me he wasn’t running, I mean, it’s just like everything was in speedy, speedy motion, and I was not sleeping so well,” she told the All the Smoke podcast. Meanwhile, when Harris explains her reasoning for picking Walz, her description is disjointed and confusing: “If you look at Tim Walz and you look at me, and you have a sense of who we are and where we came from, you think we have nothing in common.”
“But his, you know, he comes from and grew up in the same kind of, you know, different part of the country,” she continued. “You know, folks were a different color, from a different culture, but same people. Hardworking people, straight-talking people, people who have values, and I just found that so familiar to me.”
“The process was, ultimately, I made a decision about my gut, around, like, do you, not that any of the other candidates didn’t, but just, do you, do you have a connection to the people and a life experience that is about just seeing people. And, but, it was a whole thing,” Harris rambled.
AN UNINSPIRED CHOICE?
Walz is the Governor of Minnesota, but the people in his home state of Nebraska—including his own family — largely support Donald J. Trump.
There is speculation Harris did not pick him not because he has “a connection to the people and a life experience that is about just seeing people,” but because his main rival for running mate, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, is Jewish and a veteran of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). Some in the Democratic Party believe picking Shapiro would unlikely play well with Muslim voters.
Walz, by contrast, has built strong ties with Minnesota’s large Somali population, declaring that “the Somali community’s footprint on the cultural and demographic landscape of our state is invaluable.”