COLUMBIA, S.C. — Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz sought to energize activists at a Democratic state convention in South Carolina, as the party's 2024 vice presidential nominee works to keep up the high national profile he gained when Kamala Harris selected him as her running mate.
Walz, a former schoolteacher who went on to serve in Congress and then became his state's governor, keynoted the South Carolina gathering in Columbia, traditionally a showcase for national-level Democrats and White House hopefuls. Speaking to convention delegates for more than half an hour, Walz used colorful language and spoke plainly as he lobbed criticism at President Donald Trump and called on his fellow Democrats to have the courage to stand up to the ''bully'' in the White House.
''Maybe it's time for us to be a little meaner,'' Walz said, to applause from the crowd. ''When it's a bully like Donald Trump, you bully the s—- out of him. ... This is a ... cruel man.''
It was Walz's third set of large-scale remarks in less than 24 hours for Walz, who, along with Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, spoke Friday night at the party's fundraising dinner, as well as an after-party fish fry hosted by Rep. Jim Clyburn.
The events offered an opportunity for both Walz and Moore to test out their messages in front of hundreds of Democrats in the state that has long held the first-in-the-South Democratic presidential primary and, last year, led off the party's nominating calendar entirely. State party chair Christale Spain has said that she will renew the argument to keep the state's No. 1 position in the next cycle, but national party organizations haven't settled their 2028 calendars yet, and party officials in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada are also vying to go first.
''Donald Trump is the existential threat that we knew was coming,'' Walz told the crowd Saturday morning, acknowledging that, for Democrats, ''it is going to be a challenging few years here.''
As he did on Friday night, Walz praised his fellow Democrats for having the ''courage'' to keep fighting in a largely Republican state, where Democrats haven't won a statewide election in about two decades and only hold one congressional seat — Clyburn's.
''Damnit, we should be able to have some fun and be joyful,'' Walz said. ''We've got the guts and we need to have it to push back on the bullies and the greed.''