Gentle start to governor’s race shaping up as Trump proxy fight

Published 8:46 am Friday, August 17, 2018

By Brian Bakst

MPR News/90.1 FM

Minnesota’s recalibrated race for governor began Wednesday with the DFL and Republican nominees sizing up one another and the shadow President Trump casts over the race.

Democratic Rep. Tim Walz

Email newsletter signup

Newly minted Republican nominee Jeff Johnson didn’t exactly come out of the gate swinging at Tim Walz, his DFL opponent for the next 12 weeks.

“I like Tim. I think people will like Tim. I think most people like me, so hopefully it won’t turn into a mudslinging contest,” said the Hennepin County commissioner, adding that voters will find enough differences in where each candidate would take the state, so the race shouldn’t become personal.

“I talk a lot about our state agencies having too much power and having an arrogance about them. I don’t hear that at all from Tim Walz. I talk about trying to give Minnesotans more choice, more freedom, more competition in their health care,” Johnson said. “He talks about single-payer health care, which means government takes over your health care. You don’t even have private health care anymore.”

Johnson said Walz is too open to raising taxes and not committed to enforcing immigration laws.

“He left out the confiscating puppies?” responded Walz.

The six-term congressman sees Johnson as a hard worker, noting how he often ran into the Republican as both made far-flung campaign stops in recent months. Walz topped state Rep. Erin Murphy and Attorney General Lori Swanson in the DFL primary Tuesday.

Walz said he and Johnson generally get along.

Johnson

“We just have two fundamentally different visions of this state. We have two fundamentally different visions of governing,” Walz said.

He said he’s not going to let Johnson get away with demonizing government or the services it provides.

“What exactly are you going to cut? What are you going to do? What are you going to take away? And what is the vision that what you’re saying is going to make a difference in people’s lives?” Walz said. “We’re going to make the difference and they���re going to see the value.”

The two will have plenty of chances to make their contrasts in person. A few debates are already on the calendar, including a televised joint appearance on TPT’s “Almanac” program this Friday.

In many ways, the race is also a proxy fight over Trump. The president formally endorsed Johnson, by tweet, a day after he beat former Gov. Tim Pawlenty in the Republican primary.