Walz was once a climate bill holdout

By Robin Bravender | 08/06/2024 01:30 PM EDT

Kamala Harris’ new running mate was the target of a pressure campaign to back the Waxman-Markey measure. 

Rep. Tim Walz speaks during a House committee hearing.

Then-Rep. Tim Walz (D-Minn.) speaking in June 2014 during a House Veterans' Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill. J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Fifteen years before he was picked as Kamala Harris’ running mate in the 2024 presidential contest, then-Rep. Tim Walz was a holdout on a sweeping Democratic climate bill.

The now-Minnesota governor, who’s winning accolades from green groups, was the focus of a pressure campaign in 2009 as House leaders and the Obama White House looked to shore up the votes for the climate and energy legislation known as the Waxman-Markey bill.

Walz’s deliberations over the climate bill, which he detailed in news accounts at the time, offer a glimpse into how the farm-state Democrat approached climate policy, his constituents and his party’s leadership on a major vote that proved to be politically perilous for many moderate lawmakers.

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Democrats were in a sprint in the summer of 2009 to try to pass a climate bill, a major priority for then-President Barack Obama.

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