Second gentleman Doug Emhoff discussed his intense “hug” with his wife’s running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, when the two met on-stage during the Democratic National Convention last month.
“We get up there and we just do this big bro bear hug, and I cannot tell you how many texts I got from my actual friends and actual family members, like, ‘You never hug me like that. What’s going on? You literally [just] met this guy,’” Emhoff told “Pod Save America” host Jon Lovett.
“Did you hit him on the back? Did you hit him on the back to preserve your heteronormativity? Did you give him the back pat or was it just a full embrace?” the host asked.
“Yeah, we just did this full-on — and he was like this, I was like this, and then there was just this bro hug. And I heard from a lot of actual friends,” Ehmoff responded.
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Since Vice President Kamala Harris chose Walz, her running mate has been embroiled in one controversy after another, most of which has centered on his lies about his military service.
Prominent figures from both major political parties criticized Democratic Minnesota Governor Tim Walz for appearing nervous during Tuesday night’s vice presidential debate in New York against Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio).
The vice presidential nominee faced Vance for the first and only time before the November election on CBS News. The debate was moderated by veteran anchors Margaret Brennan and Norah O’Donnell.From the moment Walz began speaking, social media users began commenting on his demeanor:
Left-wing media figures and outlets also panned Walz’s debate performance following the CBS-moderated event Tuesday evening, giving Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate low marks across the board.
CNN’s Abby Phillips, Dana Bash, and Jake Tapper, notably, were all critical of Walz, with each of them alternately opining that he appeared to either lack debate prep or had far too much of it and was not quick enough on his feet to counter Vance’s many jabs at Harris.
At one point during post-debate analysis, Tapper even claimed that Vance is a “much more experienced” debater, a point that Bash said could be attributed to the fact that Walz — and Harris — have not done many media interviews.
“I think there was a clear lack of preparation and execution here,” anchor Abby Phillip said, noting how Vance managed to land some “punches.”
Bash had the opposite take. “I think he had too much preparation. He had so many lines that he was clearly trying to say,” she said. “I think the lack of interviews that he has done with national media, with local media — it showed he needed more.
”Tapper added that “JD Vance is much more experienced with this, at public speaking and defending himself and pivoting,” while host Anderson Cooper concluded that Walz seemed nervous on stage.
“It kind of reminded me of the June 27 debate, when Kamala Harris that night said of Joe Biden, ‘It was a slow start, but a strong finish,’” ABC News anchor Linsey Davis said regarding Walz’s debate against former President Donald Trump’s running mate. “And that’s how I felt Tim Walz kind of did tonight,” she added, per the New York Post.
Davis, who co-moderated the presidential debate on September 10 between Vice President Kamala Harris and Trump alongside David Muir, suggested that Vance was more “effective” at challenging Harris on Tuesday than Trump had been the previous month.
“I feel like that was really effective,” Davis said of Vance, who noted frequently during the debate that Harris has not pressed for any of the issues and policies she claims to support now.
“You know, to use Tim Walz, his own words, I mean, a lot about this debate tonight was, was weird,” she added. “There were comfortable, cringey moments, but overall, my take on this was that JD Vance needed to come away as that humble, likable guy from ‘Hillbilly Elegy.’ It seemed like he did perhaps get some points in that.”