Manitoba, Ontario premiers reflect on Tim Walz as Democrat running mate pick

Premiers that share a border with Minnesota say Tim Walz understands America’s important cultural and trade relationship with Canada, after the governor was chosen as Kamala Harris’s running mate on the U.S. Democratic presidential ticket.

“I was happy as punch,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford said of Walz’s candidacy during a news conference in Mississauga Wednesday.

Walz made his debut with Harris, the current U.S. vice-president, at an energy-filled rally Tuesday evening in Philadelphia, kicking off their battleground state tour.

The premier commented just two months after the two met in Ford’s office at the Ontario legislature. Ford said they talked about how to strengthen the economic ties between Ontario and Minnesota, including the agriculture and energy sectors.

Walz is known for his “Minnesota nice” demeanour, and leaders north of the 49th parallel are hoping his track record working with Canada will continue if the Democrats end up back in the White House.

“We shared a lot in common when we sat down,” Ford said.

A white-haired man with a slight smile wears a suit
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he’s ‘happy as punch’ about Walz’s candidacy. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Ontario and Minnesota do $7.6 billion in two-way trade, Ford said.

Ford said he and Walz — who once coached high school football — also tossed a ball around in his office before Ford gave Walz a Canadian Football League ball.

“We’re going to work well together if we get to that point,” Ford said.

Walz’s state shares a 885-kilometre border with Canada, south of Ontario and Manitoba.

“I think it would be good for Manitoba if somebody in the White House not only could point out our province on a map but also is a person who knows about our hydroelectricity, our [agriculture] industry,” Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said Wednesday.

“That’s what Gov. Walz could bring to the table.”

Kinew hasn’t tossed a football with Walz, but there are binding cultural and economic ties between Manitoba and Minnesota, he said.

Manitobans go to Minnesota to watch sports, shop and take holidays. There are also significant business connections in manufacturing, agriculture and energy.

“At the same time, we have a balancing act,” Kinew said.

Whichever party wins the election will be in power during a looming review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade in 2026 �— the first since former president Donald Trump pushed to renegotiate the old North American Free Trade Agreement.

U.S. President Joe Biden’s tenure brought more stability for the Canada-U.S. relationship but still enforced policies experts have called protectionist. It’s expected Harris, if elected, would follow Biden’s example.

In preparation for the trade talks, the Manitoba NDP government has connected with members of both parties, including North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, who is rumoured to be a likely member of Trump’s cabinet if he returns to the White House.

Close up of a man wearing a traditional First Nations headdress
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew, seen in a file photo from his swearing-in ceremony in October, says there are binding cultural and economic ties between Manitoba and Minnesota. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

North Dakota also shares a long border with Manitoba, and Burgum has important insight into the Canada-U.S. relationship, Kinew said.

“Whichever way the American public decides to vote, we are going to be working really hard to identify those key allies who have a familiarity with Manitoba,” Kinew said.

The new Democratic ticket has been met with a flurry of excitement since Biden stepped back from the nomination, amid concerns about his age, to endorse Harris.

Walz told a crowd of thousands about the importance of “community” at an outdoor rally he headlined with Harris Wednesday in Eau Claire, Wis.

The newly formed Democratic team is taking a decidedly more positive tone, with Harris calling herself and Walz “joyful warriors” as they began the sprint to November’s election.

“This idea of caring for a neighbour, a kindness, a hand up when somebody needs it,” Walz told the crowd when a supporter seemed to receive help after struggling in the direct summer sun.

“That’s who we are.”

Walz’s opponent was on a similar path in key states this week. Republican vice-presidential nominee J.D. Vance even ran up to Harris’s plane on an airport tarmac in Wisconsin on Wednesday.

“I just wanted to check out my future plane,” Vance joked with reporters.

Vance also responded to the Democrats’ recent labelling of their Republican opponents as “weird,” telling a crowd at his Eau Claire event that “if those people want to call me weird, I call it a badge of honour.”

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