Walz was in US, not Asia, during Tiananmen protests, Minnesota radio reports
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Tim Walz, the Democrats’ vice presidential candidate, was not in Hong Kong or Asia during the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown as he has said, Minnesota public radio reported this week, citing a photograph and a newspaper report from that time.
Walz, who frequently traveled to China as a teacher in the 1990s, leading trips of U.S. high school students, had said while a member of Congress that he was nearby during the demonstrations in Tiananmen, which started in April of 1989 with protests and ended in June with a bloody government crackdown that was estimated to have killed hundreds or more.
“The courage of Chinese reformers during this monumental and heartbreaking day has been a beacon for the democratic spirit throughout the world,” he said in a 2014 statement on the Tiananmen anniversary. “Living in Asia at the time, I was profoundly affected by these events and the Chinese people’s struggle for reform.”
During a Congressional hearing in 2014, Walz said he was in Hong Kong at the time, saying: “As the events were unfolding, several of us went in (to Tiananmen).”
MPR News, Minnesota’s public radio station, reported on Sept. 30 that a photograph published May 16, 1989, showed Walz working in the National Guard Armory in Alliance. “And a story published in another Nebraska paper on Aug. 11 that year said he would ‘leave Sunday en route to China,'” the station reported.
The campaign for presidential candidate Kamala Harris had no comment. Walz did not respond to shouted questions about the report on Tuesday as he traveled to New York for a debate with Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance.
Walz has been criticized by Republicans for referring to “weapons of war, that I carried in war,” in his 2018 gubernatorial campaign, although he was not deployed to a war zone in his 24 years in the National Guard.
He has referred to himself as a retired command sergeant major, a rank he achieved but did not retire with after failing to complete necessary paperwork.
(Reporting by Heather Timmons; Editing by Daniel Wallis)