Tim Walz caught on camera calling Trump supporters this disgusting name

tim walz

Donald Trump has broken the Democrat Party. They’re now resorting to the most heinous tactics to fight back.

And Tim Walz was caught on camera calling Trump supporters this disgusting name.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a Democrat, made a striking claim on Sunday while speaking to supporters in Las Vegas, Nevada. Walz alleged that former President Donald Trump’s upcoming rally at Madison Square Garden mirrors a Nazi rally held at the same venue in the 1930s.

Basically, the Democrat vice presidential candidate insinuated that Trump’s supporters at the rally were Nazis.

“Don’t miss on this, go do your Google on this — Donald Trump’s got this big rally going at Madison Square Garden,” Walz told the crowd.

“There’s a direct parallel to a big rally that happened in the mid-1930s at Madison Square Garden. And don’t think that he doesn’t know for one second exactly what they’re doing there.”

Walz’s remarks appear to align with a theory initially put forward by Democratic strategist James Carville and repeated by former presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.

This theory attempts to draw parallels between Trump’s choice of venue and a 1939 pro-Nazi rally organized by the German American Bund.

However, Madison Square Garden has a complex history. The venue has hosted a vast array of events across the political spectrum, including anti-Nazi rallies.

Breitbart News highlighted that Madison Square Garden was not only the site of the infamous German American Bund rally in 1939 but also the location of anti-Nazi gatherings, including a Jewish anti-Nazi protest in 1933.

Another anti-Nazi rally occurred in 1943, as global awareness of the Holocaust began to grow.

Breitbart News also noted that several Jewish individuals attended Trump’s Sunday rally. Some found Walz’s comments offensive, particularly former Democratic Assemblyman Dov Hikind, now a vocal Trump supporter.

For some attendees, the comparison between Trump’s rally and a Nazi event felt unwarranted and misleading.

In the final stretch of the campaign, the Harris/Walz ticket seems increasingly intent on associating Trump with Hitler, revisiting both the “very fine people” hoax and past assertions that Trump admired Hitler’s generals. Trump supporters have expressed concern that such rhetoric could foster divisiveness and incite further violence, like another assassination attempt against the former president.

Walz’s comments were met with criticism from various quarters, with some pointing out the governor’s own history of controversial remarks involving Nazi symbolism.

In the past, the Minnesota governor has been caught praising those who support Adolph Hitler and his evil ideologies.

Interestingly, Walz has previously voiced support for prosecuting what he describes as misinformation involving “hate speech,” despite the protections offered by free speech laws. His stance has raised concerns about the line between combating harmful rhetoric and preserving the right to free expression.

Stay tuned to The Federalist Wire.