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Posted: 2024-08-06T17:40:07Z | Updated: 2024-08-06T17:40:07Z

Vice President Kamala Harris boosted the Democratic presidential tickets climate credentials when she picked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) as her running mate, advocates said Tuesday, pointing to a record of expanding public transit, subsidizing electric bicycles and enacting one of the industrial Midwests strongest laws to phase down fossil fuel emissions.

The popular second-term governor, whose folksy accent and plain-spoken defenses of social democracy shone on national television in recent weeks, last year set the North Star State on a path to 100% carbon-free power by 2040, despite his party maintaining a narrow, single-vote majority in the state legislature.

While the 2023 Minnesota law dictates that renewables make up the majority of the states energy mix, the legislation broke with progressive orthodoxy on wind and solar and included nuclear power. Supporting atomic energy divided Democrats in Minnesota, which remains the only state with a complete ban on building nuclear plants. But Walz previously pushed to lift the moratorium and last year threw his support behind a $300,000 study to examine the potential for next-generation reactors.

Minnesotans are not going to wait any longer, Walz said before signing the bill into law. Theyve made it clear they make it clear with their voices, they make it clear with their advocacy, they make it clear with their votes that they expect movement around climate change to happen and it is happening today.

Already, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has sought to cast Walzs record as radical. But criticism from some environmentalists for not taking a hardline stance against a controversial oil pipeline could help Walz burnish his image as a pragmatist who has overseen the biggest manufacturing revival in the Midwest.

In just the past two months, the Walz administration moved to clear bottlenecks to actually building new carbon-free power stations, rolling out nearly $200 million in state grants and signing legislation in June to ease permitting requirements on green-energy projects.

We have good environmental laws in Minnesota, and thats the way it should be, were protectors of 20% of the worlds freshwater, Walz said in a recent radio interview . But we also have permitting that takes too long and prohibits or makes it more expensive doing renewable energy projects, things that we want to get done.