Walz needs to slink back to the shadows. But he just can’t help himself.
Now Tim Walz shoved his foot in his mouth with one ridiculous faux pas.
A Post That Invited Its Own Destruction
Tim Walz posted what he thought was a clever takedown of the Trump administration on Friday. By the end of the day, it had generated 3.5 million views — and the overwhelming majority of the traffic was not what he expected.
Walz’s target was the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which has become the latest Democratic talking point after peeling paint and algae growth appeared just weeks after a $14.8 million restoration project was completed. The images were unedifying, and Walz seized on them with the kind of confidence that comes from not thinking too hard about what you are about to write.
“Found an imaginary problem, said only they could fix it, didn’t listen to experts, hired buddies who grifted millions, failed miserably, bragged how great it went,” Walz wrote. “The entire Trump presidency in a nutshell.”
The response from social media was swift, pointed, and largely formatted around a single question: Has he met himself?
“I’m sorry, TIM WALZ is accusing someone else of enabling grifting?” asked journalist Mark Hemingway.
“Tim Walz: Are you describing yourself?” posted the Minnesota Staff Fraud Reporting Commentary account, which represents more than 480 Minnesota state employees who have been documenting the fraud scandal that erupted under Walz’s administration.
“Ya might want to sit this one out…” offered Sal Nuzzo, executive director of Consumers Defense.
Fox Business’ Charles Gasparino went straight to the specifics: “From the dude who gave us all those ‘Learning Centers.'”
Rep. Derrick Van Orden of Wisconsin offered his own variation: “Crazy, you found an imaginary war record” — a reference to the controversy that dogged Walz during the 2024 vice-presidential campaign over his characterization of his military service.
The Context That Makes The Post Remarkable
The reason Walz’s post exploded in the wrong direction is one of the cleaner cases of unforced political irony in recent memory. The governor who authored that post presided over one of the largest state-level fraud scandals in American history. The Feeding Our Future case — in which approximately $250 million in pandemic-era federal nutrition funds was stolen through a network of fraudulent childcare and feeding programs concentrated in his state — has produced dozens of federal indictments, millions in recovered funds, and a House Republican oversight report that accused the Walz administration of fostering a “culture of tolerance” that allowed the fraud to flourish.
The DOJ has since opened a “full criminal investigation” into the Walz administration in connection with the scandal, as confirmed by Vice President Vance in a recent television appearance. Walz’s own approval rating has cratered to the lowest level of his tenure, with a new poll showing him trailing President Trump in his own state for the first time.
The Reflecting Pool situation, to be fair, is a genuine embarrassment for the administration. The $14.8 million restoration project produced results that were both visually poor and rapid in their deterioration — peeling paint and algae growth within weeks of completion. Trump attributed the damage to vandalism, posting on Truth Social that the pool had “been given a 300-foot long gash” and that chemicals had been illegally placed in the water. Law enforcement has made arrests in connection with the vandalism allegations, including a former Olympian.
Whether vandalism fully explains the pool’s condition or whether there were also failures in the restoration work itself is a legitimate question worth asking. But it is a question best asked by someone whose own record of overseeing government contracting does not include a quarter billion dollars in fraudulent nutrition-program payments. Walz’s post did not land the blow he intended. It handed his critics the most efficient ratio of context-to-damage of any political own goal this month.