The Minnesota governor and Kamala Harris' running mate will sit down with Kimmel with less than one month to go before the presidential election.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz admitted during the debate that he had previously misspoken in 2014 when he said he was in mainland China between April and June 1989, during the Tiananmen Square protests.
The incident took place at the Jimmy Lee Recreation Center in St. Paul, where a 27-year-old employee shot a 16-year-old in the head during an altercation.
Sen. JD Vance and Gov. Tim Walz debated several health care topics during the vice-presidential debate on Tuesday. Here's where they stand on the issues.
Walz’s son Gus, who at the time was 16 and attending St. Paul Central High School, was at the community center across the street from the school when an employee shot a teen in the head.
The Minnesota governor has brought his charm to the campaign trail, but his debate was uneven and he has so far been scarcely seen on national television. His team says that may be changing.
A CNN/SSRS poll found that around the same amount of debate-watchers felt Vance or Walz “won,” and that they felt more favorable about both after the debate, but that the event mostly did not impact people’s choices of who to vote for.
Multiple news reports indicate that Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz misleadingly claimed he was in Hong Kong during the turbulence surrounding the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre,
While the Walz-Vance debate, which was noted for being a relatively civil affair, was viewed by almost 25 percent less people than its predecessor, the Harris-Pence debate was also the second-most watched VP debate since Nielsen began keeping records.
White House hopeful JD Vance was the undisputed champion of CBS News' Vice Presidential Debate Tuesday night, according to Fox News' Howard Kurtz.
Candidates juggled detailed questions covering starkly different visions for America before sparring about democracy’s future