Aug 21, 2024
Tim Walz's Wife Reveals TRUTH About Her Fertility Treatments
Tim Walz’s wife Gwen Walz’ revealed that she did not conceive her children thorough in vitro fertilization (IVF).
- 13 minutes
Some of you might have heard this.
This is very personal for my wife and I.
When Gwen and I decided to have children,
we went through years
of fertility treatments,
and I remember each night praying
that the call was going to come
and it was going to be good news.
The phone would ring,
tenseness in my stomach.
[00:00:17]
And then the agony when you heard
the treatments hadn't worked.
So it wasn't by chance
that when we welcomed our first child,
our beautiful daughter, we named her Hope.
[00:00:33]
Democratic vice presidential candidate
Tim Walz has been very vulnerable,
publicly very candid and open about
the difficulties that he and his wife had
in conceiving their children.
He talks about the fertility treatments
that they needed in order to conceive.
[00:00:51]
But now new reporting indicates that he
might not have been telling the truth.
And it has to do with the type
of fertility treatments
that he and his wife relied on.
And as a result, Republicans are now
using this, of course, to attack him.
[00:01:07]
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So before we get to the Trump ticket
and Republican supporters and how they're
[00:01:25]
attacking walls, let's actually back
up a little bit and give you the context.
So during an interview with CNN,
the first lady of Minnesota, Gwen Walz,
who of course, is Governor Walz wife,
revealed that she underwent
a different fertility treatment, not IVF,
[00:01:43]
called intrauterine insemination.
And so intrauterine insemination,
like IVF, is a common fertility procedure
that's used by couples
who are trying to get pregnant.
But it's a different method entirely.
Okay, so during intrauterine
insemination known as IUI.
[00:02:01]
Sperm is placed directly in the uterus.
The process is sometimes combined
with ovulation induction when or where
medication stimulates the release of eggs.
People experiencing infertility
often start with IUI
and then move on to IVF if needed.
[00:02:18]
Now, in her statement to CNN,
Gwen Walz described the process
as an incredibly personal and difficult
experience and then said this the only
person who knew in detail what we were
going through was our next door neighbor.
[00:02:33]
She was a nurse and helped me
with the shots I needed.
As part of the IUI process, I'd rush home
from school and she would give me the
shots to ensure that we stayed on track.
And then she went on to explain that she
and Walz only started publicly sharing
[00:02:49]
their fertility treatments after Alabama's
decision in regard to IVF treatments.
They see the embryos that are used
at IVF treatments as sacrilege
because they consider those embryos
like the same as a viable.
[00:03:04]
Human being, which I think is crazy.
Gwen Wahl says in regard to that, after
seeing the extreme attacks on reproductive
health care across the country,
particularly the efforts in Alabama
that jeopardized access
to fertility treatments,
Tim and I agreed that it was time to
formally speak out about our experience,
[00:03:21]
but their experience didn't have
anything to do with IVF, obviously,
and I don't think that the right wing
is going after intrauterine insemination,
because that is it's about it's
not about putting an embryo,
[00:03:37]
a fertilized egg, into the woman's body.
It's about having her ovulate and ensuring
that the sperm gets to her egg.
If that makes any sense. Yeah.
So genuine question when he explained
how many different times they tried, etc.,
[00:03:54]
was that part of the story
as far as we can tell?
True.
Well, why don't we take a look at this
compilation of Governor Walz talking about
this issue, and you'll see for yourself.
JB Vance knows nothing about that.
And then he keeps going
into all of these things.
Today's IVF day.
[00:04:10]
Thank God for IVF.
My wife and I have two beautiful children.
He thinks he needs to dictate that.
And I've been saying this the golden rule
that makes small towns work
so we're not at each other's throats
all the time in a little town is,
mind your own damn business.
That includes IVF, and this gets
personal for me and my family.
[00:04:30]
When my wife and I decided
to have children, we spent years going
through infertility treatments,
and I remember praying every night
for a call for good news.
The pit in my stomach when the phone rang,
and the agony when we heard
that the treatments hadn't worked.
Yeah, first of all, it was up to him.
[00:04:45]
I wouldn't have a family because of IVF
and the things that we need to do.
Reproductive.
My kids were born through that direct,
you know, that way.
And also I make sure that I'm the guys and
our folks are investing in prenatal care.
We're the ones that are there
for universal pre-K were the ones
that are providing school meals at this.
[00:05:01]
I'm not going to back down one bit on this
whole family values thing, and it's us.
So look, obviously I agree with Walz
and the Democratic Party
in wanting to protect IVF.
And by the way, IVF treatments are also
incredibly popular with Republican voters.
[00:05:17]
They want to protect
those treatments as well.
But obviously, campaigning on this issue
as though he and his wife
relied on that treatment.
And then it turns out that that's
not the treatment that they relied on,
is something that's now going to be
attacked or Republicans are going to use
[00:05:35]
to attack Walz.
I don't know how much it's going
to hurt the ticket, but he should
have been careful and he wasn't.
Yeah, I'm 50 over 50 on this one.
So, on the one hand, yeah,
don't say IVF if it was IUI and and there
[00:05:53]
is a real difference because there
actually as Anna pointed out,
they're actually opposed to IVF
because of the way that it's done,
and they probably are not opposed to IUI.
But the reason why I say I'm 5050
is because what I always do is I look
at this, and in any given issue like this,
[00:06:10]
how would I react if it was on the shoe
was on the other foot and a
Republican made this kind of mistake lie,
whatever you want to call it, right?
And I would think, is it material
like is am I outraged by this?
And I don't think it's that material.
[00:06:27]
And so and maybe I'm biased
and we could talk it through, but the
reason why I don't think it's material
is to me, the most important part was,
wait, did he make up that story
about infertility treatment and the years
they went through and the struggle, etc.?
Because if he did though,
then I'm worried about it.
[00:06:44]
That's a significant lie, right?
But if it turns out, yeah,
they were doing infertility treatment
and all that is true, it was just
a different infertility treatment.
And he was kind of saying it
because people know IVF
and they don't know IUI II as much.
Yeah, it still shouldn't have done it.
No question.
[00:07:00]
Yeah, but a lot less severe. Okay.
Like, I'm not overly worried about it.
I'm going to speculate on something,
and I know it's not going to come across
as overly kind to walls or men in general.
Sorry.
But I think there's some chance
that walls genuinely didn't know
[00:07:18]
the details of the treatment.
- Well, that's more embarrassing.
- Yeah, but it's true, right?
Like, I just feel like, I don't know.
I just feel like men aren't, like, super
involved in, like, the specific details
of, like, what the fertility treatment is.
[00:07:34]
They just know that a fertility treatment
is happening, and they're trying to see
if the pregnancy will happen
as a result of that treatment.
Obviously, like because here's the thing,
his wife is obviously in the know
about the campaigning.
And so she wouldn't like blow.
[00:07:50]
Like she wouldn't blow
his cover like that.
You get what I'm saying?
Like in an interview.
- Yeah.
- So So, look, it's super hard to tell.
I hear you, that might be the case.
We don't know.
We're speculating on why. Right?
- Total speculation.
- Yeah.
On why he said it wrong.
But look, number one, it's super important
not to be like the Republicans
[00:08:10]
and not to be bad faith actors.
So just call him out for being wrong.
Yeah.
Okay.
And so and then when I look at it
as like is it material.
And it would be material in 1 or 2 ways.
One is it genuinely affects a policy
that I care about
[00:08:25]
and is important to the public.
In this case, no, he's in favor
of all fertility treatments,
including IVF, and I'm in favor of that.
It doesn't affect policy at all.
In fact, I think that this whole story,
including the attack on walls,
does one thing and one thing only
remind everyone that there is some faction
[00:08:44]
within the Republican Party
that wants to do away with IVF, and J.D.
Vance happens to be one of them.
Totally. Right?
There is one fact pattern which would
be really problematic for Tim Waltz Yeah,
as if I sense that he is inauthentic.
Yeah, exactly. I agree.
[00:08:59]
- Right I. Agree.
- So that's not a policy thing.
But that would be a little bit
heartbreaking because we're hopeful
that he's one of like a very literally
a handful of politicians.
I don't know if it's past 3 or 4 in my
lifetime that is honest and authentic.
[00:09:15]
And if it turns out
it's a little bit of an act,
then that would be both heartbreaking.
But again, I'm not naive.
- Yeah.
- It's heartbreaking.
Yeah, I would say.
All right. Well another one.
No. But what I mean by heartbreaking
in the relevant part of that is,
well, that means maybe
he's not going to get things done.
[00:09:32]
And so that that affects
how I view the chances of them passing
those bills on a national level.
But again, the fact that he already
passed them in Minnesota is overwhelming
evidence that he is not full of crap.
- Yeah I agree.
- And hence.
Okay, so I've been talking about
the attacks on Walz over this, and I
[00:09:48]
haven't even given you the attacks yet,
so I just want to quickly do that.
So JD Vance tweeted about it,
saying today it came out that Tim Walz had
lied about having a family via IVF
who lies about something like that.
And then Vance further elaborated
that when he was elaborated on this,
[00:10:05]
when he was stopped by reporters
in Wisconsin yesterday.
So let's take a look at that.
You have attacked him for not being
clear about his military record.
Do you think this is becoming a pattern
of him using ambiguous language,
either through commission or omission
when talking about, you know, his record?
[00:10:21]
Yeah, I do that.
I mean, look, I saw that this morning,
and it's just such a bizarre thing
to lie about, right?
There's nothing wrong
with having a baby through IVF
or not having a baby through IVF.
Like, why lie about it?
I just don't understand that.
And having, you know, had people who,
you know, friends of mine who used IUI
[00:10:38]
and then some of them worked out
and some of them didn't,
and then some of the people
who didn't work out, they then used IVF.
Like, you know the difference, right?
Anybody who's had a friend or themselves
gone through fertility treatments,
you know the difference.
So why lie about it?
I just don't understand it.
My basic read on Tim Walz and I don't
know the guy but my basic read,
[00:10:55]
if you look at his military record,
the lies about the rank, the lies about
serving in combat, the lies now about IVF.
Even lying about like,
his food preferences.
My read on him is that he's a guy
who likes to just barely cross the line.
[00:11:12]
The 2004 esque attacks
on Tim Walz over his military record.
I haven't commented on it publicly like
you got to do better than that, JD Vance.
But you know this issue.
I don't know how much of an
impact it's going to have,
but I lean in your direction, Jake.
[00:11:28]
It's not really material, and if anything,
it does remind everyone that there is
a group of Republicans who want to do away
with the fertility treatment,
IVF, that people desperately rely on
when they want to conceive
and they want to have children.
And then finally, I also need to note that
the president and CEO of resolve, that's
[00:11:46]
the National Infertility Association,
stated that the group regrets
elevating suggestions That walls used IVF,
so they kind of took what he said
at face value and they promoted it.
And so Barbara Collura,
who's the president of this organization,
[00:12:03]
said the following resolve regrets
if our organization contributed to any
confusion about how he became a parent.
We support all paths to parenthood
and have welcomed Governor Walz's support
for our community and our advocacy issues
since the Federal Advocacy Day in 2017,
[00:12:21]
during his tenure in Congress.
Okay. I have one last comment here.
If I heard him right, J.D.
Vance said, you know, he he has
a habit of going barely past the line.
Right.
That's actually a really
fair thing to say, right?
Because I think that is
what Tim Walz is doing.
[00:12:38]
But he is going barely past the line.
And, you know, when you add up
a couple of these things
and most of them are unfair, especially
when they make a federal case out of it.
But there are a couple of things
that are fair, including saying, hey,
it wasn't IVF, it was our UI, right?
[00:12:55]
I get the sense that Tim Walz,
in order to tell a good story, is the kind
of guy who embellishes around the edges,
and so look out for that.
That'll probably happen a couple
more times, because if you're
the story embellisher guy, you you do that
on a fairly consistent basis.
[00:13:13]
So it's not lethal.
Being a phony and lying regularly
and lying egregiously
is lethal, like politically.
And so so so far, not too bad.
But I am a little bit on the lookout
for the embellishments now.
[00:13:28]
Yeah, 100%. And that's okay.
I think that's important to look out for.
Look, I'm literally wearing a balls
to the wall shirt shop to you.
Com. Nevertheless, I'm fair about it.
Fair has shown America.
How many times are you going
to do this on the show today?
To be fair, probably 20 or 30 times.
[00:13:46]
Then followed up with shop target.com
and the link is in the description box.
Okay.
I don't know, maybe 40.
I'll see what happens.
- I'll try to prepare.
- Myself mentally for that.
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