Minnesota’s political fallout from Gov. Tim Walz’s sudden withdrawal from the governor’s race deepened this week, after new comments from his daughter, Hope Walz, reframed the decision in far more personal terms.
In a now-circulating interview with John O’Sullivan, a small YouTube creator better known as “Minnesota’s Official Tour Guide,” Hope Walz said that sustained death threats against her and her brother were a central factor behind her father’s exit. The interview, initially scheduled to focus on Hope’s own social media career, abruptly turned into a political scoop when news of Walz’s withdrawal broke just moments before recording.
According to Hope, the decision wasn’t just about political pressure or policy controversies but safety.
“She told me threats against her and her brother contributed to Governor’s dropping out of the race,” O’Sullivan wrote when sharing a clipped portion of the interview to Reddit’s r/minnesota forum.
The comment section erupted with comments that all echoed a similar tone, including:
“The fascists and terrorists won, and they will be more emboldened,”
Walz’s official statement earlier this week emphasized the toll of relentless scrutiny, particularly surrounding alleged Medicaid waiver fraud and what he described as a political environment dominated by cynicism and bad faith. While he did not publicly cite threats to his family, Hope’s remarks suggest those dangers were very real.
Multiple Reddit users noted that Hope has been speaking for weeks on TikTok about harassment, people showing up near the family’s home, and online threats that crossed into explicit violence. In the r/minnesota thread, one commenter bluntly summarized the situation:
Others pointed out that Minnesota has already seen politically motivated killings in the past year, lending weight to fears that the threats weren’t just online bluster.
From Policy Fight to Family Risk
The interview itself is striking partly because of its unlikely source. O’Sullivan’s channel is small, niche, and largely apolitical, a far cry from the national press corps that typically breaks stories of this magnitude. Yet because the interview was already underway when news broke, Hope spoke candidly, without the polish or guardrails of a traditional press appearance.
In the longer conversation, according to O’Sullivan, Hope discusses everything from the surreal experience of dating while under Secret Service protection to her anger toward Republican House Speaker Lisa Demuth, and what it was like living through high-profile Democratic National Convention moments.
But it was the offhand acknowledgment of death threats that resonated most.
“I wish people would wake up to how unacceptable it is that multiple major political figures feel so unsafe due to the political environment Trump has fostered.”
A Broader Chill on Minnesota Politics
Within the heavily left-leaning Minnesota subreddit, the reaction was near-unanimous: Walz’s exit is being viewed not just as a political loss, but as a warning. Several commenters argued that the intimidation worked, and that future candidates will take note.
“This absolutely encourages right-wing terrorism.”
Even some commenters who acknowledged the policy controversies surrounding Walz argued that those debates now feel secondary. As one post put it, “Clearly fraud is a big part of the story here, but so much of the reporting leaves out this key fact.”
That key fact, according to Hope Walz, is fear — not for a political career, but for a family.
Walz will remain in office for another year, and supporters across social media have urged him to govern without restraint for the remainder of his term. But the interview with Hope adds a grim undertone to Minnesota’s political future. There’s clearly a sense that the boundaries between public service and personal danger have collapsed entirely.
As one Reddit user wrote:
“MAGA will do anything to win.”
For Minnesota, the question now isn’t just who replaces Tim Walz but who will be willing to step forward at all.






