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Ex-Vikings player calls Walz 'shame about football' because of trans-athlete inclusion

The former soccer player of Minnesota Vikings and the football player of the University of Minnesota, Jack Brewer, will join a conservative activist Riley Gaines in his home state on Monday to praise a law on the ban on transgender athletes in women's sports.

The “preservation of girls sports laws”, which was passed on February 20 in the state committee for the state's training policy and is elected in the House of Representatives on Monday. When it is over there, Governor Tim Walz 'desk is going to be a veto, since Walz is a strong lawyer for transgender rights.

Brewer, the founder of the Jack Brewer Foundation, told FOX News Digital, he finds Walz 'Pro-Trans channel “disgusting”, especially when you consider that Walz was a high school football coach at the Mankato West High School in the 1990s.

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Jack Brewer (Jack Brewer Foundation)

“It is absolutely disgusting, and that's why when you see him and see his mannerisms and how he wears himself, you know that this guy does not appeal to real men and boys who fought for the rust, man for him. I have nothing together with this guy,” said Brewer.

“I think he's a shame in the football world to be honest.”

In April 2023, Walz signed the “Trans-Refugee Law Template”, which protects people, seek and offer gender care in the state. Minnesota has recently been investigated by the US Ministry of Education for President Donald Trump's latest execution regulations because Minnesota continued to allow Minnesota's transformations against girls in the high school.

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Walz 'daughter Hope Walz recently became viral for a number of Tikok videos, in which she spoke out against Trump's executive order and to defend transgender athletes.

Brewer hopes to have a conversation with the governor about this topic.

“If I arrive there on Monday, if he invited me to his office and had a conversation about it, I would accept it with respect,” said Brewer. “I would tell him that I know that he doesn't believe in it in his heart.

“I think deeply in his heart he knows that it is wrong. I think he is trying to address a much left liberal basis and collect money. These LGBTQ groups donate a lot of money, especially in Minnesota. So the money and power you have really drives this legislation.”

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Brewer does not expect Walz to sign the bill into the law when it reaches its desk.

“You know that he won't do it because it is only what he was still,” said Brewer. “I pray that he has a change in the heart and awakening, but I am sure that if he signs it, it will only be because the money can be ended.”

Gaines also said Fox News Digital that she did not expect Walz to sign the bill.

“I am pretty sure that governor Walz would be against this calculation,” said Gaines. “But even if there is not the best way to be signed in the law, it is so important that we have these members, these representatives, these senators, in the recording. Are they with women or not?”

Before the publication, Walz 'office did not respond to the request from FOX News Digital by comment.

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