Jenna Wang, 58, told The Daily Mail she had a secret fling she had with Democrat VP candidate Gov. Tim Walz when he taught in China.
Walz and Wang had to keep their fling a secret because her father, CCP official Bin Hul, would have disowned her for being with a Westerner.
Wang came forward with the story because of all the lies that have surfaced since Walz became the VP candidate:
The mother-of-one says she is coming forward now because she feels Walz behaved selfishly towards her and put her reputation and career at risk with his fickle behavior.’Tim lied about Tiananmen Square and he’s lied about other things,’ she told DailyMail.com’This is a very crucial moment in history and a man like this does not appear to have the character and integrity to do one of the most important jobs in the world.’
‘Tim was very passionate and very romantic. I can still remember dancing with him to our favorite song, Careless Whisper,’ she told DailyMail.com in an exclusive interview.’The fact we couldn’t touch or kiss in public just made it all the more exciting and intense when we were finally alone.
However, Wang felt “angry and suicidal” when she realized Walz was not going to propose to her and start a new life in America.
“We were deeply in love and I wanted to marry him and start a family,” explained Wang. “When it didn’t happen, I felt very unhappy and sad. Tim’s behavior was very selfish.”
Walz fell for Wang after being in China for several months:
She was attending one of his lectures to brush up on her pronunciation when the then-25-year-old Walz slipped her headphones aside and whispered into her ear: ‘You are very beautiful.”Tim was very handsome. I loved his eyes and his big mouth. We talked afterwards and he was very complimentary about my English,’ Wang told DailyMail.com.’My colleagues couldn’t speak whole sentences but Tim told me that if he closed his eyes and listened it was like being back in America.’Wang had a friend on the same teaching staff as Walz so she was able to gain access to the exclusive school where she could visit him in his one-bed staff digs.Over the weeks that followed the lovebirds grew closer, walking in the park and going to dances in the evening where there was less chance of being spotted by communist snoops.They avoided overt shows of affection in case it got back to Wang’s father Bin Hui, who was an important CCP official and chairman of a labor union in her native city of Guilin.
Walz went to Hong Kong and Macau on the weekends. He would bring her “Western-style luxuries like blue jeans, Ray-Ban sunglasses and jewelry.”
Wang could never spend the night with Walz, but they talked “for hours and hours” and have sex.
Walz returned to America during the summer. He asked Wang to send him “a passport photo and information about herself to an address in the States.”
Wang thought Walz needed the information to secure her a visa:
When the future running mate of presidential hopeful Kamala Harris flew back to China in 1992, she resigned her coveted teaching role, believing she was about to embark on a new life.Their relationship soon began to sour, however, when Walz made clumsy, romantic gestures in public, on one occasion trying to feed Wang a slice of pear as they embarked on a ten-day tour of South China.’People were staring at us. I tried to reject it because I was very afraid. Teachers were supposed to set an example,’ she said.The couple made sure to book two hotel rooms wherever they stayed but on an overnight train journey Walz insisted that Wang sleep in his cabin.The conductor shone a flashlight on Wang in the middle of the night and started to admonish her, only to retreat when Walz, afforded more respect as a westerner, woke up.When the pair reached Hainan Island, known for its tropical climate and beach resorts, Wang was ready to confront him about their future plans.
Walz told Wang he thought she only wanted a passport instead of marriage.
Wang found the suggestion “offensive.” She wanted marriage and a passport or nothing:
‘I wasn’t giving up my life and my position to move to Nebraska, a cold place in the middle of nowhere that most Chinese people had never heard of.’I was giving it up to be with Tim, to get married and start a family.’Knowing now that he wasn’t going to marry me made me feel cheap and common, as if I was being treated like a prostitute.’The next morning Wang slipped out of their hotel and took a taxi to a remote clifftop where she says she contemplated throwing herself off rather than returning to her old life in disgrace.But on the bus back to Foshan she resolved to leave Walz and instead headed to Guilin to help her mother recover from a recent stomach surgery.
Walz begged Wang to get off the bus with him and talk about their relationship.
“But I said no, I felt dead inside,” said Wang. “I wasn’t going to force a person to love me. I never saw Tim again.”
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