It was Gov. Tim Walz's first go-round with the Minnesota tradition of facing a roomful of reporters alongside a turkey he was powerless to save.
Walz talked about how Minnesota farmers are feeding the world. He complimented the bird. But one word was notably absent Wednesday: pardon.
Iowa pardons a turkey. So does North Dakota. And President Donald Trump proclaimed a pair of the animals, dubbed Bread and Butter, as free birds this week.
Why, in Minnesota, is that 16-pound hen likely fated to end up alongside some family's gravy and stuffing? The Star Tribune's Curious Minnesota project typically answers readers' pressing questions, but this one comes from the reporter who stared the turkey straight in the eye.
Former Gov. Mark Dayton once joked that he lacked the legal authority to pardon a bird, saying, "Every time I exceed my executive authority, somebody files a lawsuit."
But really it was the state's turkey farmers who made the call, said John Zimmerman, past president of the Minnesota Turkey Growers Association.
The growers decided years ago that the animal that gets the honor of a gubernatorial meet-and-greet should not be free from the harsh reality that befalls its flightless brethren on the fourth Thursday of November.
"That live bird there will be harvested, processed and given to a needy family so they can consume it on Thanksgiving," Zimmerman said. "We just feel as growers that that's what we do for a living. We provide high-quality protein in the form of turkey meat. And we don't raise the turkeys to be pardoned."