Where can full videos of Gov. Walz’s statewide address and press conferences be officially requested from the Minnesota governor’s office?

Checked on January 27, 2026
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Executive summary

The official route to request full videos of Governor Tim Walz’s statewide addresses and press conferences is through the Office of the Governor’s public contact channels — phone, contact form/email, or the media/press office — and by checking the governor’s newsroom pages where recordings and statements are posted [1] [2] [3]. The public website provides telephone numbers, an online contact form and newsroom/press-release pages but does not, in the available reporting, publish a separate, detailed archival video-request procedure or dedicated media-download portal [1] [2] [4].

1. Where the governor’s office lists direct contact lines and postal address

The governor’s main contact information appears on the official state pages and public listings: the Office of Governor Tim Walz is located at 130 State Capitol, St. Paul, MN 55155, with primary telephone numbers listed as 201-3400 and a toll-free line at 657-3717; those lines are the most direct phone routes for public and media inquiries [1] [2]. The state site consistently repeats the physical address and phone numbers across multiple contact pages, establishing them as the baseline, authoritative contact points for requests that require staff handling or routing [1] [2].

2. The online contact form and scheduling portal as official request channels

The governor’s web presence includes an online contact form and a scheduling request page that are intended to accept public communications and event invitations; these same forms are the logical and official electronic mechanisms for submitting a video-request inquiry if no other media-specific instructions are provided [2] [5]. The scheduling request page notes that submissions are acknowledged and processed, indicating an internal workflow for requests routed to appropriate staff — useful when asking for full clips, multi-camera footage, or official copies of a statewide address or press conference [5].

3. The press newsroom and press-release pages for posted recordings

The Office of the Governor maintains a newsroom/press releases section where statements, transcripts and sometimes video clips are published; before making a formal request it is prudent to check the governor’s newsroom because many addresses and press events are posted there in full or in part [3] [4]. The reporting indicates those pages are the first place official releases and media assets appear, though the available site snippets do not guarantee every full video will be posted or downloadable, which is why follow-up contact via the channels above is necessary [3] [4].

4. Emailing, media lists and subscription services

The governor’s office offers subscriber tools and public notification systems — for example, the GovDelivery subscription page — that distribute press releases and updates and may include links to livestreams or video posts when announcements are made [6]. While subscriptions deliver published content, the reporting does not show a distinct media-only email address for formal archival video requests; therefore, using the general contact form or phone lines and asking to be directed to the press/media relations team is the recommended approach [6] [2].

5. What the available reporting does not show and next steps

None of the provided sources lays out a separate, explicit archival-video request procedure, a dedicated download portal, or a public-records video access form for gubernatorial footage, so the factual record here is limited to the contact mechanisms and the newsroom posting practice [1] [4] [3] [2]. The practical next step, given those limits, is to call 201-3400 or use the governor’s contact form to request the specific video, identify the event by date and title, and ask to be connected to the media/communications office for delivery or instructions on an official copy [1] [2] [5].

Want to dive deeper?
How does Minnesota’s public records law apply to video recordings of gubernatorial events?
Which governor’s office channels typically deliver livestreams or full recordings of state press conferences and addresses?
How have other states structured official requests and archives for gubernatorial video footage?