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Home»CORRUPTION»Here’s Tim Walz Blaming His Medicaid Fraud Scandal On…Trump

Here’s Tim Walz Blaming His Medicaid Fraud Scandal On…Trump

By Jonathan DavisDecember 14, 2025 CORRUPTION
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As if Minnesota’s $1 billion welfare fraud scandal weren’t already bad enough, Tim Walz somehow managed to make it worse on Friday.

The North Star State’s governor — yes, the same man Democrats once thought should be vice president of the United States — held a news conference not to accept responsibility, not to explain how this happened on his watch, but to deflect. Walz tried to steer attention away from the state’s massive Somali immigrant community at the center of multiple fraud cases and, in a truly impressive feat of political gymnastics, blamed President Donald Trump for the controversy itself.

That’s right. Not the criminals. Not the systemic failures. Not the lax oversight. Trump.

The irony of the moment was impossible to miss — a full-blown dog-and-pony show, with Walz and a parade of state cronies unveiling a “statewide fraud prevention initiative.” Translation: close the barn door after making sure the horse is long gone.

During the event, a questioner cut through the spin and asked the obvious: did Walz want to hear more directly from community leaders about taking real ownership and oversight over the systemic fraud that siphoned off massive sums from COVID-era relief programs, Medicaid, and initiatives meant to feed hungry children?

Walz practically bristled, and pointed out — bizarrely — that “a lot of white men should be holding white men accountable for the crimes they have committed.” He then noted that “Medicaid fraud will stretch across all racial demographics, all ethnic groups.”

Not sure why this white guy had to virtue signal by suggesting other white guys do bad things, but the good news is, this jerk isn’t our vice president right now.

Anyway:

That said, he wouldn’t be a Democrat if he didn’t find some way to blame a Democratic politician’s scandal on the current occupant of the White House.

“Each community’s got this in their own niche,” Walz said. “To blame them and say they should have been responsible for stopping it, I think that’s a pretty hard reach …

“I think we continue to educate folks about why they shouldn’t commit crimes. You would hope that it’s being taught both at home and at schools and in our society, but no, I think this idea that the Somali community is to blame for this because they didn’t do more, I think that’s how we got into this …

“Donald Trump brought this to the attention, like this is something brand new. This is not brand new, and it’s being worked on. But he made it white hot. And, um, very dangerous.”

At best, Walz’s statement is pure nonsense — a jumble of non sequiturs stitched together to avoid answering the question. At worst, it’s a tacit confession: an admission that his own state government failed spectacularly, and that his leadership is the very reason it did.

Incompetent scumbag Tim Walz says it's a "pretty hard reach" to expect the Somali community to not engage in the massive theft of tax dollars, criticizes @POTUS for calling them out:

"Each community's got this… Donald Trump brought this to the attention… very dangerous." pic.twitter.com/ffqmpQcT7G

— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) December 12, 2025

Does Medicaid fraud occur across “all racial demographics”? Sure. Human nature being what it is, crime exists everywhere.

But in Walz’s upside-down worldview, that truism becomes a convenient excuse — a way to wave off what happened in Minnesota as somehow ordinary, unavoidable, and therefore not his fault.

That dodge misses the point entirely. This scandal isn’t about abstract sociology; it’s about a specific, massive fraud operation enabled by the gross incompetence of Walz’s own administration. Guardrails failed. Oversight collapsed. And Minnesota taxpayers were robbed blind — not by accident, but because the state allowed what amounts to a guest population to exploit the system with impunity.

To be fair, he’s not completely wrong.

We shouldn’t be claiming the Somali community as much as we should be blaming Tim Walz, who allowed the fraud to balloon to these levels.

This falls on him.

— Dustin Grage (@GrageDustin) December 12, 2025

Walz’s tired “everybody does it” excuse also conveniently sidesteps the inconvenient facts of this case. This wasn’t some diffuse, impossible-to-trace problem spread evenly across society. It was highly concentrated, centered very specifically within Minnesota’s Somali immigrant community — and it involved massive transfers of stolen taxpayer money back to Somalia, with credible concerns that some of it may have even wound up in the hands of the terrorist group al-Shabaab.

That matters. And pretending it doesn’t is deliberate misdirection.

It wouldn’t be unreasonable — or controversial — to expect leaders within that community to publicly condemn the fraud and express genuine regret over the damage done to Minnesota taxpayers. Accountability isn’t oppression. Silence isn’t compassion.

And if someone from that community happens to occupy a high-profile perch — say, an outspoken Democratic member of Congress — you’d think that person would be especially vocal in condemning the theft of public funds and the betrayal of the country that took them in.

Instead, when it comes to Rep. Ilhan Omar — a Somalia native and one of the loudest voices in Minnesota politics — what Americans mostly hear are complaints about victimhood. Not outrage over the fraud. Not anger on behalf of taxpayers. Just grievances about how unfairly everyone is being treated.

Even worse was Walz’s tacit admission that his own administration failed to stop the fraud. Rather than owning that failure, he pivoted to the kind of empty rhetoric only a bureaucrat could love, suggesting the country needs to “educate folks about why they shouldn’t commit crime.”

That Walz would say this about a community that escaped a North African hellscape and was welcomed into the United States only makes his comments worse. The country extended refuge, opportunity, and extraordinary generosity — literally life-saving in many cases — and the response, from a subset of that community, was theft on an industrial scale.

No one is arguing for collective guilt; that concept is rightly anathema to American law and Western morality. But it’s not unreasonable to observe that a group repaying generosity with massive fraud is probably not in need of a government seminar explaining why stealing is bad — or, for that matter, a remedial course in basic ethics (or the very old-fashioned idea of “sin”).

Walz really gave the game away, though, when he tried to shove responsibility onto President Trump for supposedly whipping the scandal into a “white hot” frenzy. And let’s be honest — that phrasing wasn’t accidental.

Trump didn’t nationalize this scandal. If anything did, it was a front-page New York Times report on November 29 that finally dragged the story into the daylight for the political class and the legacy media. Even the pious Times couldn’t spin it away, calling the fraud “staggering in its scale and brazenness.”

Yet Walz apparently believes he can save his own skin by redirecting the flames toward President Trump — the reflex of a liar motivated by cowardice.

This is the man Democrats were perfectly willing to place a heartbeat away from the presidency: a self-described “knucklehead” who has now humiliated himself, his party, and his state by presiding over one of the most sweeping public fraud scandals in American history.

It would be difficult to make the Minnesota scandal any worse under ordinary circumstances. Tim Walz, somehow, managed to do exactly that.

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