Minnesota was just put on notice.
The Trump administration is unleashing a federal “strike team” on the state’s unemployment system, tying it to a billion‑dollar web of alleged fraud, Somali‑linked scandals, and even whispered terror financing. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez‑DeRemer says abuse “will NOT be tolerated” — but state officials insist they’re being smeared. Now, with billions unaccou… Continues…
Federal scrutiny of Minnesota has escalated from headlines to high‑stakes confrontation. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez‑DeRemer is dispatching a specialized unemployment insurance “strike team” to probe whether the state’s UI system has been exploited, following massive fraud scandals in Medicaid and the Feeding Our Future case. The move comes as Trump officials publicly question how public money has been monitored under Democratic Gov. Tim Walz, even as his administration touts strong economic rankings and a budget surplus.
Behind the politics lies a volatile mix of confirmed fraud, unproven allegations, and charged rhetoric about Minnesota’s Somali community. Federal officials have cited conservative media claims that some proceeds may have reached al‑Shabaab, though no terrorism‑financing charges have been filed. State employment officials counter that their payment accuracy and fraud controls outperform national standards and say they welcome federal review. The strike team’s findings will test those assurances — and determine whether Minnesota’s crisis is mostly criminal, mostly political, or both.