We start today with yet another blue state disaster—when it comes to the money from hard-working taxpayers.
In fact, if Minnesotans know what’s good for them, Tim Walz’ days as the state’s governor are numbered.
You heard it here first last week, but the cover has been officially blown on just how much corruption and fraud has taken place under Walz’ leadership in the land of 10,000 lakes—and just how responsible he is for it.
The facts are so egregious, so scandalous, that even the *New York Times* couldn’t pass up a story this shocking.
An attorney representing some of the 86 defendants being accused of fraud in Minnesota told the *Times* that his defendants “became convinced that state agencies were tolerating, if not tacitly allowing, the fraud.”
“No one was doing anything about the red flags,” he said. “It was like someone was stealing money from the cookie jar and they kept refilling it.” – Mr. Pacyga, defendants’ attorney
He went on to say, “No one was doing anything about the red flags… It was like someone was stealing money from the cookie jar and they kept refilling it.”
If I were more naive, I’d call it shocking—but it does not surprise me one bit to find that Tim Walz turned a blind eye to corruption and fraud just to secure an important voting bloc in Minneapolis.
And according to government employees, he did a lot more than turn a blind eye.
That’s right: a Twitter account for the Minnesota Department of Human Service Employees—which represents almost 500 employees—has officially turned on the governor.
In a lengthy X post, the employees say the governor can’t claim ignorance. They wrote:
‘Tim Walz is 100% responsible for massive fraud in Minnesota. We let Tim Walz know of fraud early on, hoping for a partnership in stopping fraud but no, we got the opposite response. Tim Walz systematically retaliated against whistleblowers using monitoring, threats, repression, and did his best to discredit fraud reports.’ – Minnesota Department of Human Service Employees X Account
They also exposed their bosses for being part of the cover-up, writing:
“Our administrators are actively deleting incriminating evidence. Destroying data and documents. Thereby preventing us from attaining justice and preventing future fraud.” – Minnesota Department of Human Service Employees X Account
The account has since been suspended—likely another piece of the cover-up. We’ll keep an eye on whether Elon Musk reinstates it.
Last year, the House Oversight Committee subpoenaed documents related to one of Minnesota’s fraud schemes. Walz has still not released those documents. Sounds like even more incriminating evidence is hiding behind bureaucratic red tape.
And so far, Walz is taking no responsibility. Instead, he says his state is so well-run that it just attracts criminals. Listen.
First of all, Walz had nothing to do with putting those criminals in jail—those were federal investigations.
And I would not call a state that attracts criminals “well-run.” That’s the most laughable thing I heard all weekend. Are you kidding me?
None of your constituents—other than the criminals—are glad that you’ve created a system that benefits criminals.
President Trump has responded in his usual no-holds-barred manner. He is now ordering that Somali green cards, along with green cards issued to 18 other countries of “concern,” be reexamined.
He also called Tim Walz “seriously retarded” in a Truth Social post, and then refused to back down during an Air Force One gaggle. Listen.
There’s definitely something wrong with Tim Walz—although maybe my money would be on a pure lack of morals and integrity.
And of course, Walz went out on NBC to condemn Trump for his “hateful behavior,” saying that he considers Trump’s indictment a “badge of honor.” I guess he has no shame over his failure.
Oh, save me the crocodile tears, Tim. If you’re gonna give it, you gotta take it—and we haven’t forgotten how much “hateful behavior” Walz has engaged in against Donald Trump. Here’s a refresher.
Walz wants us to be more upset about “mean tweets” than about his bungling of billions of taxpayer dollars, but the American people aren’t so easily distracted anymore.
And it goes the same for the “race card,” which Walz also tried to play. He says Trump is “demonizing” Somalians.
All but eight of the 86 people charged in the meals, housing, and autism therapy fraud cases are of Somalian descent. That’s just fact—not racism. And it’s so predictable that he would try to deflect by playing the race card.
Americans are tired of it, and Minnesotans are tired of it—like this guy. Listen.
Walz’ failures should transcend political party. He’s failed Republicans and Democrats alike. I hope many more will join the call for his resignation.
Because demanding accountability isn’t racist.
We’re seeing the results of unchecked immigration on a daily basis. It’s a no-brainer that bad things happen when millions are allowed into our nation unvetted, under special status orders, who don’t share our values.
And the Trump administration is taking it seriously. Under Secretary of State Marco Rubio, 80,000 visas have been revoked in 2025, with the leading causes being DUIs, assault, and theft.
And the State Department isn’t going to be shamed into believing that’s racist.
In the words of Donald Trump: they’re not sending their best.
Minnesotans deserve the same kind of leadership—a government that protects their tax dollars, safeguards whistleblowers, and tells the truth, not one that hides behind excuses, deflections, and suspended accounts.
The pattern under Walz isn’t an accident; it’s a culture of neglect and retaliation that allowed corruption to flourish. No amount of spin can cover up billions lost, warnings ignored, or citizens endangered. Accountability is not partisan—it’s essential for a functioning state.
Minnesotans are waking up, demanding transparency, and refusing to be gaslit any longer. If integrity still matters in Minnesota, then Tim Walz’s time in office should be coming to an end.
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