Politics
The Democratic Party’s Leadership Vacuum Fuels Chaos and Exodus
WASHINGTON, D.C.– In the glow of Donald Trump’s return to the White House, the Democratic Party faces a crisis of identity. Once a pillar of American liberalism, it now grapples with infighting, voter losses, and a rigid attachment to ideas that repel the centre.
With the 2026 midterms on the horizon, Democrats appear not only beaten but unmoored. The party looks leaderless, disorganised, and out of step with voters who want practical answers, not purity tests.
The leadership gap is glaring and largely of the party’s own making. After Kamala Harris’s heavy defeat in 2024, a USA Today poll delivered a stark verdict. When asked who should lead the party, “Don’t know” and “Nobody” led the pack, ahead of big names like Hakeem Jeffries and Gavin Newsom.
Four under-60 figures are seen as plausible heirs: Jeffries, Newsom, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and John Fetterman, yet none draws broad agreement. Inside the Democratic National Committee, chaired by Ken Martin, tempers have flared.
Martin’s short tenure has been branded “weak,” “whiny,” and “invisible” by critics, with internal purges souring relations with allies. David Hogg, the 25-year-old vice chair, clashed with Martin over targeting “ineffective” incumbents, spurring demands for Hogg’s removal and highlighting a sharp generational split.
Years of Neoliberal Drift
This dysfunction mirrors a deeper crisis described by Left Voice. Years of neoliberal drift, mixed with missteps on protests and foreign policy, have frayed ties with workers. At the DNC’s winter meeting, strategy talks turned into finger-pointing. Jaime Harrison, Martin’s predecessor, compared it to a “firing squad in a circle.”
Progressives accuse leaders of caution and drift, while centrists blame activists for overreach. The outcome is paralysis. The party has struggled to build a firm response to Trump’s plans, from tariffs to DOGE cuts. As one DNC member told Politico, “We’re in the biggest opportunity to fight Trump in a decade, and we’re wasting it on ourselves.”
Voters are leaving at scale. A New York Times review of registration data in 30 states shows a steep decline. Since 2020, Democrats have shed 4.5 million registrants to Republicans, with losses deepening into 2025. In Pennsylvania, a key battleground, the party’s advantage fell from 517,000 in 2020 to just 53,000 this summer.
That drop was driven by 314,000 people switching to the GOP, almost double the movement in the other direction. Florida has moved solidly right as Latino voters break with Democrats. Among new Latino registrants, the party’s share dropped from 72% in 2020 to 33% last year.
Moderates are driving the shift to the Republican camp. A Gallup poll shows 45% of Democrats want a more moderate party, up 11 points since 2021, while support for a liberal course dipped to 29%. In South Texas, long a Democratic base, figures like Webb County Judge Tano Tijerina have crossed over, citing a radical turn.
Democratic Party Uphill Scrap
Ballotpedia counts 92 state legislators who have switched from Democrat to Republican since 1994, with momentum growing after 2024. These are not fringe actors. They are centre-right Democrats who say they are put off by party extremes.
Northeastern’s Nick Beauchamp warns that the progressive wing faces an uphill scrap in the midterms, while centrists press for more conservative-leaning stances to win back lost voters.
At the core of the decline is a push toward socialism and radical theory, a bet that looks costly. Ocasio-Cortez and Zohran Mamdani, a socialist rising in New York’s mayoral contest, symbolise the shift. Data for Progress finds Democrats warming to “democratic socialism,” rating it about as favourably as mainstream Democrat branding.
The catch, that warmth is mostly inside the base. Nationally, it repels voters. Critics from the Washington Examiner and opinion writers in Kentucky complain that Democrats focus on “divisive” postmodern themes, from defund-the-police echoes to strict LGBTQ+ orthodoxies and tax-and-spend agendas, while neglecting kitchen-table worries.
Jacobin argues the party has been hollowed out by nonprofits and interest groups that have edged out labour. The Guardian warns that the party’s footing is “cratering,” with millions now viewing Democrats as “out of touch.”
Democrats Out of Touch
Policy fights reflect that distance from public opinion. A Times/Ipsos poll shows many Americans believe Democrats prioritise abortion, LGBTQ+ issues, and climate over the cost-of-living squeeze. Harvard’s Youth Poll reports 41% of young adults are struggling with bills.
On defunding police, support has faded since 2020.
While 68% of Gen Z backed Black Lives Matter at the time, only 39% now support defunding in a 2025 AP-NORC poll. Green New Deal talk often clashes with daily costs, as 53% say food prices come first over environmental rules. On Gaza, mixed signals have angered both the left and the centre, fuelling primary challenges such as Katie Bansil’s against pro-Israel incumbents.
NPR finds 62% disapprove of congressional Democrats, with independents giving only 19% approval. Yet the party digs in, with 65% of Democrats saying they should “stick to positions” even if it means gridlock.
The risk is sharpest with Generation Z, born 1997 to 2012. Their numbers once lifted Democrats, with Pew showing 66% of 18 to 24-year-olds leaning blue in 2024. Now that the bond is fraying.
A Yale Youth Poll finds an 18-point gap within Gen Z. Voters aged 22 to 29 back Democrats by 6 points for 2026, while 18 to 21-year-olds lean Republican by 12. Young men are driving the switch.
Pro-Trump Sentiment
Trump improved his standing with them by 10 points over 2020, widening the gender gap to 20 points among under-25s. Harvard’s spring poll echoes this drift. Younger Gen Z is less hostile to Republicans in Congress than older peers. Trump sits at -6.2 among all youth, but a deeper -17.9 under 30.
Money worries push the trend. Over 40% of Gen Z say they are barely getting by, according to Harvard, and they want financial stability ahead of culture wars. On TikTok, MAGA creators like Theo Von and Joe Rogan outperformed Democratic messengers, with pro-Trump content roughly twice as common as pro-Harris posts in 2024.
Pandemic fallout still matters. Anger over lockdowns nudged the youngest cohort to the right, casting Democrats as the party of mandates. Independents now make up 32% of youth registrations, up from 23% in 2000, NBC reports. These voters are fluid and punish elitism.
A Wiley study says Gen Z independents, who are often Latino and vote less often, split their views, leaning Democratic on climate but Republican on borders. More than two-thirds think the system does not work for their generation, sapping trust in grand ideological fixes from Democrats.
Favourability has dropped to historic lows. Quinnipiac puts Democrats at 30% favourable, the weakest result in 35 years, with 54% unfavourable. CNN in March recorded 29%, and NBC measured 27%. Even inside the tent, the mood is sour. Internal favourability stands at 63%, down from 81% in 2021. Axios calls it a “brand problem.” Voters give Republicans the edge on inflation by 10 points, as well as on the economy and tariffs.
What comes next matters. The party must sideline its extremes, win back moderates, and speak directly to Gen Z about money, work, and the cost of living. History offers a warning. Parties do not die from one loss; they fade through irrelevance. With Trump tightening his grip, time is running out. Without change, the slide will not end in noise; it will end in oblivion.
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Tim Walz Exposed For Faking Financial Records In State Audit
MINNESOTA – A new report from Minnesota’s nonpartisan Office of the Legislative Auditor (OLA) is putting Governor Tim Walz’s administration under fresh pressure. The audit, released earlier this month, reviewed the Department of Human Services (DHS) Behavioral Health Administration (BHA) and found that state staff created and backdated documents during the audit process.
Auditors say the records appear to have been made to cover for weak oversight and questionable grant payments tied to more than $425 million in taxpayer funds.
The report adds to a growing list of concerns around fraud and waste in Minnesota social services. Walz announced on January 5, 2026, that he will not run for re-election. Many critics link that decision to the string of scandals and investigations that have followed his administration.
Major Problems With Grant Oversight
The OLA report runs about 70 pages and focuses on behavioral health grants paid out from July 2022 through December 2024. Auditors listed 13 key findings, including several problems flagged in earlier reviews. The report described repeated breakdowns, such as:
- Missing required progress reports from grantees
- Payments were approved even when the paperwork was late or incomplete
- Weak monitoring, including site visits that were not done or not documented
- Heavy use of non-competitive single-source grants without clear support for the decision
Over the period reviewed, BHA awarded more than $425 million to about 830 organizations, mostly outside government. The money was meant to support mental health care and substance use disorder services. Auditors said BHA lacked basic internal controls to track performance and confirm proper use of funds, which increased the risk of fraud and misuse.
One example in the audit drew sharp criticism. A grant manager approved a payment of nearly $680,000 to a single grantee for one month of work, and the file did not show proof that the services were delivered. The employee left state service days later and took a consulting job with the same organization. That sequence raised serious conflict-of-interest concerns.
Audit Says Walz Staff Fabricated and Backdated Documents
The most serious finding involved the audit itself. Legislative Auditor Judy Randall said the office saw signs of a “systemic effort” to alter the record, something she described as unheard of during her 27 years with OLA.
Auditors found cases where records were created after the audit began and then dated to look older. In one example, documents claimed monitoring visits happened in May 2024, October 2024, and January 2025. Auditors concluded those records were actually created in February 2025, after the audit was already underway and information requests were out.
Randall called the practice unacceptable and said it damaged trust in the review process. The report suggests the altered paperwork was used to make long-running oversight problems look fixed after the fact, instead of addressing them in real time.
Part of a Larger Wave of Fraud Claims
The DHS audit lands during a broader crackdown on alleged fraud in Minnesota’s public programs. Federal and state investigators have been looking into suspected wrongdoing that could add up to billions of dollars across Medicaid, child care, housing stabilization, and nutrition assistance programs. More than 1,000 current and former workers have come forward as whistleblowers, alleging retaliation, deleted data, and pressure to stay quiet about fraud reports.
Congress has also taken an interest. The U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, led by Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), has expanded its review of Minnesota’s handling of these programs. Comer has publicly blamed Walz for ignoring warning signs and has called on Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison to testify in February 2026. He has also pushed for cooperation with document requests.
Minnesota Republicans, including Rep. Kristin Robbins, say the state ignored auditor warnings and whistleblower complaints for years, with some concerns dating back to 2009.
DHS Response and Growing Calls for Accountability
Acting DHS Commissioner Shireen Gandhi said she was alarmed by the findings about backdated records and promised a full internal review. She also said DHS plans to tighten training, supervision, and internal controls.
Critics say those steps should have happened long ago. House Speaker DeMuth described the report as proof of a culture marked by fraud, negligence, and deception, and called for immediate reforms and possible prosecutions. Some federal lawmakers have warned that funding could be at risk if the state cannot show stronger accountability.
Walz has defended his administration in past disputes by pointing to third-party audits, paused payments in higher-risk areas, and new anti-fraud efforts. Still, the latest audit raises hard issues about who knew what, who allowed weak controls to continue, and whether anyone will face criminal charges for falsifying public records.
What This Means for Public Trust
This audit is not just about paperwork problems. It goes to public trust in the state government. The grants were meant to help Minnesotans dealing with mental illness and addiction. Auditors say the funds went out without strong safeguards, and when oversight finally arrived, staff allegedly tried to recreate a paper trail to show compliance.
With investigations still active at the state and federal levels, the fallout could shape the final chapter of Walz’s time as governor. For many Minnesotans, the biggest issue is simple: they want clear answers, real consequences, and proof that taxpayer dollars will be protected going forward.
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Politics
Sen. Joni Ernst Targets Minnesota Nonprofit Amid Fraud Scandal
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Sen. Joni Ernst, a Republican from Iowa, is moving to stop more than $1 million in federal funding set aside for a Minnesota addiction recovery nonprofit. She says the earmark raises red flags tied to Minnesota’s widening nonprofit fraud scandals.
The group, Generation Hope MN, is Somali-led and has drawn attention for listing the same address as a Somali restaurant and for links to well-known Democratic lawmakers.
Ernst plans to offer a Senate amendment that would shift the money away from the nonprofit and send it to fraud detection and enforcement instead. Her move adds to a growing GOP push for tighter controls on federal spending, especially in Minnesota, where investigators say major social service programs have been exploited for large sums.
Ernst Moves to Re-route the Money
“The amount of fraud coming out of Minnesota is shocking, and I’m worried we’re only seeing part of it,” Ernst said in a statement. “Congress should fix the problem, not keep feeding the same system that let it happen.”
The funding totals $1,031,000 for Generation Hope’s “Justice Empowerment Initiative.” The program is described as offering substance use recovery support, mental health services, job training, and educational help for East African residents in the Twin Cities. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) requested the earmark, and Minnesota Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith backed it in the Senate.
Generation Hope MN started in 2019 as a 501(c)(3). On its website, it says its mission is to build “a better, safer, and more connected community” for people dealing with addiction within the broader East African community.
Recent reports, though, have raised concerns about its setup. Those reports point to the nonprofit’s registered address above a Minneapolis Somali restaurant and claim that several leaders share the same home address.
No charges have been filed against Generation Hope. Still, Ernst and other critics say the group’s profile looks similar to patterns seen in Minnesota’s fraud cases, where some nonprofits have been accused of abusing federal and state programs.
Political Connections Add More Attention
Omar, Klobuchar, and Smith have supported programs tailored to immigrant communities across Minnesota, including the state’s large Somali-American population. Omar’s office has promoted the earmark as part of efforts to address opioid addiction in her district.
Critics say the request lands at a sensitive time. Minnesota remains under heavy scrutiny after major federal investigations into nonprofit fraud. The best-known case involves Feeding Our Future, a now-closed organization accused of taking $250 million from a federal child nutrition program during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prosecutors have charged more than 70 people in that case. They say the losses reach into the hundreds of millions of dollars.
Other probes have focused on Medicaid-funded autism services, housing stabilization programs, and childcare-related spending. Together, alleged misuse across programs could exceed $1 billion. Many defendants in these cases are Somali, though prosecutors say the schemes involve people from many backgrounds.
Ernst’s staff says they found the Generation Hope earmark while reviewing a broader spending package. She argues that putting the money into Department of Justice enforcement work would do more for taxpayers than sending it to an organization now facing questions.
ACLJ Files FOIA Requests for Records
The dispute escalated after conservative attorney Jay Sekulow said the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) filed several Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests tied to Minnesota grant programs.
On his radio show and social media, Sekulow called it a “major FOIA” push to “gather intel” on what he described as large-scale fraud being uncovered in the state. The requests went to agencies that include the Department of Health and Human Services, the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office, and the Governor’s Office. They seek documents tied to grant oversight and investigations, including alleged fraud connected to daycare and other social service programs.
The filings reflect a wider demand from conservative groups for more public records and clearer oversight. Sekulow has criticized what he calls weak guardrails, saying, “That’s not compassion. That’s corruption,” in recent broadcasts.
What This Means for Minnesota Nonprofits
The fraud cases have put Minnesota in the national spotlight. They have also led to congressional hearings and pauses on some federal payments. The Small Business Administration has opened probes into Somali-linked organizations, and Senate Republicans, led by Ernst, have asked for detailed reports on which programs were hit.
Supporters of community-based funding say these programs serve people who often struggle to access help, including immigrants facing language and cultural barriers. Generation Hope has not been named in any active prosecution. Offices for Omar, Klobuchar, and Smith have not responded to requests for comment on Ernst’s amendment.
As Congress works through the spending bill, Ernst’s proposal could slow the larger package and force a fight over earmarks and oversight. With fraud estimates rising and politics heating up ahead of the midterms, the battle over Generation Hope’s funding has become part of a bigger debate about how federal dollars should flow to nonprofits.
For taxpayers, the focus remains on whether new safeguards will stop future abuse or whether more cases are still waiting to surface.
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Politics
Iran’s Exiled Crown Prince Urges Khamenei’s Removal
TEHRAN, Iran – A new wave of nationwide protests is putting heavy pressure on the Islamic Republic, in what many describe as the biggest challenge since the 2022 Mahsa Amini demonstrations.
Crowds in cities across Iran have marched for 11 straight days, chanting against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and calling out the name of exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi as a sign of change. The unrest has reached more than 21 provinces, fueled by a sharp economic crisis and growing public anger.
The current protests began on December 28, 2025. They first centered on rising prices, a falling rial, and shortages of everyday goods. Early scenes from Tehran’s Grand Bazaar showed people rallying over the cost of living. Within days, many demonstrations shifted into direct demands to end the current system of rule.
Human rights groups that have reviewed and verified videos say chants have been heard in cities including Isfahan, Mashhad, and Ilam. Protesters have shouted “Death to the dictator,” aimed at the 86-year-old Khamenei, along with “Reza Shah, bless your soul,” a slogan that recalls the founder of the Pahlavi dynasty.
In Tehran, clashes have been intense. Riot police on motorcycles have pursued demonstrators through city streets, using tear gas and live ammunition, according to reports and video shared by monitors. On Tuesday, confrontations near the main market reportedly left several people wounded as shopkeepers joined in. Western Iran and smaller towns have also seen strong turnout, with security forces struggling to slow the pace of protests.
Rights groups, including Iran-based monitors, say at least 36 people have been killed since the unrest began. Hundreds more have been injured, and thousands have been arrested. Khamenei has publicly acknowledged economic complaints, but he has also described the demonstrations as “riots” pushed by foreign enemies.
Reza Pahlavi’s Message From Exile Gains Traction
Reza Pahlavi, 65, the son of Iran’s last shah, has become a key figure for many protesters. Speaking from the United States, he released a video message in Farsi this week that spread widely online. He urged people inside Iran to unite around disciplined, large-scale action. He also called for coordinated chants at set times and said change should not depend on foreign military involvement.
“I am more ready than ever to return to Iran and lead the transition to democracy,” Pahlavi said, while stressing that any shift must be driven by Iranians themselves.
In several cities, pro-monarchy chants have returned, including “Javid Shah” (Long live the king) and “This is the final battle; Pahlavi will return.” The slogans have been heard from Arak to Rasht, pointing to renewed interest among some groups in secular and nationalist options against clerical rule.
Pahlavi has spoken positively about recent U.S. actions abroad while continuing to frame change in Iran as an internal effort. His comments have also boosted activity among the Iranian diaspora, with rallies reported in cities such as London and Paris, as international leaders watch events unfold.
Security Crackdown Intensifies as the Death Toll Rises
Iranian security forces, including the Basij militia and the Revolutionary Guards, have responded with harsher tactics. Verified footage shared by activists shows officers beating protesters and firing into crowds. There have also been reports of night raids and internet blackouts in provinces such as Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari and Ilam, steps that appear aimed at disrupting coordination.
Activists have documented at least 36 deaths, while warning that the real figure could be higher. In one reported incident, a police colonel was killed during clashes in Tehran. Kurdish and Baloch opposition groups have issued threats of retaliation, with one coalition claiming responsibility for targeting a law enforcement officer.
In his first comments last week, Khamenei promised to “put rioters in their place.” He also signaled limited openness to discussing economic problems, similar to his approach during the 2022 unrest. That has not eased the anger. Judiciary officials have also warned that there will be no leniency for people accused of “helping the enemy.”
Iran’s crisis has gained extra attention because of major news out of Venezuela. On January 4, U.S. forces under President Donald Trump captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in an operation that led to his detention in New York on drug charges, according to reports. Trump has publicly praised the move, saying he plans to “run” Venezuela’s oil resources and warning other authoritarian governments.
Some protesters in Iran have responded by calling on Trump directly. Videos show crowds chanting pleas such as “Don’t let them kill us,” and some clips show streets being renamed after Trump. Signs have also appeared with messages like, “Trump, help us like you helped Venezuela,” reflecting fear of a violent crackdown and hope for outside backing.
Trump said last week that if Tehran “violently kills peaceful protesters,” the U.S. “will come to their rescue.” Iranian officials have condemned the Venezuela operation as a breach of sovereignty, and the comments have increased anxiety inside the regime about foreign action.
Reports Claim Khamenei Has a Backup Plan to Flee to Russia
As protests continue, Western media outlets have cited intelligence reports claiming Khamenei has a fallback plan to leave Iran for Moscow if security forces lose control. The plan reportedly includes travel with up to 20 relatives and aides, with support from Russia. If true, it highlights how much Tehran depends on close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
There have also been unverified claims that Iraqi militias could enter Iran to help with a crackdown. Similar rumors have circulated during past protest waves. At the same time, internet disruptions and heavy security deployments in Tehran point to a government under strain and trying to regain control.
In Tehran today, the mood remains tense and unsettled. Demonstrations have continued despite large security deployments, with 19 protests in the capital reported since Monday. At night, chants of “Don’t be afraid, we are all together” have echoed from neighborhoods, while bazaar merchants and students keep pushing back against pressure to stay home.
Kurdish political groups have backed calls for a nationwide general strike on Thursday, which could raise the stakes even more. With inflation climbing and water shortages looming in some areas, many people say daily life is becoming harder by the week.
No one can say for sure whether this movement will force real change or face another brutal crackdown. But for many Iranians taking the risk to protest, the message is direct: they don’t want decades more of unchecked theocratic rule.
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