Politics
Pressure Builds for Tim Walz to Resign After Viral Video of Somali Daycare Fraud
MINNESOTA – Governor Tim Walz is at the center of a fast-growing controversy that has drawn national attention. A viral video from independent YouTuber Nick Shirley put a spotlight on alleged fraud inside the state’s publicly funded child care system.
The claims, which include “ghost” daycare centers collecting large subsidies, triggered sharp public backlash and renewed calls for accountability from state leaders. The uproar has also added fuel to demands for Governor Tim Walz to resign.
At the same time, questions have surfaced about a major jump in the reported value of companies tied to Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband, Tim Mynett, as investigators look at wider corruption concerns. With federal agents moving into Minneapolis, many Minnesotans say they want clear answers and real consequences.
Viral Video Puts Daycare Subsidies Under the Microscope
The controversy took off after a 42-minute YouTube video titled “I Investigated Minnesota’s Billion Dollar Fraud Scandal.” The video was posted days before Christmas by Nick Shirley, a 23-year-old conservative influencer.
With a small crew and a camera, Shirley went to close to a dozen daycare sites in Minneapolis. Many were reportedly owned by Somali immigrants and received public support through programs such as the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP).
In the footage, Shirley shows empty buildings, locked doors, and no visible staff or children. Viewers also saw signage with errors, including one sign reading “Quality Learing Center.” Shirley said one location that looked unused had still received more than $4 million in public money.
The video spread quickly, reaching millions of views and sparking loud debates online. Shirley claimed he identified more than $110 million in possible fraud in one day. He also pointed to earlier cases, including the Feeding Our Future scandal, where $250 million meant for child meals during the COVID-19 pandemic was allegedly stolen.
Some critics, including media outlets, accused Shirley of chasing shock value and targeting Somali-owned businesses. They also argued he showed up outside regular hours. Supporters pushed back and said he did the work others would not, calling him a citizen journalist who exposed abuse of taxpayer dollars.
Soon after, Homeland Security agents arrived in Minneapolis. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem described it as a “massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud.” The FBI and other federal agencies also increased activity, with officials calling the allegations a “tip of a very large iceberg.” Shirley later posted follow-up videos showing tense encounters with officials and said he faced threats, which highlighted how heated the situation had become.
Allegations Focus on Empty Centers
The main allegation centers on daycare providers that appear to exist on paper but not in practice. Shirley’s team tried to enroll a made-up child at several sites. In the video, many locations appeared closed, with no one answering the door and no children present.
One site tied to millions in funding became a flashpoint because the building looked inactive and the sign had a visible typo, raising concerns about oversight and licensing controls.
The claims land in a state already dealing with past fraud cases. Under Governor Walz’s administration, Minnesota has faced repeated accusations of weak monitoring across programs tied to Medicaid, child nutrition, and other public benefits.
Estimates shared by critics have reached into the billions. In the Feeding Our Future case, prosecutors charged dozens of people in a scheme that allegedly took $250 million meant to feed kids during the pandemic.
Authorities said some of the money went to luxury purchases, real estate, and overseas transfers, including claims tied to groups such as Al-Shabaab. Whistleblowers, including disability advocate Nathaniel Olson, have said warnings were raised for years without strong action.
Supporters of the child care system say the picture is more complicated. They note that many small providers run home-based programs, which are common in immigrant communities. They also say a quick visit, especially outside business hours, can give a misleading impression.
Tim Walz and other state leaders say they have worked to stop fraud and have asked lawmakers for more tools. Still, the Trump administration’s move to freeze federal child care payments to Minnesota until audits are finished has reinforced the belief, for many critics, that the problem is serious.
Public Anger Spreads Online
The timing has hit Minnesota Democrats hard, adding to existing frustration about costs, taxes, and government waste. Social media is filled with posts under hashtags such as #MinnesotaFraud and #WalzResign. Many commenters compared reports of alleged fraud with the daily struggles of families trying to afford child care and housing.
The outrage grew after high-profile voices amplified the story, including posts shared by Elon Musk and Donald Trump Jr. One online post even offered $100,000 to anyone who could disprove Shirley’s claims.
Locally, residents raised concerns at public meetings and in online petitions. A Change.org petition calling for Tim Walz to resign drew thousands of signatures. Minnesota GOP Chair David Hann echoed the mood, saying taxpayers feel taken advantage of. Some Democrats have also voiced concern, while others say the backlash is being used to target Somali communities and stir division.
National politicians also joined the conversation. Sen. JD Vance called for FBI involvement and described it as a “Somali fraud probe,” a label that drew strong reactions. Protests outside the state capitol brought crowds calling for transparency. Shirley’s team also reported confrontations while filming, including being shoved out of a Somali-owned business.
Pressure Mounts on Governor Tim Walz
Minnesota Republicans moved quickly after the video went viral. Several GOP lawmakers called on Walz to resign, arguing that repeated fraud cases show a breakdown in oversight and leadership.
They pointed to the state Constitution and accused the governor of failing to protect public funds. House Majority Whip Tom Emmer cited the daycare site with the misspelled sign while pressing Tim Walz on how licensing and payment systems could miss problems that appear obvious on camera.
Walz has defended his administration’s record and said state agencies have pursued fraud cases, including actions tied to Feeding Our Future. Critics say the state ignored early warnings and allowed the problem to grow. State Sen. Karin Housley called for Walz to step down as federal raids expanded, saying Minnesota has become a place where fraud is too easy.
The situation escalated after the Trump administration stepped in more forcefully. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced 98 charges connected to the broader set of scandals. Polling has shown Tim Walz’s approval rating slipping as voters express frustration and doubt about state oversight.
Ilhan Omar’s Husband Faces New Attention
The wider controversy has also pulled Rep. Ilhan Omar into the headlines. Financial disclosures showed a sharp rise in the reported value of companies tied to her husband, Tim Mynett. The filings list values moving from modest amounts to figures as high as $30 million. Mynett’s firm, Rose Lake Capital, started in 2022. The company also removed names from its website during the scrutiny, which raised more questions online.
A conservative watchdog group said it is reviewing the disclosures and looking for possible connections to Minnesota programs now under investigation. Omar has rejected the accusations, said she is not a millionaire, and called the criticism partisan. Republicans argue the overlap between her district and areas linked to alleged fraud makes transparency even more important. Calls for federal review and conflict-of-interest checks have continued as agencies investigate.
Federal agencies have taken a bigger role, including freezing funds and sending agents to investigate. Supporters of the move say Minnesota needed outside pressure to force audits and tighter controls. DHS has also reviewed immigration-related fraud claims, including marriage fraud, while the FBI has focused on networks described as Somali-linked.
Some critics have also attacked major media outlets. They say coverage has focused too much on trying to discredit Shirley, instead of fully examining the fraud claims and oversight failures.
As 2025 ends, the Minnesota child care fraud allegations have become a warning about what can happen when public programs grow faster than enforcement. With billions of dollars and public trust on the line, Minnesotans want results, not talking points. Whether the pressure leads to a resignation, new charges, or deeper reforms is still unknown. The anger and scrutiny are not fading.
Politics
President Trump Addresses Nation on War with Iran
WASHINGTON, D.C. – President Donald Trump addressed the American public from the White House on Wednesday night in his first prime-time national address since the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran in late February, declaring that American military objectives are on the verge of being achieved and that the conflict, now in its 32nd day, will conclude “very shortly.”
Speaking for roughly 19 minutes, the president said U.S. forces have achieved “overwhelming victories” but did not offer a definitive timeline as questions swirled about when and how the war could formally wrap up.
According to a White House official ahead of the address, the president was expected to reaffirm his intention to end the war within the next three weeks and relay an “operational update” on the progress of the conflict, which he and top administration officials have characterized as running ahead of schedule.
“Operation Epic Fury”: Four Goals, One Deadline
“I’ve made clear from the beginning of Operation Epic Fury that we will continue until our objectives are fully achieved,” Trump told the nation. “Thanks to the progress we’ve made, I can say tonight that we are on track to complete all of America’s military objectives shortly, very shortly.”
The president again outlined the four core objectives the White House says it is pursuing: destroying Iran’s missiles and production facilities, annihilating its navy, ensuring Iran can no longer support regional militant groups, and guaranteeing that Tehran cannot obtain a nuclear weapon.
Trump reminded the nation that past American conflicts — World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the war in Iraq — lasted for years, while he expects this operation to conclude soon. “We are in this military operation, so powerful, so brilliant, against one of the most powerful countries for 32 days, and the country has been eviscerated,” he said.
Threats Against Iran’s Energy Infrastructure
In some of the speech’s most pointed language, Trump escalated his warnings against Tehran, threatening severe consequences if Iran’s leadership refuses to negotiate.
The president said the U.S. will hit Iran “extremely hard” over the next two to three weeks and threatened to obliterate all of Iran’s electric generating plants and target its oil sites if the country’s leaders don’t make a deal.
Trump had previously threatened to destroy Iran’s water and energy infrastructure if a deal to end the war and reopen the key trade route is not reached soon. Wednesday night’s address signaled no retreat from that posture.
The remarks drew immediate condemnation from international observers and human rights organizations who warned that targeting civilian energy infrastructure could constitute a violation of the Geneva Convention.
The Strait of Hormuz: An Economic Crisis at Choke Point
Central to Wednesday’s address was the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes. Iran has effectively shuttered the passage since the war began, triggering a cascading global economic shock.
As a result of the war, Iran has sharply curtailed traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, leading to higher oil prices, with gasoline in the U.S. now averaging more than $4 per gallon — a level not seen since 2022.
Higher fuel costs are beginning to ripple through prices on a wide variety of goods. The Strait’s closure has also raised the price of some fertilizers, hurting farmers.
Trump told allies that countries heavily relying on the Strait of Hormuz “must take care of that passage” and “grab it and cherish it,” suggesting nations struggling to secure sufficient fuel should purchase it from the United States. He added that once the conflict concludes, “the strait will open up naturally.”
Earlier in the day, Trump had urged allies who did not join the war but are facing fuel shortages to “build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT,” saying the United States “won’t be there to help you anymore.”
Iran Rejects Ceasefire Claims, Vows to Continue Fighting
Hours before Trump’s primetime address, the president posted on social media claiming Iran’s president had asked for a ceasefire — a claim Tehran flatly denied.
Iran’s foreign minister called Trump’s claim “false and baseless,” according to a report on Iranian state television.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Al Jazeera that Tehran is not in direct negotiations with Washington, despite Trump’s claims that the U.S. is in “serious discussions” with what he described as a “new, and more reasonable regime” in Iran. “Negotiation is when two countries engage in talks to reach an agreement, and such a thing does not exist between the United States and us,” Araghchi said.
Iran’s foreign minister also said his country is prepared for “at least six months” of war, directly contradicting Trump’s two-to-three-week timeline for wrapping up the operation. “We do not set any deadlines for defending ourselves,” Araghchi told Al Jazeera. “We will defend our country and our people as far as necessary and by any means required.”
Regime Change and Nuclear Ambiguity
Trump addressed the sensitive issue of regime change, saying, “Regime change was not our goal. We never said regime change. But regime change has occurred because of the deaths of all of their original leaders. They’re all dead. The new group is less radical and much more reasonable.”
On the question of Iran’s nuclear capability — cited by the administration as a central justification for launching the war — the president’s position remained notably ambiguous. Trump said Tuesday, “They will have no nuclear weapon, and that goal has been attained.” But he later hinted that another president may have to return to the issue in the future, saying Iran “will not be able to do a nuclear weapon for years.”
Netanyahu, for his part, asserted that the U.S.-Israeli strikes have eliminated Iran’s ability to produce nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, thereby removing what he called “two existential threats” to Israel.
Lebanon, Gulf States, and the Widening War
Lebanon has become another major front in the larger Middle East war. More than 1,300 people in Lebanon have been killed in about four weeks of Israeli attacks, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry, and more than a million people have been displaced by the fighting and Israel’s broad evacuation warnings.
A drone attack struck Kuwait International Airport’s fuel depots on Wednesday, causing a “massive blaze” with significant damage to fuel tanks, though no injuries were reported. Meanwhile, Bahrain’s Interior Ministry said it was working to extinguish a fire at a company facility following a separate Iranian drone attack.
Some Persian Gulf allies, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, have privately urged the Trump administration to press ahead with strikes on Iran to ensure the regime can no longer threaten the region with ballistic missiles and drones. “Our message is: Finish the job,” said one senior Gulf official.
Public Opinion and Political Pressures
The address comes at a politically fraught moment for the administration. Trump’s approval rating has continued to slide amid the war, hitting first-term lows in both the New York Times and RealClearPolitics polling averages.
New CNN polling shows just one-third of the American public believes Trump has a clear plan to handle the situation in Iran. Americans are not sold on the war’s costs, and significantly more Americans say the economy — rather than the war — is the most important issue facing the country.
Oil prices fell below $100 per barrel, and Asian shares surged on Wednesday over renewed optimism about a potential de-escalation following Trump’s suggestion he would likely end U.S. operations within several weeks. Brent crude, the international benchmark, dropped to $99.05 per barrel in early trading.
The foreign ministers of Pakistan and China issued a joint statement Tuesday calling for talks as part of a broader peace plan, demanding a ceasefire, an end to attacks on civilian infrastructure, and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
As the conflict enters its second month with no formal ceasefire in sight, the coming days may prove decisive — a sentiment echoed by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who declared earlier this week that the “upcoming days will be decisive” in the war with Iran.
This is a developing news story. Updates will be published as further information becomes available.
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Politics
Swalwell Panics Demands FBI Halt Release of Fang Fang Spy Files
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Eric Swalwell from California battles FBI Director Kash Patel in a heated Washington showdown. Swalwell acts fast to stop the FBI from sharing files on a 10-year-old probe.
Those files link him to Christine “Fang Fang” Fang, a woman suspected of spying for China. She got close to several California Democrats back in the early 2010s.
Swalwell’s lawyers fired off a cease-and-desist letter to Patel on Monday. They demand he drop all plans to release the records right away. The probe never led to charges against Swalwell. For example, the Associated Press got a copy of the letter.
Top lawyers Sean Hecker and Norm Eisen signed it. They warn that Patel risks big legal trouble for himself, the FBI, and others. “You aim to smear him and hurt his run for California governor,” they state. They add that sharing the files breaks federal laws in key ways.
The letter sets a deadline. It asks Patel and the FBI to confirm in writing by Wednesday that they won’t release anything. So far, no public reply has come out.
Old Spy Probe Comes Back to Life
This story goes back over 10 years. Fang helped Swalwell raise funds. She also placed an intern in his office during his 2014 campaign. She first connected with his team in 2012 as he ran for Congress. Federal agents warned Swalwell in 2015.
They also briefed Congress then. Swalwell cut ties after that, he says.
No one ever charged him with anything wrong. A House Ethics probe started in 2021. It ended two years later with no action. The Justice Department skipped charges, too.
However, the case stirs again now. Critics point to the timing as no accident. FBI staff in California collect and edit documents now. They prep them for top Trump officials, says the New York Times. It cites three sources who know. The Washington Post broke the story first. They note this public release would break norms for cases without charges.
In addition, the Post reports something wild. The FBI eyes a visa for Fang to visit the U.S. She could talk to agents about Swalwell. Agents rarely do that with accused foreign spies.
Eric Swalwell Calls It Election Meddling
Swalwell speaks out strongly. He leads in the June 2 California governor’s primary. He sees the FBI push as a Trump White House trick to sway the race.
“It’s just 34 days until voting starts in California,” he told CNN’s Brianna Keilar on Monday. “Polls show us out front. The president wants his pick out West.”
On CNN, he calls any file release straight corruption. He compares it to J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI days, known for dirty politics.
Swalwell hits harder online. “Great reporting shows how far the White House goes after rivals,” he posted. “Trump fights me because I’m the frontrunner now, not just because of the governor race. Still, Trump and Patel don’t choose our governor. Voters do.”
Why Swalwell’s Team Says It’s Illegal
His lawyers list clear reasons to block the release. First, it breaks the 1974 Privacy Act. It also hits Swalwell’s First Amendment rights. “He helped the FBI in a closed case with no charges against him,” they write. “No real law enforcement need exists here.” Plus, it could harm sources and methods.
They call it pure politics, too. “You target him for his views. That violates the First Amendment,” the letter states.
The Justice Department sticks to a rule. It skips public shares on no-charge probes. Experts say changing that before a big primary would shock history.
Patel and Swalwell clashed before. In his 2023 book “Government Gangsters,” Patel named Swalwell among Trump’s foes. Now Patel controls those FBI files.
Patel mocked Swalwell publicly in December on Fox News. He joked about Swalwell dating Fang Fang again. Democrats slammed it as a personal grudge, not cop work.
The FBI defends its steps carefully. “This FBI shares more than ever,” a spokesperson says. “We prep docs for reviews by other agencies on old cases from past admins.” They skip details on Swalwell files or timelines.
Democrats Back Swalwell Hard
Top Democrats blast the moves. They see it as Trump using cops against enemies. Rep. Jamie Raskin leads the House Judiciary Democrats. “FBI smears a congressman, governor hopeful, and Trump foe,” he says. “How does that serve cops? It’s just partisan weapon use.”
Sen. Adam Schiff agrees. “Trump and his team hit DOJ foes again,” he posted on X. “Patel will do anything to pick California’s governor.”
This hits during California’s huge governor fight. Ten big names run: eight Democrats, two Republicans. Primary’s June 2. The top two advance to November, party aside. Polls this month put Swalwell high among Democrats. He even tops one Republican. That sets him up for the general.
Swalwell faces a DOJ referral, too, over alleged mortgage fraud. He calls it another attack. He dropped a suit on a housing official lately. Last September, he said he expected Trump to prosecute him. Patel’s book lists him as a “gangster.”
No one knows if files drop or when. Yet this Fang Fang fight spotlights big issues. It questions FBI independence, government attacks on rivals, and election-year power limits.
Swalwell risks his whole shot. Patel seems to plan it. California voters start early mail ballots in May. Who shapes the story might matter most in this race.
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Politics
Democrat Megadonor Exposes How Clueless Harris Campaign Really Was
WASHINGTON, D.C. – John Morgan, a big-time Democratic donor from Florida, went on Fox News and ripped into Kamala Harris’s 2024 campaign. He said Donald Trump’s son Barron showed more smarts than the whole Democratic team that spent a billion dollars.
Morgan runs Morgan & Morgan, a major personal injury law firm. He spoke with host Kayleigh McEnany after the election. His words spread fast in political news circles.
Barron Trump looks like a model, yet he told his dad to hit podcasts like Joe Rogan’s, Morgan explained. An 18-year-old freshman got it right. Seasoned pros with big salaries missed the mark on media.
“Barron Trump beats everyone on the Harris team,” Morgan stated flat out. Progressives skipped Joe Rogan because they did not like him.
Joe Rogan Snub Cost Democrats Big Time
Post-election talk centers on Joe Rogan. Trump’s October 25 interview hit 52 million views before Election Day. Harris’s clip from “Call Her Daddy” on October 6 stayed under one million views. Her team wanted Rogan to come to her for just one hour. He suggested his Austin studio for the usual three hours. That fell through.
Trump showed real commitment. He arrived three hours late to a rally after Rogan’s show, Morgan pointed out. Both sides differed on reaching new listeners.
Rogan’s YouTube channel has 18.6 million subscribers. Edison Research says 80% of viewers are men, and 51% are 18 to 34 years old. Harris needed young guys. Skipping this hurt badly, Morgan argued.
“If I ran things, I’d do Rogan and Fox nonstop,” he said. “That’s how you win hearts. They hid instead, so they lost hard. She should step aside for good.”
How Barron Trump Shaped the Podcast Wins
Barron acted like a secret media advisor. Jason Miller, a top Trump aide, told Politico that Barron picked key podcasts.
Those shows targeted young male fans of streamers and hosts. The plan worked well.
On Rogan’s show, Trump credited his son. “Barron’s smart and tall. He knows guys I’ve never heard of. He said they’re huge, Dad.”
Morgan highlighted this to show Democratic blind spots. Progressives stuck to their views. A teen saw clear chances they ignored.
Morgan slammed money handling, too. Harris raised over a billion dollars but ended twenty million in the red. They spent more than they took in.
Money flooded in with 100 days left. Ad buyers, talent, and consultants grabbed it all, Morgan said on NewsNation’s CUOMO show. “No ads run, no pay for some.”
Did they steal? “Maybe legally,” he replied. Lots of folks cashed in, but no crime was hinted at.
Spending shocked: fifteen million on events, four million on jets, one million to Oprah’s firm. Consultants chased fees in safe states like Florida.
“Donors fought Trump, but many got rich off it,” Morgan said. “This bars her forever. Can’t run a campaign? Can’t lead America.”
Harris Lacked Support and Skills from the Start
Morgan doubted Harris early on. Obama and Pelosi did not back her to replace Biden. Obama waited five days.
She ran before and got zero delegates, just 8% in California. Morgan begged party leaders to skip her. Biden tied her down. Voters rejected Trump, not her, he noted.
“She copies Obama,” he told McEnany. Trips to Hawaii, speech style, all fake. “She’s no Obama. Zero talent. No more runs for president.”
Harris chased anti-Trump folks. Trump built fans on podcasts instead.
Morgan’s voice carries weight as an insider. In July, he went independent on NewsNation. No cash for Harris. On X, he said you need real fire or job hopes to fundraise. He had neither.
He picked Andy Beshear or Joe Manchin as better leads. Democrats had choices but passed.
The billion-dollar flop sparked fights. DNC’s Lindy Li told NewsNation staff to quit over money mess.
Morgan’s final take stays simple. They burned cash, dodged Rogan, and ignored voters. A kid’s tips beat pros. That ends her shot at the top.
“You can’t run a campaign? You sure can’t run the country.”
John Morgan founded Morgan & Morgan, a top U.S. personal injury firm. He was a key Democratic donor. His Fox chat with Kayleigh McEnany went viral in late November and early December 2024.
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