Minnesota's Fraud Scandal Isn't an Immigration Problem. It's a Spending Problem.
Health care fraud is an all-too-common feature of the U.S. health care system, not only in Minnesota.
In January, Minnesota governor and recent Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz announced that he would not be seeking reelection. Walz's surprise announcement came in the wake of escalating attention on health care fraud in the state, much of it tied to Somali immigrants. The Trump administration had targeted Walz rhetorically and threatened to cut off health care funding for the state. "I don't think any governor in history has had to fight a war against the federal government every single day," Walz said.
Perhaps Walz should have spent more time fighting the war on fraud and misuse of federal funds. The prior month, Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson revealed in an indictment that since 2018, at least half of the roughly $18 billion in federal funds meant to support a collection of state-run programs had been used fraudulently. "The magnitude cannot be overstated," Thompson said in December. "What we see in Minnesota is not a handful of bad actors committing crimes. It's staggering, industrial-scale fraud." And it happened on Walz's watch.
Yet Walz's negligence was hardly remarkable. Health care fraud is an all-too-common feature of the U.S. health care system—not only in Minnesota, and not only through Medicaid. Neither Democrats nor Republicans appear intent on fixing it.
Much of the coverage of the Minnesota fraud focused on the ethnic background of the perpetrators. The alleged fraudsters were disproportionately of Somali background and part of Minnesota's distinctive Somali immigrant community. A White House release on the issue noted that 78 of the 86 individuals so far charged in the scheme were Somali.
The statement then declared that President Donald Trump was "taking action" by "terminating Temporary Protected Status for Somalis, indefinitely halting migration from third-world countries, reexamining green cards for every alien from every country of concern, pausing all asylum decisions, and more." The Trump administration wanted to treat the fraud primarily as an immigration problem.
It's not. Fraud and abuse are persistent throughout the U.S. health care system.
Shortly before the scandal began to make national headlines, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report on fraud in the Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as Obamacare. The report focused on the program's "premium tax credit," essentially a federal subsidy for buying heavily regulated health insurance through government-run online marketplaces. For 2024 and 2025, GAO investigators created fictitious accounts and used them to apply for the tax credit. Of the 24 fake accounts created, 22 were approved for and received subsidies, costing the government more than $10,000 a month.
That figure is just a fraction of the true scale of the likely fraud the GAO report estimates in the program: The report found $21 billion in "unreconciled" premium tax credits. Not all of that amount is certain to be fraudulent, but given the ease of fraud, much of it likely is.
Notably, the subsidies were the subject of 2025's most heated health care debate—a government shutdown in which Democrats demanded that a temporary expansion of the subsidies put in place during the pandemic be made permanent. As House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington (R–Texas) remarked, the report "exposed the rampant fraud plaguing Democrats' expanded Obamacare subsidies, which have effectively no eligibility checks, anti-fraud controls, or other basic program integrity measures in place, resulting in billions of wasted tax dollars and increased health care costs."
These problems are not new. The GAO report found that "fraud risks have persisted since we first reported on this." That was more than a decade ago, in 2014. And that's just Obamacare. Even before that, in 2011, the GAO estimated that Medicare—the federal program for seniors—annually made $48 billion in "improper payments," which was almost certainly an undercount since it overlooked many erroneous payments in the drug program.
A separate GAO report, from 2008, detailed how watchdogs fraudulently billed Medicare after creating fake names and bank accounts and completing a cursory application process. The GAO agents even used a phone number inside the GAO office building for their application. They were approved anyway.
None of this was a result of lax immigration policy. Rather, it was a product of loose, bordering on nonexistent, spending controls on federal health care programs, in which the fundamental goal is to pay quickly and—maybe—ask verification questions later. Industrial-scale fraud is a feature of poorly designed, poorly run, bloated government health care programs. Walz was just the latest in a long line of politicians who allowed rampant misspending to persist.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Minnesota’s Fraud Scandal Isn’t About Immigration."
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One explanation does not preclude the other.
"...exposed the rampant fraud plaguing Democrats' expanded Obamacare subsidies, which have effectively no eligibility checks, anti-fraud controls, or other basic program integrity measures in place,..."
Which can also describe our refugee and asylum seeker immigration programs in the past. And it compounds the issue when you have a group of immigrants from a low trust culture that does not have much moral compunction against participating in fraud.
If it' not an immigrant problem in MN then why are Somali "immigrants" the ones running all the fraud?
More critically, if it's not an immigration problem, how is Somalia doing? If it's not an immigration problem, how is Guatemala doing? If it's not an immigration problem, how is Mexico doing? If it's not an immigration problem, why are people leaving these other "low trust" societies and coming here? If they're so inherently productive and beneficial to the local economies, why are the ones they left so shitty?
We're a decade in to border and immigration enforcement at this point and even with ICE crackdowns it was still enormously popular. Reason continues to be beyond retarded about this.
Mexico is doing rather well. Net migration to/from Mexico in recent years has been TO Mexico, as Americans are moving there in significant numbers, often as remote workers or retirees. Mexico has free universal healthcare for all residents (not just citizens). It has illegal immigrant problems because too many Americans overstay their visas. There are American schools to serve expat communities in Mexico, teaching in English. (Could you imagine the outcry from the MAGA bigots were Mexican Americans set up Spanish language educational institutions in the US? The only institution like that I am aware of is Boricua College in New York, founded to serve the needs of Puerto Ricans, not Mexicans, who as my high school Spanish teacher said are "US Citizens Not By Choice". And its language of instruction is English, although faculty are bilingual.)
Somalia is Libertarian Paradise. No taxes. No government. The government haters should emigrate there.
https://www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/countries/mex/mexico/net-migration
This is written in MollyG syntax. Completely unserious.
More like obviously partisan and retarded.
Somalia is yet another failed socialist sh1thole. Nowhere even remotely close to a "libertarian paradise"
Mexico is not doing well. The country is being consumed by cartel violence.
Please move
Why are those countries low trust and why should we expect that to magically change once they're in the US, especially in their own little cultural/ethnic enclave?
Dirty little secret:
It is a bigger problem for private insurers, which lack the resources to investigate fraud adequately. I know that from private talks with insurance executives.
I know that from private talks with insurance executives.
I know you hear this a lot, but you have no idea what you are talking about. Poorly conceived and poorly executed lies only amplify that point.
But we have to accept the standard progressive paradigm of "lived" (i.e. imagined) experiences, right?
Reported Medicare/Medicaid fraud is near double the fraud losses of private insurers (68B vs 36B). We also know much of the public fraud is never investigated by states unwilling to look. And that's with private insurers not having the heavier enforcement capabilities.
Also, private insurance handles 2/3 of medical coverage to the U.S. populace. You government loving leftists can only rely on lies.
Just want to add that maybe it is a "bigger problem" because private companies are beholden to shareholders and clients while politicians are beholden to getting people to vote for them with giveaways.
You do t have any ‘private talks’ with insurance executives. You really do spout endless bullshit here.
Retard
You know why people hated the Irish refugees when they first started pouring into the US? They were fucking grifters. They grifted their way through the country as migrant workers taking advantage of every community that welcomed them.
Same shit, different century. Crusty jugglers, the lot of them.
In a roundabout way Suderman does identify the root cause: a complete lack of oversight and consequences for illegal immigration and deliberate obstruction of any attempts to investigate by Waltz's administration, an ill-conceived attempt at nationalized healthcare known as Obamacare, and perpetual temporary extension of benefits through threats of government shutdown. They don't all have Somalia in common, they all have the Democrat party.
Nice job!
Except he's also all in for all of that.
Immigration fraud is part of the scam, too. The marks were just too willing to be a part of it all. Too stupid to realize their "No Humans are Illegal" signs and virtue signaling has left them unable to admit they were dupes and rush to defend the con.
Shorter Suderman - The government's skirt was so short it wasn't the rapists fault.
JOURNALIST: So I have this amazing fraud story. Nine billion dollars. Gone. Industrial scale. The federal prosecutor said "the magnitude cannot be overstated."
READER: Wow. Who did it?
JOURNALIST: That's not the story.
READER: ...okay. Who's responsible?
JOURNALIST: The spending controls. Also, negligence. But — and I want to be clear — hardly remarkable negligence.
READER: Hardly remarkable.
JOURNALIST: Governors just don't notice these things.
READER: The housing stabilization program was budgeted at two and a half million dollars a year and spent a hundred million.
JOURNALIST: Right. Spending problem.
READER: That's a 38-times overrun.
JOURNALIST: Systemic issue.
READER: Did the governor see the budget?
JOURNALIST: He does the budget, yes.
READER: So he saw a line item go up 3,800 percent and thought—
JOURNALIST: Minnesotans are very generous people.
READER: The House Oversight Committee says he knew about the fraud in 2019 and retaliated against the whistleblowers.
JOURNALIST: That's very political of them to say.
READER: The whistleblowers are also saying it.
JOURNALIST: That's very political of them too.
READER: He got campaign contributions from the daycare operators.
JOURNALIST: Everyone gets contributions.
READER: From the specific people committing the specific fraud he was specifically not investigating.
JOURNALIST: You're making this about immigration.
READER: I haven't mentioned immigration.
JOURNALIST: You were about to.
READER: I was going to ask about the campaign contributions—
JOURNALIST: Which is just another way of asking about immigration
Reason: Open Borders Uber Alles!
You stupid cunts.
It's a spending on immigration problem.
Seriously, Reason, grow up. The whole point is the spending was allowed to go unchecked because the scandal involved a protected class.
You've identified the actual mechanism. The fraud required two components to reach industrial scale: a willing population with the access and network to execute it, and political cover that made investigation radioactive. The 'protected class' framing wasn't incidental — it was load-bearing infrastructure. Without it, a 3,800% budget overrun gets noticed in year two, not year seven.
The "journalist" is now running the second half of the same play. The first half kept investigators away from the fraud. The second half keeps readers away from the politicians who benefited from looking away. 'It's a spending problem' is just 'it's a protected class problem' with the mechanism stripped out and libertarian vocabulary substituted in. Both framings accomplish the same thing: the governor stays off the field.
Which is increasingly obvious that widespread criminal activity where immigrants are heavily involved is ignored or covered up because of the immigrant involvement and fears that it will promote "racism". Unfortunately, what it really does is corrode the trust levels in our society.
How do they get away with this?
People always bock, it is not possible to have the amount of people involved for this conspiracy to occur.
The more involved the less chance for it to exist because someone will talk, someone will shed light on it.
It seems today the old thinking about the impossibility for the evil Cabal to exist has been proven false.
Time to change the thinking which understands how massive the groups are now perpetrating fraud in unison.
If immigration wasn't a component of the problem it wouldn't have been overwhelmingly immigrants, legal or otherwise, engaging in the fraud.
Somewhat amusingly, Reason's failure to even acknowledge that issue is exactly the kind of attitude that resulted in this problem in the first place.
Some animals are more equal than others, indeed.
JOURNALIST: So I have this amazing fraud story. Nine billion dollars. Gone. Industrial scale. The federal prosecutor said "the magnitude cannot be overstated."
READER: Who did it?
JOURNALIST: That's not the story.
READER: ...okay. What was the money for?
JOURNALIST: Meals for hungry children. Childcare for low-income families. Autism services for sick kids.
READER: Someone stole money designated for sick children?
JOURNALIST: Spending problem.
READER: Who stole money designated for sick children?
JOURNALIST: 78 of the 86 people charged are Somali immigrants. But—
READER: People who just arrived from one of the lowest quality of life countries on earth stole money designated for sick American children.
JOURNALIST: The spending controls allowed—
READER: I understand what the spending controls allowed. I'm asking about the people who looked at a program that said "this money is for children with autism" and thought "yes, I'll take that."
JOURNALIST: That's a very uncharitable framing.
READER: What's the charitable framing for stealing from sick children?
JOURNALIST: Immigration is, on net, a benefit to society.
beat
READER: ... the children with autism.
JOURNALIST: Historically and economically, immigrants contribute significantly—
READER: Who did not receive their autism services.
JOURNALIST: —to GDP, innovation, cultural enrichment—
READER: Because the money was stolen.
JOURNALIST: —and studies consistently show—
READER: By the immigrants.
JOURNALIST: —that on balance—
READER: From the sick children.
JOURNALIST: —the evidence is clear that immigration—
READER: Is good. Yes. You've mentioned that. Several times. In several articles. Nevertheless, money intended to treat poor, sick children was stolen, and the people who stole it share characteristics so specific they constitute roughly 0.1% of the American population and 90% of the defendants.
JOURNALIST: That's the spending controls.
No, it’s a fraud scandal. Case closed.
Two different problems.
Minnesota has a illegal immigration problem and a bunch of sanctuary laws, particularly in the major cities.
Minnesota has a massive fraud problem that is compounded by single party dominance.
Neither of these problems are isolated to Minnesota, but doe exist in Minnesota and are bad enough that something needs to be done to fix the problems and punish those who enabled them to get this bad.
Sanctuary laws, illegal immigration, and single-party dominance and their mixing is what has lead to MN's massive fraud problem.
At its core its an immigration problem.
First issue. Walz don't think. Second issue, Walz.
"I don't think any governor in history has had to fight a war against the federal government every single day," Walz said.
If he really said that, he's dumber than I thought.
And yet it was in Minnesota where the mix of politics, fear of Islam, and greed led to 85%+ of the people we know were involved in fraud to be Somali immigrants.
So . . . sounds like an immigrant problem.
Especially when we find, after starting to really look at other states, that its immigrant-run clinics that are the largest percentage of fraud and abuse.
So . . . sounds like an immigrant problem.
And since the federal and state governments have such strong incentives to push immigration in order to skim money and votes off of immigrant communities protecting each other while creating networks of fraud . . . sounds like an immigration problem.