『Minnesota Governor Walz Condemns Federal ICE Crackdown as Political Retribution Amid Welfare Fraud Investigation』のカバーアート

Minnesota Governor Walz Condemns Federal ICE Crackdown as Political Retribution Amid Welfare Fraud Investigation

Minnesota Governor Walz Condemns Federal ICE Crackdown as Political Retribution Amid Welfare Fraud Investigation

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概要

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz sharply condemned a federal ICE crackdown and Medicaid funding freeze as political retribution during a House Oversight Committee hearing, amid allegations of a $9 billion social welfare fraud scandal involving mostly Somali Minnesotans, with 98 charged and 62 convicted according to Congressman Pat Fallon on Bill O'Reilly's No Spin News[5]. Democracy Now reports Walz accused federal agents of entering citizens homes without cause and ignoring court orders[1]. The 2026 legislative session, underway since February 17, features Rep. Alex Falconers bill prohibiting AI in health insurance decisions, which received its first committee hearing, per the Minnesota House site[2]. Senator Michael Holmstrom announced $37.5 million in bonding priorities for District 29, including water treatment facilities in Monticello and Howard Lake, and upgrades to Wright Technical Center, as detailed on the Minnesota Senate Republicans site[4].

A positive state budget forecast highlights growth opportunities, according to the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce[3]. DEED awarded nearly $7.5 million in housing infrastructure grants to Greater Minnesota communities like Leech Lake Band and White Earth Nation, supporting over 100 northern housing units, KAXE reports[8]. The Roseville Planning Commission approved a $119 million Minnesota State Patrol headquarters, consolidating metro operations with training facilities set to open in 2028, Finance & Commerce notes[7]. Employers face 2026 payroll changes including minimum wage hikes and Paid Family and Medical Leave contributions, per iCompPayroll[11].

No significant recent weather events were reported.

Looking Ahead: The 2026 session advances with capital bonding debates, Roseville city council reviews the State Patrol project on March 23, and ongoing federal scrutiny of Minnesota fraud cases may intensify.

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