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98 Minnesota Mayors Warn: Residents Are Paying the Price for Fraud, Runaway Spending

98 Minnesota Mayors Warn: Residents Are Paying the Price for Fraud, Runaway Spending

“Fraud, unchecked spending, and inconsistent fiscal management in St. Paul have trickled down to our cities.”

As Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) tries to gaslight his way out of the massive fraud scandal that has engulfed his administration in recent months, 98 Minnesota mayors have collaborated on a letter voicing their consternation over the state’s fiscal mismanagement and the trickle-down effect it is having on the cities they serve.

The letter, addressed to state lawmakers and Walz, states:

Minnesotans watched an historic $18 billion surplus disappear in a single biennium, only to now face an updated projected $2.9 billion-$3 billion deficit in the 2028-29 biennium.

As mayors, we see firsthand how these decisions ripple outward. Fraud, unchecked spending, and inconsistent fiscal management in St. Paul have trickled down to our cities—reducing our capacity to plan responsibly, maintain infrastructure, hire and retain employees, and sustain core services without overburdening local taxpayers.

The mayors cite a recent Minnesota Chamber of Commerce report showing just how far the state has fallen in national rankings:

  • 33rd in GDP Growth
  • 39th in Job Growth
  • 40th in Labor Force Growth
  • 33rd in Per-Capita Income Growth
  • 46th in Median Household Income Growth
  • 44th in Tech Job Growth
  • 44th in Overall Tax Competitiveness
  • Net out-migration of nearly 48,000 residents from 2020-2024

The mayors argue that these challenges are not theoretical; they reflect the very real pressures impacting their cities. And they argue that it is their constituents who are paying the price.

Property taxes throughout the state are projected to rise by an average of 8.7% in 2026. The mayors claim that rather than the increases being “local decisions,” the state’s “policies, mandates, and cost shifts” have forced city councils to raise taxes to balance their own budgets.

Fox News reached out to Minnesota State Sen. Andrew Lang (R), who serves as the Lead on the chamber’s State and Local Government Committee, who said in a statement:

Governor Walz and Democrats passed unaffordable spending and tax increases along with unfunded mandates on the promise it would make life more affordable. In reality they just passed down the costs to local governments, schools, and small businesses, who in turn pass down costs to local taxpayers and consumers.

This letter is a warning that we must reduce state spending, stop the massive fraud plaguing our state, and remove unnecessary mandates to keep life affordable for everyone.

In May, as the legislative session was winding down, Brock Bergey, a writer for local media outlet KTTC-TV, asked a good question: “What happened to Minnesota’s nearly $18 billion surplus from 2023?”

Bergey pinned the blame on DFL Party lawmakers, who then controlled both chambers of the state legislature. [The DFL (Democratic-Farmer-Labor) Party is Minnesota’s state affiliate of the national Democratic Party.] According to Bergey, “DFLers used most of the surplus to approve a $72 billion, two-year budget—the largest in Minnesota history.”

It should be noted that this outsized spending commitment was made well before the latest allegations of large-scale fraud came to light. At the time, the $250 million Feed Our Future fraud case had already been making headlines for years, but the far larger scandals — potentially involving billions of dollars — had not yet been uncovered.

Last month, Ryan Thorpe and Christopher Rufo of The Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, reported findings from an investigation alleging that millions of dollars in Minnesota taxpayer funds were funneled to entities in Somalia. According to the report, a portion of those funds may have gone to the Somali terrorist organization Al-Shabaab.

The report prompted more expansive audits of state government programs. Investigators now claim the total amount of fraud could ultimately reach into the billions.

In the video below recorded last Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson tells reporters that fraud in the state’s Medicaid program might exceed $9 billion.

The following day, Walz, accompanied by several administration officials, addressed the allegations, at a press conference of their own. Walz said that while he takes responsibility for the fraud that occurred on his watch, he claimed his opponents are exaggerating the extent of the fraud for political gain.

Deputy Department of Human Services Commissioner John Connelly told reporters that rather than billions of dollars in total fraud, his department believes the true number is far less: “We’ve seen evidence of tens of millions of dollars to this point. We don’t have evidence in hand to suggest we have $9 billion in fraud in these benefits over the last seven years and if there is evidence, we need it so we can stop payment.”

For his part, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison released a video on X casting himself as a relentless, hard-charging prosecutor — one for whom nothing slips through the cracks. The message was clear: he is unafraid to hold wrongdoers accountable and works hard everyday to protect taxpayer dollars. His office is “on it,” identifying and addressing misconduct before it can metastasize.

Can Walz and Ellison successfully convince Minnesotans to disregard what investigators are uncovering? As audits of state programs expand and the allegations of fraud grow more serious, their attempt to dismiss concerns as political exaggeration may prove increasingly difficult to sustain.

America is watching.


Elizabeth writes commentary for Legal Insurrection and The Washington Examiner. She is an academy fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Please follow Elizabeth on X or LinkedIn.

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Comments


 
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E Howard Hunt | December 23, 2025 at 6:05 pm

But, this is who we are.


 
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Subotai Bahadur | December 23, 2025 at 6:33 pm

Minnesota voters made their collective choice. They want to avoid the consequences at someone else’s expense. It is not going to happen.

Subotai Bahadur

How can any American, regardless of party, be ok with this?? If these weak and feckless compromised losers can’t do something about this how about a recall election? Get these bums away from the public funds!! Now!! It didn’t take a genius to see that Walz is a highly compromised and not too bright human being. But to be this complicit in this level of theft this man needs to go to jail!!! Where is the US Attorney on this? Who is protecting the taxpayer??? Who is being investigated/prosecuted??!!! Who is going to jail? Who is being deported??? WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE????


     
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    Conservative Beaner in reply to kshea. | December 23, 2025 at 7:03 pm

    In case you haven’t noticed, all of these scandals are nothing more than kabuki theater. Each side uses the scandals as political leverage and hardly anygoes to jail.

98 Minnesota Mayors Warn: Residents Are Paying the Price for Fraud, Runaway Spending
————————-
Good, you let the dfl put this jackass into office now you get to pay for that dumb decision.
Don’t sit on your duff, get out and vote them out for once in your life.


     
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    isfoss in reply to 4fun. | December 24, 2025 at 9:39 am

    Have any media interviewed Minnesota taxpayers for their take on this massive fraud?
    Haven’t seen any coverage of the people who voted for the fraudsters.


 
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ztakddot | December 23, 2025 at 8:21 pm

The biggest fraud is Walz. He’s only a $2 fraud even though he cost his state billions and billions.

Investigate him. There is some way he’s been profiting from it even if it only campaign contributions.

Recall him. The MN governor can be recalled. Do it!!!


 
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 3
ChrisPeters | December 23, 2025 at 8:25 pm

The Moral of the Story:

Everything the Left touches turns to crap.

Meanwhile, Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey is inciting violence against ICE. That is nothing short of galactic-scale stupid. If, God forbid, someone takes the cue and kills an ICE agent, Trump will come down on Frey, Walz, and Ellison like a pit bull on a poodle. And woe to any Democrat judge who tries to stand in his way.

I must say I never thought it would happen but Governor Walz has rehabilitated the word “retard”.


 
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TrickyRicky | December 23, 2025 at 11:27 pm

I mean this sincerely. Calling Walz a retard is, truly, a blood libel against retards.

FAFO


 
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henrybowman | December 24, 2025 at 2:20 am

“98 Minnesota mayors have collaborated on a letter”
Is a single one of them DFL?
Or is this just more political masturbation?

I went to a number of sites and can’t find a list of who these mayors are. How many are members of the DFL that, along with Walz and Ellison, turned a blind eye to this problem so they would not be called rayyyycist and islamiphobic?

Minnesotans voted for these crooks. It is now the voters’ responsibility to see the criminals held to account. They can start by getting Walz and Ellison thrown out of office, but more likely they will wait for the Feds to do this. It’s not only Minnesotans who have been cheated; it’s every American taxpayer. Let’s hear the uproar.


 
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Suburban Farm Guy | December 24, 2025 at 10:35 am

All states are red states with islands of blue in them. Look at the electoral map, you will see Mauro’s Nutjob Archipelago. All the state capitols, big citites and university towns in bright blue.. These people probably didn’t vote for Walz but he has stolen them blind anyway. Or allowed it. Guy is not exactly an evil genius but the embodiment of DEI on a very low-IQ level of incompetence. Plus he hates us.

OT: Trump IS on the ballot next year.

2.7 million working age men left the country in 2025. Another 1 -2 million were prevented entry at the border. We were told that if this were to happen, the shock to our labor force would be so intense that the economy would slump into a deep, deep recession. Yet, notwithstanding the Trump Administration’s moronic mishandling of the economy, the economy grew by an amazing 4.5% in the third quarter. At what point can we admit the obvious? The migrants were not productive members of our communities. They are analogous to an invading army ripping apart our communities.


     
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    oneoclock in reply to spappas. | December 24, 2025 at 7:24 pm

    “Yet, notwithstanding the Trump Administration’s moronic mishandling of the economy, the economy grew by an amazing 4.5% in the third quarter.”

    Wow, the economy grew all by itself, even with a “moronic mishandling”.

    Imagine how well it would have grown if an expert like yourself was in charge.

New tagline for the state: Minnesota, land of Ten Thousand Retards…

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