Author: Michael Phillips
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Minneapolis’ $250M Fraud Scandal Raises Uncomfortable Questions for City Hall
The ongoing federal investigation into Minnesota’s Feeding Our Future fraud case has cast doubt on Mayor Jacob Frey’s administration amid connections to individuals implicated in the $250 million scheme. While Frey and his wife have not been charged, their associations raise concerns about political oversight and accountability, highlighting vulnerabilities in government spending and ethics.
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Minneapolis ICE Shooting Ignites a New Flashpoint—And Raises Hard Questions About Protest Tactics and Political Rhetoric
The Minneapolis ICE shooting is a tragedy—but it’s also a warning. When protests shift from speech to physical obstruction, and elected leaders amplify incendiary rhetoric, split-second encounters can spiral into irreversible outcomes.
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Western Wisconsin Republicans Move to Attract Data Centers—Without Sticking Ratepayers With the Bill
Western Wisconsin Republicans are advancing a new bill to attract large-scale data centers while shielding families and small businesses from higher electricity bills, ensuring tech growth doesn’t come at the expense of local ratepayers.
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Tim Walz Likely to Exit 2026 Minnesota Governor’s Race, Reports Say
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has not officially dropped out of the 2026 governor’s race, but multiple credible reports indicate he is expected to announce he will not seek a third term on January 6. If confirmed, his exit would upend the Democratic field and open a rare statewide opportunity for Republicans amid ongoing scrutiny over…
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Illinois DHS Data Exposure Raises Questions About Government Data Practices
The Illinois Department of Human Services disclosed a data exposure affecting over 670,000 residents due to misconfigured privacy settings on public planning maps. The incident, discovered in September 2025, has raised concerns about data security practices and the use of third-party tools. Steps for affected individuals include monitoring credit and being cautious of fraud.
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Minnesota’s Fraud Reckoning: When Oversight Fails, Everyone Pays
Federal investigators are probing what prosecutors describe as “industrial-scale fraud” across Minnesota’s social services programs. From the Feeding Our Future scandal to new daycare allegations, the state faces a reckoning over lax oversight—and taxpayers are left holding the bill.
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Ohio Lawmakers Call for Scrutiny of Publicly Funded Daycares as Fraud Allegations Surface
Ohio lawmakers are calling for unannounced inspections and audits of publicly funded daycare centers in Columbus amid growing concerns about potential misuse of taxpayer dollars, though no confirmed fraud cases have been identified so far.
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Illinois PPP Loan Fraud Scandal Exposes Deeper Problems of Oversight and Public Trust
An investigation by the Chicago Tribune reveals widespread fraud involving government employees in Illinois who improperly obtained Paycheck Protection Program loans intended for small businesses during COVID-19. The findings highlight systemic failures in oversight and accountability, prompting concerns about public trust and the future of emergency spending policies.
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When the Safety Net Frays: Nebraska’s Murder-Suicide Spike Exposes a Broader Crisis
A sharp rise in murder-suicides in Nebraska during 2025 exposes what happens when domestic violence services, protection order enforcement, and mental health intervention all fall short at once—leaving families, especially children, to bear the cost.
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Ohio Bets on Accountability Over Ambiguity in Election Oversight
Ohio begins 2026 with a major overhaul of its election enforcement system, replacing a long-criticized commission with a new body designed to bring accountability and real enforcement power to campaign finance and election law oversight—raising both hopes for reform and questions about independence.