FeaturedFeeding Our FuturemediaMinnesotaTim Walz

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Asked this past Sunday on Meet the Press whether he accepted responsibility for the massive Feeding Our Future fraud that took place under the auspices of his administration, Governor Walz said he accepted resonsibility for “putting people in jail.” Walz, however, has put no one in jail. Federal agents and the United States Attorney for the District of Minnesota investigated, exposed, and prosecuted the Feeding Our Future fraudsters while Walz slept. In the video below a local reporter has the temerity to challenge Walz on this point. As John noted here, Walz does not take it well.

Once upon a time Walz blamed Judge John Guthmann for tying his hands in the case. He couldn’t anything about it! Now he wants to sound like a tough guy. At the Washington Free Beacon, Meghan Blonder details the relevant facts in “‘Then Why Aren’t There State Prosecutions?’ Local Reporter Calls BS on Tim Walz’s Claim He Sent Somali Fraudsters to Jail.”

Does Walz really think he can continue his charade up to November 2026? He seems to think claims that people are being mean to him will carry the day. In the video below, Walz asserts that people are driving by “[his] house]” and “using the r-word in front of people.” I would find that offensive, but what does that mean? Let’s hear from the “people.”

I doubt Walz’s veracity as well. Walz impersonates a man in distress as he tells his story. From a guy who slings offensive epithets with abandon, the fear that “retard” might lead to violence is a bit rich. Maybe violent laughter.

Walz’s “house” is the governor’s mansion on Summit Avenue in St. Paul. He reportedly returned to the mansion in February 2025 after renovations beginning in July 2023. The renovations included improved security features. (In the interim Walz lived at Eastcliff, a University of Minnesota-owned property along the Mississippi River.)

The governor’s mansion is recessed from the street and protected by an iron fence around the perimeter. It would be difficult to hear anything from the street inside the mansion. Who said what to whom and where? I’m thinking “liar” might be more like it.



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