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WALZ CLOSE IN: Massive fraud raids spark HEATED showdown with all eyes on Walz

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Welcome back. The US Government

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Accountability Office out with a new

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report identifying

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186 billion dollar of improper payments

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across 64 programs in fiscal year 2025

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alone. It's one reason why the federal

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government is ramping up its fraud

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crackdown. Yesterday, authorities raided

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more than 20 locations in Minnesota,

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including multiple child care centers

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and now as well the infamous Quality

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Learing Center. Investigators say some

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state licensed daycarees may have been

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billing for services that were never

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provided. And the raids are part of the

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broader fraud probe involving largely

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Somali owned businesses. In other words,

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a federal operation, something Governor

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Tim Waltz doesn't seem to realize.

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We've created additional checks and

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balances. We've brought on more

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investigators, more auditors, more law

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enforcement agencies, as well as an

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outside firm to take a look at

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high-risisk programs. People who have

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ripped us off are getting caught, and

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they are going to jail, just like today.

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I've said the buck stops with me. And as

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I know some of you will take that as an

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open invitation to play politics with

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every incident of fraud that takes place

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here in Minnesota. Even though I have to

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tell you, the statistics show it's

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happening in red states more than here.

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But so be it.

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>> Should someone tell him? Well, I can

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leave that to the vice president. Vice

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President JD Vance, who's heading up the

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crackdown. And here's more of my

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exclusive interview with the vice

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president. As you know, Governor Tim

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Walter of Minnesota has claimed some

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credit for the fraud crackdown in

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Minnesota. Is there credit to be

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deserved for the governor?

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>> Uh, no, not at all, Will. This is uh

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like the the arsonist trying to claim

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credit for the work of the fire

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department because Tim Waltz let this

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fraud happen under his watch. Uh whether

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he was complicit in it directly himself

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or just turned a blind eye towards it.

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Uh we we really did not get much help at

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all from the governor's office. Where we

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did actually get some help was from some

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state local uh law enforcement officers

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who we assigned to the federal task

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force because the state government

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wasn't doing anything. So all credit

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goes to people on the ground, the

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federal officers, the state officers who

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are working to uncover this fraud. The

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best part about this for me, Will, is

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you you have when the president

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empowered his entire government to go

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after this fraud issue. You know, I had

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this question to the Department of

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Justice, you know, these investigations

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take a long time. So I was asking

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myself, how quickly can we start getting

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into some real investigatory work, court

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issued warrants, actually going

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doortodoor and finding out what's going

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on? People told me it would take at

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least six months. We've gone from Nick

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Shirley's video about the Minneapolis

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fraud schemes to active, you know,

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judges issuing warrants for this

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investigation in a matter of 3 months.

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We've got 280 law enforcement officers

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working on this problem. We really have

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the most accelerated aggressive

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anti-fraud operation that we've ever

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seen from the federal government. And

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again, it's because the president of

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United States empowered his team to go

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after this. That's what we're doing. And

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this is just a very very good next step.

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This is far from done, Will, but we're

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doing a lot of good work and we're

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making a lot of progress.

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>> Far from done. You mentioned complicity

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and you analogized the governor to an

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arsonist. Do you expect some type of

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accountability beyond political some

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type of accountability for Attorney

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General Ellison or Governor Waltz?

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>> Well, will we have to follow the law

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where it leads? And what we know is that

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there were multiple Minnesota

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authorities who were turning a blind eye

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to this fraud. Uh what we don't yet know

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is whether they knew it was going on as

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it was going on. But that's one of the

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things that we're looking at with these

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investigations. We're not going to, you

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know, we're not going to let anybody who

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committed a crime off the hook. And in

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fact, if you're a senior officer, if

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you're the attorney general or the

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governor or any other elected official,

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we're going to look extra hard at what

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you knew and when you knew it and how

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connected your actions were to this

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fraud scheme. But it's part of the

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reason why we're serving these warrants,

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Will, is because of course people don't

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come out and tell you, "Oh, yeah, I knew

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that the qual quality learing center was

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committing fraud and people were getting

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rich off of it and I did nothing."

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People don't say that. So, we've got to

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do the investigatory work to understand

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what was known, when it was known, and

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by whom. That's a big part of the reason

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why the fraud investigation, these

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warrants that we saw being served all

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across this the city of Minneapolis, why

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that's such a big deal is because we're

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finally starting to really get into the

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nitty-gritty of what we knew of what

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people were involved in this fraud

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scheme. But but regardless of whether

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there was criminal wrongdoing on behalf

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of the governor, of course, like I said,

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Will, we're going to let the law make

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those determinations. We know that he

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turned a blind eye towards this. I mean,

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you have people, will who came into this

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country, many of them illegally, and six

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months later they're driving Mercedes

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despite the fact that they don't have a

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job. That doesn't happen without some

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defrauding of the American taxpayer. The

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fact that they turned a blind eye

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towards it for so long as a scandal.

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We're also going to find out whether it

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was criminal.

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>> Let's stay on the note of accountability

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for one more second. You mentioned the

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people that come into this country

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sometimes illegally, sometimes legally,

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and then take advantage of our system

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here in the United States. We know, for

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example, as you mentioned with the

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Quality Laring Center, that much of this

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was located within the Somali community

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in Minneapolis. Could the law lead you

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to a place where we'd see accountability

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in the form of dennaturalization or

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deportation from people that come to

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this country legally or illegally and

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take advantage of America?

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Yeah. Well, absolutely. And that's one

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of the angles that we're looking at is

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the people who committed immigration

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fraud against our system and how do we

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denaturalize those people and send them

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back uh to where they came from. There's

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also, as you know, will under the Biden

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administration, there was a big blurring

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of the lines between illegal and legal

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immigration. The B administration would

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often take people who were coming in on

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fraudulent asylum claims, fraudulent

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refugee claims, and basically wave the

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magic wand of amnesty and say, "We're

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not going to enforce the immigration

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laws against those people." The first

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thing, and maybe the most important

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thing that we did in the Trump

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administration is that we stopped that

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from happening. But then you still have

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a lot of people who benefited from that

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Biden administration amnesty program.

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We're trying to unwind as much of that

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as possible. We we've already had some

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success, by the way, will despite the

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fact uh that left-wing radicals in the

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justice system, the court system have

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tried to stop us. We have been able to

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denaturalize and actually unwind that

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temporary protected status, a lot of

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those fraudulent asylum claims. So, that

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work has been happening, but it's going

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to keep on happening so long as Donald

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Trump is president. I think Minneapolis

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is the tip of the iceberg. I think

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there's sort of a good news bad news

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situation in that will which you know

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