Gov. Walz denounces Trump for calling Minnesota’s Somali community ‘garbage’

Democratic Gov. Tim Walz, speaking at a news conference on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in St. Paul, denounces President Donald Trump for calling Minnesota's Somali community "garbage" and dismissing the state as a "hellhole." (AP Photo/Steve Karnowski)
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Updated 05 December 2025
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Gov. Walz denounces Trump for calling Minnesota’s Somali community ‘garbage’

ST. PAUL, Minnesota: Democratic Gov. Tim Walz denounced President Donald Trump on Thursday for calling Minnesota’s Somali community “garbage” and dismissing the state as a “hellhole.”
Walz said Trump slandered all Minnesotans and that his expressions of contempt for the state’s Somali community — the largest in the US — were “unprecedented for a United States president. We’ve got little children going to school today who their president called them garbage.”
Republican legislative leaders stopped short of accepting the governor’s invitation to join him in condemnation, and countered that the dispute wouldn’t have erupted if Walz had acted more effectively to prevent fraud in social service programs.
What Trump has said about Somali people
Trump’s rhetoric against Somalis in the state has intensified since a conservative news outlet, City Journal, claimed last month that taxpayer dollars from defrauded government programs have flowed to the Somali militant group Al-Shabab, an affiliate of Al-Qaeda.
On Thanksgiving, Trump called Minnesota “a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity” and said he was terminating Temporary Protected Status for Somalis in Minnesota, a legal safeguard against deportation for immigrants from certain countries.
The president went further Tuesday, saying at a Cabinet meeting that he did not want immigrants from the war-torn East African country to stay in the US. “We can go one way or the other, and we’re going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our country,” he said.
And Trump kept it up Wednesday, saying Minnesota had become a “hellhole” because of them. “Somalians should be out of here,” he told reporters. “They’ve destroyed our country.”

Immigration enforcement in Minnesota
Federal authorities have prepared an immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota this week that a person familiar with the planning said would focus on Somalis living unlawfully in the US.
A congressional report put the number of Somalis with protected status at around 700 nationwide. Within that, Walz estimated the number of Minnesota Somalis to be around 300.
Walz and community leaders said they didn’t have figures on how many people might have been detained in recent days. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement press office did not reply to requests for details Wednesday or Thursday.
The Minneapolis-St. Paul area is home to about 84,000 people of Somali descent, who make up nearly one-third of the Somalis living in the US Almost 58 percent of the Somalis in Minnesota were born in the US, and 87 percent of the foreign-born Somalis in Minnesota are naturalized US citizens.
Uncertainty around fraud in government programs
It’s unclear how much loss there’s been due to fraud schemes against government programs in Minnesota. Many but not all of the defendants in those cases are Somali Americans, and most are US citizens.
Federal prosecutor Joe Thompson — who led the investigation into the $300 million Feeding Our Future scandal, which has led to charges against 78 people — estimated in an interview with KSTP-TV this summer that the total across several programs could reach $1 billion.
Walz said an audit due for completion by late January should give a better picture, but allowed that the $1 billion figure “certainly could be” accurate. He said his administration is taking aggressive action to prevent additional fraud.
Republicans are treading lightly
“Demonizing an entire group of people by their race and their ethnicity, a very group of people who contribute to the vitality — economic, cultural — of this state is something I was hoping we’d never have to see. This is on top of all the other vile comments,” Walz told reporters during a briefing on the state’s budget.
Republican Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth, who is running for governor and has said she hopes to win Trump’s endorsement, hedged when asked if she would condemn the president’s remarks, too.
“In no way do I believe any community is all bad. Just like I don’t believe any community is all good,” Demuth said. “What we need to do is call the fraudsters in any community accountable for their actions and stop it here in the state of Minnesota.”
GOP state Sen. Eric Pratt, who is running for the suburban congressional seat being vacated by Democratic US Rep. Angie Craig, went a little further.
“It wasn’t said the way that I would have said it,” Pratt said. “But what I will say is, I share the president’s frustration in the amount of fraud and corruption that’s effectively gone on in the state. I mean, it’s really put a black eye on the state, and we are in the national news for all the wrong reasons.”
Lawmakers in Ohio speak out
The president’s attacks also drew condemnations Thursday from lawmakers in Ohio, which has the second-largest Somali population in the US.
“Our Somali neighbors deserve to live in a state where they are respected for their contributions and not singled out by divisive commentary,” said state Rep. Terrence Upchurch, president of the Ohio Legislative Black Caucus.
“President Trump’s comments about Somali immigrants are xenophobic, dangerous and wholly unacceptable from any public official, let alone the President of the United States,” the Ohio Jewish Caucus said in a separate statement.


Putin says there are points he can’t agree to in the US proposal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine

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Putin says there are points he can’t agree to in the US proposal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine

Russian President Vladimir Putin says some proposals in a US plan to end the war in Ukraine are unacceptable to the Kremlin, indicating in comments published Thursday that any deal is still some ways off.
US President Donald Trump has set in motion the most intense diplomatic push to stop the fighting since Russia launched the full-scale invasion of its neighbor nearly four years ago. But the effort has once again run into demands that are hard to reconcile, especially over whether Ukraine must give up land to Russia and how it can be kept safe from any future aggression by Moscow.
Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and son-in-law Jared Kushner planned to meet later Thursday with the Ukrainian delegation led by Rustem Umerov following the Americans’ discussions with Putin at the Kremlin, but there was no immediate confirmation whether that meeting took place.
The meeting at the Shell Bay Club, a golf property developed by Witkoff in Hallandale Beach, was tentatively set to begin at 5 p.m. EST, according to an official familiar with the logistics. The official was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly because the meeting has not yet been formally announced and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Putin said his five-hour talks Tuesday with Witkoff and Kushner were “necessary” and “useful,” but also “difficult work,” and some proposals were unacceptable.
Speaking to the India Today television channel before he landed Thursday in New Delhi for a state visit, Putin said the American proposals discussed at the Kremlin meeting were based on earlier discussions between Russia and the US, including his meeting with Trump in Alaska in August, but also included new elements.
“We had to go through practically every point, which is why it took so much time,” he said. “It was a meaningful, highly specific and substantive conversation. Sometimes we said, ‘Yes, we can discuss this, but with that one we cannot agree.’“
Trump said Wednesday that Witkoff and Kushner came away from the marathon session confident that Putin wants to find an end to the war. “Their impression was very strongly that he’d like to make a deal,” he added.
Putin said the initial US 28-point peace proposal was trimmed to 27 points and split into four packages. He refused to elaborate on what Russia could accept or reject, and none of the other officials involved offered details of the talks.
The Russian leader praised Trump’s peace efforts, noting that “achieving consensus among conflicting parties is no easy task.”
“To say now what exactly doesn’t suit us or where we could possibly agree seems premature, since it might disrupt the very mode of operation that President Trump is trying to establish,” Putin said.
He emphasized that Russia will fulfill the goals it set and take all of the eastern Donetsk region. “All this boils down to one thing: Either we take back these territories by force, or eventually Ukrainian troops withdraw,” he said.
European leaders, left on the sidelines by Washington as US officials engage directly with Moscow and Kyiv, have accused Putin of feigning interest in Trump’s peace drive.
French President Emmanuel Macron met in Beijing with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, seeking to involve him in pressuring Russia toward a ceasefire. Xi, whose country has provided strong diplomatic support for Putin, did not say respond to France’s call, but said that “China supports all efforts that work toward peace.”
Russian barrages of civilian areas of Ukraine continued overnight into Thursday. A missile struck Kryvyi Rih on Wednesday night, wounding six people, including a 3-year-old girl, according to city administration head Oleksandr Vilkul.
The attack on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s hometown damaged more than 40 residential buildings, a school and domestic gas pipes, Vilkul said.
A 6-year-old girl died in the southern city of Kherson after Russian artillery shelling wounded her the previous day, regional military administration chief Oleksandr Prokudin wrote on Telegram.
The Kherson Thermal Power Plant, which provides heat for over 40,000 residents, shut down Thursday after Russia pounded it with drones and artillery for several days, he said.
Authorities planned emergency meetings to find alternate sources of heating, he said. Until then, tents were erected across the city where residents could warm up and charge electronic devices.
Russia also struck Odesa with drones, wounding six people, while civilian and energy infrastructure was damaged, said Oleh Kiper, head of the regional military administration.
Overall, Russia fired two ballistic missiles and 138 drones at Ukraine overnight, officials said.
Meanwhile, in the Russia-occupied part of the Kherson region, two men were killed by a Ukrainian drone strike on their vehicle Thursday, Moscow-installed regional leader Vladimir Saldo said. A 68-year-old woman was also wounded in the attack, he said.