And in a recent House Oversight Hearing on the Minnesota fraud, Gill brought this concern up.
“Does large-scale Somali immigration make Minnesota stronger or weaker?” Gill asked Democrats’ witness Brendan Ballou, former special counsel at the DOJ.
“Certainly stronger,” Ballou replied.
“Certainly stronger,” Gill repeated, before asking, “Do you know what percentage of Somali-headed households in Minnesota are on food stamps?”
“No,” Ballou replied.
“54%,” Gill explained. “Do you know what that number is for native Minnesota-headed households?”
When Ballou tried to deflect without answering, Gill cut him off and said, “It’s 7%.”
Gill went down the list, telling Ballou that the amount of Somali-headed households on Medicaid is 73%, while native Minnesota households were 18% — and even more concerning, the amount of Somali-headed households on welfare in general is 81%.
“Somalians are contributing nothing to our society except fraud and abuse and siphoning off your taxpayer dollars,” Gonzales comments. “And I don’t recall voting to bring a bunch of third worlders into my country to use my tax dollars to go out there and create fake day cares and siphon in the millions.”
“I didn’t actually vote for that. I don’t think you did either,” she continues, asking, “So why should we continue to allow this?”
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