Illustration of Minneapolis immigration raid amid political controversy, showing detentions at Somali child care centers and a GOP press event.
Illustration of Minneapolis immigration raid amid political controversy, showing detentions at Somali child care centers and a GOP press event.
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Minnesota GOP defends inviting influencer as Minneapolis immigration crackdown draws scrutiny

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Minnesota Republicans are defending their decision to help a social media influencer publicize allegations of fraud at Somali American-run child care centers, even as Democrats argue the episode helped set the stage for a sweeping federal immigration operation in Minneapolis that led to mass detentions and the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens by federal officers.

Minnesota Republicans are facing renewed criticism over their decision to facilitate a visit by social media influencer Nick Shirley, whose online video accused several Somali American-run child care centers in Minneapolis of inflating enrollment figures to receive more state money.

Details of Shirley’s reporting and the extent of assistance provided by Minnesota House Republican staff were not independently verifiable from the available sources reviewed for this fact-check, including the single cited NPR report, which could not be accessed due to technical and access restrictions. No additional, independent reporting located in a targeted web search corroborated several specific claims in the draft article, including the assertion that Vice President JD Vance reposted Shirley’s video, or that the White House “doubled the number of U.S. attorneys” in Minneapolis.

What can be corroborated independently is that Minneapolis has been the focus of a large federal immigration enforcement push described in national reporting as an “Operation Metro Surge” or similar surge operation, and that the crackdown has coincided with several high-profile use-of-force incidents involving federal immigration officers.

On Jan. 7, 2026, 37-year-old U.S. citizen Renée Nicole Macklin Good was shot and killed in south Minneapolis by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer, according to local officials and contemporaneous reporting. The shooting set off protests and drew sharp criticism from Minneapolis officials, including Mayor Jacob Frey, who rejected federal claims that the shooting was justified as self-defense. (cbsnews.com)

On Jan. 24, 2026, another U.S. citizen, 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti — a Veterans Affairs nurse — was fatally shot by Customs and Border Protection officers in Minneapolis, according to reporting that cited Minnesota authorities and federal statements. Minnesota officials later said the FBI had not provided them with key evidence they said was needed to fully investigate Pretti’s death. (theguardian.com)

Separate reporting has also highlighted disputes over federal accounts of at least one additional shooting during the enforcement surge — the Jan. 14 shooting of Venezuelan man Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis — and said video evidence has, in multiple cases, raised questions about early official narratives from federal immigration agencies about the circumstances of shootings. (apnews.com)

Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota have argued that the influencer-driven fraud allegations, and the way they were amplified, helped create political momentum for the federal crackdown. Republicans, for their part, have said scrutiny of suspected fraud in publicly funded programs is warranted. The precise quotes attributed in the draft to specific Minnesota political figures, as well as claims about a governor’s reelection decision and creation of a “National Fraud Enforcement division,” could not be verified from the accessible sources reviewed and are not included here.

Minnesota has faced major fraud cases in recent years, including the COVID-era Feeding Our Future child nutrition investigation, which federal prosecutors have described as involving more than $250 million in alleged fraud and has led to multiple convictions. However, broader demographic generalizations about those charged or convicted were not confirmed from the sources reviewed in this check and are not repeated here.

As Minnesota lawmakers head into a new legislative session, immigration enforcement and oversight of state-funded programs are expected to remain politically charged topics, amid ongoing investigations into the Minneapolis shootings and continued debate over how federal immigration tactics are affecting public safety and community trust.

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Discussions on X criticize Nick Shirley's allegations of fraud at Somali-run child care centers as unsubstantiated and sensationalist, linking them to Minnesota GOP actions that allegedly precipitated chaotic ICE operations, mass detentions, and fatal shootings of U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. Supporters defend the GOP's invitation of Shirley to highlight welfare fraud issues, dismissing media portrayals as biased. Skeptical users note that while no fraud was found at specific sites, broader investigations into Minnesota fraud predated his videos.

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Minnesota GOP chair Alex Plechash at podium addressing federal immigration surge protests and profiling concerns in Twin Cities.
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Minnesota GOP chair says federal immigration surge is “unusual,” urges review of profiling complaints

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Minnesota Republican Party chair Alex Plechash told NPR that a federal immigration enforcement surge known as Operation Metro Surge has been conducted in the Twin Cities and has fueled intense protests after two fatal shootings by federal officers. While backing the stated goal of targeting serious offenders, he said reports of U.S. citizens being profiled should be investigated if confirmed.

Somali-run child care providers in several U.S. states say they have been harassed and surveilled by strangers after a viral video by right-wing influencer Nick Shirley alleged widespread fraud in Minneapolis-area day cares—claims that inspectors later said were not supported by their follow-up visits. The intimidation has prompted some providers and advocates to bolster security and has helped fuel renewed political calls for increased oversight of subsidized child care.

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The deaths of Renée Macklin Good and Alex Pretti during federal immigration enforcement actions in Minnesota have sharpened a partisan divide over how states should respond to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Democratic-led states are exploring new oversight and legal tools aimed at federal agents, while Republican-led states are moving to deepen cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.

Four days after federal agents killed Minneapolis ICU nurse Alex Pretti during an ICE raid—detailed in prior coverage—border czar Tom Homan announced tactical adjustments in the city, as protests intensify, leadership changes occur, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar launches a gubernatorial bid citing the violence.

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Federal immigration authorities fatally shot an armed individual during a targeted operation in Minneapolis on Saturday morning. Local Democratic leaders condemned the incident and blamed the Trump administration, while President Trump accused them of inciting unrest. The Department of Homeland Security described the shooting as defensive after the suspect resisted officers.

Organizers in Minnesota’s Twin Cities region planned a series of demonstrations and trainings from Feb. 25 through March 1 under the banner “Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!”, including actions at the Minnesota State Capitol and at hotels they say are housing federal immigration agents, according to organizing materials obtained by the advocacy group Defending Education and reported by The Daily Wire.

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One day after bystander video contradicted federal claims in the January 24 fatal shooting of ICU nurse Alex Pretti during an ICE operation in Minneapolis, unlikely allies from left and right—including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Marjorie Taylor Greene—condemned the Trump administration's defense, accusing it of hypocrisy on Second Amendment rights amid the ongoing immigration crackdown.

 

 

 

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