Tim Walz's, DFL's culture of fraud

DFL Rep. Dave Pinto apparently thinks that hearing DFL whistleblowers from Minnesota's Department of Human Services testify before the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee isn't the definition of bipartisanship. According to this Alpha News article, "DFL Reps. Dave Pinto and Emma Greenman disagreed with Robbins’ comments, with Pinto saying the committee 'achieved nothing' and was a forum for 'partisan presentation after partisan presentation' while other committees worked on anti-fraud legislation."

Rep. Pinto either isn't that bright or isn't that honest. That testimony alone makes the Committee's work bipartisan. If Rep. Pinto didn't like the content of these DFL whistleblowers' testimony, he should've objected to Gov. Walz's turning a blind eye towards the massive Medicaid fraud that's been prosecuted. Better yet, Rep. Pinto should've criticized Gov. Walz allegedly retaliating against these DFL whistleblowers.

Exposing the fraud alone is the opposite of "achieving nothing." Exposing Gov. Walz's alleged retaliation against these whistleblowers is a major accomplishment, too. This NewsNation report got national attention:

Rep. Pinto appears to be a partisan hack. He's playing a poor hand poorly. Gov. Walz essentially ignored the fraud for electoral reasons. Then, when he got caught, Gov. Walz insisted that President Trump was at fault and that the crisis wasn't as big as President Trump said it was. Exposing Gov. Walz as a stone-cold liar and driving him from the governor's race alone is a big deal.

This cover-up wouldn't have been possible without the help of DFL politicians and parts of the Twin Cities media. They both worked overtime covering this up.

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