Business
Less Talk, More Action
From the National Citizens Coalition
Meetings, meetings, and more meetings…
If Prime Minister Mark Carney could turn meetings into an Olympic sport, he’d be a gold medalist. At the recent Council of Federation meetings, the emphasis was on how well everyone gets along and how things are already in motion. Just trust the process, and results will follow. However, many Canadians — myself included — are still waiting for tangible outcomes.
(We also couldn’t sit idly by and watch those in attendance ignore immigration, and we were thankful that pressure eventually forced the premiers to address immigration.)
To be fair, I acknowledge that Carney has only been in office for a short time, so a comprehensive evaluation of his performance might be premature. That said, I find his approach heavy on rhetoric and light on action, though I sincerely hope he proves us wrong. The public is eager for concrete steps, not just promises. Here are some practical suggestions to move things forward.
- First, repeal Bill C-69, often called the “no more pipelines” bill, which creates uncertainty for investors. Despite premiers Ford, Smith, and Moe signing agreements to support pipeline construction and the development of rare earth mineral mines — resources the world desperately needs — potential investors remain skeptical without clear economic stability. And B.C., Quebec, and even Manitoba represent major potential road blocks to national projects. Investors are not swayed by symbolic gestures; they want policy changes that ensure predictability.
- Second, Carney should be upfront about Canada’s trade realities. While he claims to have held 90 bilateral meetings with countries interested in investing in Canada, the United States remains our most critical trading partner due to geographic proximity. The idea of drastically shifting exports from the U.S. to the European Union is unrealistic. Diversify, absolutely. But shipping costs to Europe and Asia are significantly higher, and geography will always play a decisive role in trade dynamics.
- Third, it’s time to address Canada’s outdated supply management system, particularly in Quebec, where farmers are protected by quotas that lead to millions of liters of milk being dumped annually. This system inflates prices for Canadians and hinders trade deals, especially with the U.S. A bold solution would be to buy out farmers’ quotas at full market value and guarantee their sales levels for 5 to 10 years. If their sales drop after the market opens, a formula-based compensation could make them whole. The cost of this buyout and transitional support would be a fraction of what Canadians currently pay for overpriced milk and other protected products.
While the National Citizens Coalition strongly supports free markets, we recognize the need for pragmatic solutions in a fast-moving world. These issues don’t require endless meetings or self-congratulatory talk about progress. Working Canadians deserve decisive leadership and measurable results — on cartels being torn down, immigration, crime, housing, healthcare, and getting energy projects built and out to market.
Together, we’re changing the conversation, holding politicians to account, and expanding the social license for the projects and priorities we need to get this country back on track.
As our month-end approaches, we’re working to meet our fundraising goals and need your support. We’re aiming to raise $5,000 in the next week to fund our initiatives, including new industry-leading advertising and messaging. And we have some big news to come shortly that we’re excited to share!
Please consider donating today and sharing our message with friends and colleagues who might also support the cause of Canadian renewal, and more freedom through less government. Thank you for your ongoing commitment. We never take it for granted.
Peter Coleman
President
National Citizens Coalition
Business
Stripped and shipped: Patel pushes denaturalization, deportation in Minnesota fraud
FBI Director Kash Patel issued a blunt warning over the weekend as federal investigators continue unraveling a sprawling fraud operation centered in Minnesota, saying the hundreds of millions already uncovered represent “just the tip of a very large iceberg.”
In a lengthy statement posted to social media, Patel said the Federal Bureau of Investigation had quietly surged agents and investigative resources into the state well before the scandal gained traction online. That effort, he said, led to the takedown of an estimated $250 million fraud scheme that stole federal food aid intended for vulnerable children during the COVID pandemic.
According to Patel, the investigation exposed a network of sham vendors, shell companies, and large-scale money laundering operations tied to the Feeding Our Future case. Defendants named by the FBI include Abdiwahab Ahmed Mohamud, Ahmed Ali, Hussein Farah, Abdullahe Nur Jesow, Asha Farhan Hassan, Ousman Camara, and Abdirashid Bixi Dool, each charged with offenses ranging from wire fraud to conspiracy and money laundering.
Patel also said Abdimajid Mohamed Nur and others were charged in a separate attempt to bribe a juror with $120,000 in cash. He noted that several related cases have already resulted in guilty pleas, prison sentences of up to 10 years, and nearly $48 million in restitution orders.
Despite those outcomes, Patel warned the case is far from finished.
“The FBI believes this is just the tip of a very large iceberg,” he said, adding that investigators will continue following the money and that the probe remains ongoing. Patel further confirmed that many of those convicted are being referred to immigration authorities for possible denaturalization and deportation proceedings where legally applicable.
The renewed focus follows a viral video circulated by independent journalist Nick Shirley, which appeared to show multiple childcare and learning centers operating as empty or nonfunctional storefronts. The footage sparked immediate backlash from Republicans, including Vice President JD Vance.
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz of sitting idle while massive sums were stolen from taxpayers. Walz addressed the allegations during a November press conference, before the full scope of the fraud became public, saying the scandal “undermines trust in government” and threatens programs meant to help vulnerable residents.
“If you’re committing fraud, no matter where you come from or what you believe, you are going to go to jail,” Walz said at the time.
Authorities say the alleged schemes date back to at least 2015, beginning with overbilling Minnesota’s Child Care Assistance Program and later expanding into Medicaid-funded disability and housing programs. One such housing initiative, aimed at helping seniors and disabled residents secure stable housing, was shut down earlier this year after officials cited what they described as large-scale fraud.
The fallout has already reached the federal level. Last month, President Trump announced the suspension of Temporary Protected Status for Somali nationals, arguing that Minnesota had become a hub for organized welfare fraud and money laundering activity.
Business
Mainstream media missing in action as YouTuber blows lid off massive taxpayer fraud
Vice President JD Vance is giving public credit to a YouTube journalist for doing what he says legacy media and elite institutions have failed to do: follow the money in Minnesota. In a post on X, Vance praised independent reporter Nick Shirley for digging into alleged fraud networks tied to the state, saying Shirley “has done far more useful journalism than any of the winners of the 2024 Pulitzer prizes.” The comment was a direct response to a video Shirley shared online documenting what he described as widespread fraud, with Shirley claiming his team identified more than $110 million in suspicious activity in a single day while confronting facilities allegedly receiving millions in public funds.
Shirley’s reporting has been circulating widely among conservatives, with commentators amplifying clips of him visiting supposed daycare and education centers that appeared inactive despite receiving massive federal aid. Conservative media personality Benny Johnson said Shirley had exposed more than $100 million in Minnesota Somali-linked fraud routed through fake daycare and healthcare fronts, adding to the pressure on state leadership. The issue gained further traction after Tom Emmer, Minnesota’s top House Republican, demanded answers from Gov. Tim Walz following a viral clip showing Shirley confronting workers at an alleged daycare in South Minneapolis. Shirley reported the center, called the “Quality Learning Center,” showed no visible activity despite claims it served up to 99 children, and even misspelled “learning” on its signage. As Shirley approached, a woman inside was heard shouting “Don’t open up,” while incorrectly accusing him of being an ICE agent.
🚨 Here is the full 42 minutes of my crew and I exposing Minnesota fraud, this might be my most important work yet. We uncovered over $110,000,000 in ONE day. Like it and share it around like wildfire! Its time to hold these corrupt politicians and fraudsters accountable
We ALL… pic.twitter.com/E3Penx2o7a
— Nick shirley (@nickshirleyy) December 26, 2025
The controversy builds on earlier reporting from City Journal, which published a November investigation citing federal counterterrorism sources who said millions of dollars siphoned through Minnesota fraud schemes had been sent overseas, with some of the money allegedly ending up in the hands of Al-Shabaab. One confidential source quoted in the report bluntly claimed, “The largest funder of Al-Shabaab is the Minnesota taxpayer.” Since that report, the scrutiny has widened inside the Trump administration. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has announced that the Treasury Department is examining whether Minnesota taxpayer funds were diverted to terrorist-linked groups, while Education Secretary Linda McMahon has publicly called on Walz to resign amid separate allegations of large-scale education fraud within the state’s college system.
Taken together, the attention from Vance, congressional Republicans, and multiple federal agencies has elevated Shirley’s reporting from viral internet content to a flashpoint in a broader debate over fraud, accountability, and the role of independent journalists. For the vice president, the message was clear: real accountability sometimes comes not from prize committees or press rooms, but from outsiders willing to ask uncomfortable questions and stand in front of locked doors with a camera rolling.
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