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Stephen Miller Says Fraud Savings Could Balance The Budget

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May 27, 2026 at 1:52 pm
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Stephen Miller Says Fraud Savings Could Balance The Budget

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The Trump administration says it is uncovering widespread fraud throughout the federal welfare system, with White House officials arguing the scale of abuse is so large that stopping it could dramatically reduce the national deficit.

Speaking during a press conference Tuesday alongside Vice President J.D. Vance, White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller said the administration’s newly formed White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud has already identified what he described as hundreds of billions of dollars in fraudulent government spending.

“The amount that has been fleeced from us is in the hundreds of billions of dollars,” Miller said. “We could balance the federal budget if the only dollars that went out of the Treasury went to individuals who were properly, lawfully, correctly eligible to receive them.”

The task force, launched under Vice President Vance’s leadership, is focused on rooting out fraud across federal welfare programs, government contracts, student aid systems, and immigration-related benefit programs.

Miller praised the effort as one of the most aggressive anti-fraud initiatives ever undertaken by the federal government.

“Because of the Vice President’s leadership, you are seeing the most muscular, robust, aggressive, dedicated, determined, and speedy effort to shut down criminal fraud that has not only ever occurred in the history of this country, but in any developed nation,” Miller said.

During his remarks, Miller specifically referenced welfare fraud cases tied to Somali refugee communities in Minnesota, arguing the issue reflects broader systemic abuse within federal assistance programs.

“What’s happened to our country is we became a society, as you’ve seen with the Somali refugee problem in Minnesota, where you have a large number of people that are not following the honor system,” Miller said. “They’re not playing by the rules.”

🔥 Stephen Miller is DIRECTLY calling out the Somali pirates in Minnesota for DESTROYING our honor-based welfare system

“What’s happened to our country is we became a society, as you’ve seen with the Somali refugee problem in Minnesota, where you have a large number of people… pic.twitter.com/J76TVQYRun

Should the government focus on fraud in welfare programs to balance the budget?

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— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) May 26, 2026

The administration has also announced audits of Medicaid Fraud Control Units nationwide as part of the broader crackdown.

According to administration officials, the Department of Justice recently established a National Fraud Enforcement Division that has already identified approximately $6.3 billion in suspected fraudulent contracts.

Meanwhile, the Small Business Administration reportedly uncovered 562,000 fraudulent loans totaling roughly $22 billion. Officials also said investigators identified more than 10,000 suspected fraudulent immigration student work programs and uncovered approximately $60 million in student loan fraud.

The administration argues those findings point to deep vulnerabilities within multiple federal systems that have allowed abuse to flourish for years with little oversight.

Miller also cited a report published last December by the Center for Immigration Studies, which found that roughly 80 percent of Somali refugee-headed households in Minnesota receive at least one form of welfare assistance.

Supporters of the administration’s anti-fraud initiative say the effort could save taxpayers billions while restoring confidence in public assistance programs. Critics, however, have long argued that fraud estimates tied to welfare spending are often overstated and can unfairly target immigrant communities or vulnerable populations.

The White House says additional audits and investigations are expected in the coming months as the task force continues its work across multiple federal agencies.

The National Pulse

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