WASHINGTON — The Trump administration plans to freeze $10 billion in funding for child care subsidies, social services and cash support for low-income families in five states controlled by Democrats, claiming widespread fraud throughout those states, without citing evidence, after a major welfare fraud scheme in one of them.
Minnesota, New York, California, Illinois and Colorado will be cut off from around $7 billion in funding for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, which provides cash assistance to households with children, according to two people familiar with the matter. The five states will also lose access to nearly $2.4 billion for the Child Care and Development Fund, which supports child care for working parents, and around $870 million for social services grants that mostly benefit children at risk, the people said.
The funding pause could jeopardize programs that serve hundreds of thousands of low-income households in the five states.
The planned freeze appears to build on the administration’s pause last week in $185 million in annual aid to Minnesota day care centers after investigators said that more than a dozen welfare fraud schemes in that state had led to billions of dollars in taxpayer losses.
No evidence has suggested that the other four Democratic states suffered similar widespread welfare frauds, but Andrew Nixon, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, which is in charge of disbursing the funding, suggested that the fraud cases in Minnesota led to the freeze.
“Democrat-led states and governors have been complicit in allowing massive amounts of fraud to occur under their watch,” Nixon said in a statement. “Under the Trump administration, we are ensuring that federal taxpayer dollars are being used for legitimate purposes.”
The planned freeze, reported earlier by The New York Post, is the latest in the Trump administration’s pattern of interrupting federal dollars to Democratic-run cities and states, leveraging disbursement of congressionally approved funding to punish perceived enemies and political opponents.
During the government shutdown last year, the administration froze or canceled more than 200 projects that primarily were located in Democratic cities, congressional districts and states. The administration also cut federal disaster preparedness funds for the District of Columbia and 11 blue states after they opposed Trump’s mass deportation campaign, though a federal judge later ordered the funding restored.
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., said the funding freeze had “nothing to do with fraud” and characterized the cuts as “political retribution that punishes poor children in need of assistance.”
“I demand that President Trump unfreeze this funding and stop this brazen attack on our children,” Gillibrand said.
As of Tuesday afternoon, officials in the five states said they had not received any official notification of the funding freeze.
Trump had foreshadowed a freezing of funds for some of the states, vowing Sunday to cut welfare money for Minnesota, California and Illinois. He cited the fraud scandal in Minnesota, in which dozens of people, largely members of the Somali diaspora, have been charged with stealing hundreds of millions of dollars from a government program meant to keep children fed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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