Politics & Government

Trump Freezes $10B In Child Care, Social Services To IL And Other Democratic States

Based on unspecified claims of fraud, the freeze would impact hundreds of thousands of low-income families, day care and social services.

The Trump Administration is freezing some $10 billion in federal funding for child-care and other social services in Illinois and four other Democrat-led states over allegations of fraudulent programming.

The five states are Illinois, California New York, Minnesota and Colorado, The Department of Health and Human Services has confirmed with multiple news outlets.

The scale-back in funds could hamper child-care services for low income families in the five states as the New Year begins.

Find out what's happening in Across Illinoisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“Congress appropriated this funding to support working families and ensure children have safe places to grow and learn,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

“Loopholes and fraud diverted that money to bad actors instead. Today, we are correcting that failure and returning these funds to the working families they were meant to serve.”

Find out what's happening in Across Illinoisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

As of Tuesday, the Illinois Department of Human Services contended that the freeze is "politically motivated," according to CBS. IDHS had indicated that they had not yet been contacted about a freeze to their federal funding for social service programs.

The agency will slash more than $7 billion in funding for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. On Monday, HHS through the Administration for Children and Families said it would roll back a series of Biden-era child care rules that "weakened oversight and increased the risk of waste, fraud and abuse in federally funded state-child care."

The federal health agencies say previous rules required states to pay providers before verifying any attendance and before care was delivered.

Though child-care centers are being investigated in Minnesota, HHS has not cited any evidence or examples of fraud in the five states impacted by the funding freeze.

A senior Trump administration official told ABC News that funding has been frozen due to "rampant fraud" and "giving money to illegals."

The sudden freeze comes a month after 23-year-old conservative content creator Nick Shirley claimed in a YouTube video that Minnesota child care centers run by Somalis were fraudulently taking federal money. The video prompted HHS to freeze Minnesota child care payments on Dec. 30.
HHS Deputy Secretary Jim O'Neill praised Shirley's video in his own post on X.

"We have turned off the money spigot and we are finding the fraud," he said on Dec. 30.
Since his video went viral, Shirley told talk show host Riley Gaines that he's now receiving tips of alleged day care fraud from all over the country.

"The people have given me a mandate to expose more of the fraud, so I'll be exposing more," Shirley told Gaines.

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump announced on social media that the "Fraud Investigation of California has begun."

The president has not provided any information about what is being investigated.

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