ST. PAUL, Minn, — Democratic Gov. Tim Walz denounced President Donald Trump on Thursday for calling Minnesota's Somali community ''garbage'' and dismissing the state as a ''hellhole.''
Walz said Trump slandered all Minnesotans and that his expressions of contempt for the state's Somali community — the largest in the U.S. — were ''unprecedented for a United States president. We've got little children going to school today who their president called them garbage.''
Republican legislative leaders stopped short of accepting the governor's invitation to join him in condemnation, and countered that the dispute wouldn't have erupted if Walz had acted more effectively to prevent fraud in social service programs.
What Trump has said about Somali people
Trump's rhetoric against Somalis in the state has intensified since a conservative news outlet, City Journal, claimed last month that taxpayer dollars from defrauded government programs have flowed to the Somali militant group al-Shabab, an affiliate of al-Qaida.
On Thanksgiving, Trump called Minnesota ''a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity'' and said he was terminating Temporary Protected Status for Somalis in Minnesota, a legal safeguard against deportation for immigrants from certain countries.
The president went further Tuesday, saying at a Cabinet meeting that he did not want immigrants from the war-torn East African country to stay in the U.S. ''We can go one way or the other, and we're going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our country,'' he said.
And Trump kept it up Wednesday, saying Minnesota had become a ''hellhole'' because of them. ''Somalians should be out of here,'' he told reporters. ''They've destroyed our country."