Donald Trump’s bullying tricks may seriously be catching on in the White House, because Attorney General Pam Bondi just publicly offered Tim Walz a deal to get ICE out of Minnesota, and it reads less like federal correspondence and more like a mob shakedown.
In any other timeline that could still claim to recognize normalcy in a lineup, the death of Renee Nicole Good would’ve been enough to kickstart serious reforms in ICE and the Trump administration’s inhumane crackdown on immigration. But since we live in the clown world of 2025, the brutality of ICE has resulted in yet another needless death in Minnesota, a mere two weeks apart.
Since then, Minneapolis has essentially turned into a “war zone,” according to Rep. Ilhan Omar, with the Minnesotans protesting ICE’s illegal raids and brutal tactics against communities in the Twin Cities, and getting tear gas for their trouble.
Where does the administration stand in all of this? Well, Attorney General Pam Bondi recently wrote a letter to Governor Tim Walz, offering him a deal that’s straight out of hostage-rescue thrillers.
Pam has asked Walz to hand over state voter registration files containing citizenship information, repeal “sanctuary policies,” and share its files on Medicaid, and Food and Nutrition Service programs. And maybe—just maybe—the federal government won’t need to conduct more of those pesky raids that occasionally result in dead Americans.
The voter file demand is particularly telling given that voter registration doesn’t reliably indicate immigration status. What Bondi is asking for is a shortcut around Fourth Amendment protections, and a way to target communities without the tedious burden of warrants.
Walz, to his credit, isn’t playing along. “Her letter is an outrageous attempt to coerce Minnesota into giving the federal government private data on millions of U.S. Citizens in violation of state and federal law,” his office responded, per CBS News. “Minnesota’s elections are fair, accurate, honest, and secure. Yet, without alleging any wrongdoing by Minnesota, the DOJ continues to demand that we disclose private data such as social security and drivers’ license information.”
Around a year ago, we wrote about how the second Trump administration was adopting authoritarian methods to consolidate power in the federal government and leave states scrambling to defend their own authority.
What has ensued since then is worse than any nightmare scenario we could’ve come up with, and the truly chilling part is that something tells us the administration views Minnesota less as a cautionary tale and more as a beta test for what it can do next.
Published: Jan 25, 2026 03:09 pm