Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

Ex-NFL reporter launches GOP Senate bid, reveals how she will flip script on state’s ‘crisis of leadership’

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

EXCLUSIVE – MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. – Saying that she wants to bring «sanity» and «normalcy» back to her home state of Minnesota, former longtime TV sports reporter turned political activist and conservative commentator Michele Tafoya on Wednesday formally launched a campaign for the Senate in a bid to flip a Democrat-held open seat.

Advertisement

«We are suffering a crisis here in Minnesota, and really, it’s a crisis of leadership. We have career politicians who have brought us to this place, and they’re not coming to save us. So, some of us are going to have to step up and clean up the mess ourselves,» Tafoya said in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, as she explained why she is running in the blue-leaning state.

Tafoya is bidding to win the seat currently held by retiring Democratic Sen. Tina Smith, which national Republicans are eyeing as they aim to not only defend but expand their current 53-47 majority in the chamber in this year’s midterm elections.

The announcement by Tafoya came as Minnesota is ground zero in the national battle over President Donald Trump’s illegal immigration crackdown, with a massive deployment of agents by the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Advertisement

DEMOCRATS DILEMMA: PROGRESSIVE PUSH TO ‘ABOLISH ICE’ SPARKS FRESH DIVIDE IN PARTY

Members of law enforcement work the scene following the shooting of Reene Good by an ICE agent during a federal immigration enforcement operation on Jan. 7, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

The arrest of thousands of migrants and the fatal shooting by an ICE agent of Renee Good, a Minnesota woman demonstrating against the immigration crackdown, has fueled anti-ICE protests in Minneapolis and across the country.

Advertisement

And Minnesota is also reeling from a sweeping fraud scandal that at the beginning of the month forced Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic Party’s 2024 vice presidential nominee, to drop his bid for re-election.

WHAT TRUMP SAID ABOUT MINNESOTA AS HE LEADS WHITE HOUSE BRIEFING

«We’ve got to decide not between right versus left, but right versus wrong, and we’ve got to decide, are we going to build up with the common sense that made this country great, or are we going to tear us apart with the corruption and the crazy that we’re seeing?» Tafoya emphasized. «I think people know the answer to that, and that’s why I’m running.»

Advertisement

Tafoya called the shooting of Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, «absolutely tragic.»

«My heart sincerely goes out to her family and all of those who loved her. It should not have happened,» Tafoya said.

But Tafoya added, «How did we get to this place? How did this environment get created where people feel it’s their duty to go put their cars or their bodies in front of federal law enforcement? And I would contend that Governor Tim Walz and Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis have ginned this up.»

Advertisement

And she charged that Walz and Frey «are fanning the flames. We’ve got to have a change in leadership. We’ve got to have people who are willing to assuage the situation, to calm it down, not to stir it up, and get rid of the hate for law enforcement.»

SCATHING AUDIT REVEALS MORE MINNESOTA FRAUD

Tafoya spoke as the Justice Department sent subpoenas to Walz, Frey and other state leaders, in what sources told Fox News was an escalation of the federal investigation into whether state officials conspired to impede law enforcement amid the immigration operations.

Advertisement
People march during a protest after the killing of Renee Nicole Good

People march during a protest after the killing of Renee Nicole Good, on January 8, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Getty Images)

Walz, in a statement, called the Justice Department investigation «a partisan distraction,» and that his «focus has always been protecting the people of this state.»

«Minnesota will not be intimidated into silence and neither will I,» the governor added.

Frey has also sharply criticized the Trump administration and accused the Justice Department of misusing its power.

Advertisement

The Justice Department said they are also investigating an anti-ICE protest that disrupted a service on Sunday at a Minnesota church where one of the pastors is an ICE acting field director in the St. Paul office.

«I think that incident in the church was horrific, awful, disgusting,» Tafoya argued. «To see that picture of that small child scared being hugged by a parent because in a place of worship, these people thought they were safe, and then they learned otherwise.»

And she argued that the ongoing demonstrations are «making the whole environment not only dangerous for law enforcement, but for citizens.»

Advertisement

GOP SENATE CAMPAIGN CHIEF AIMS TO EXPAND 2026 MAP IN THIS BLUE-LEANING STATE

Turning to Minnesota’s other crisis, Tafoya said, «this fraud scandal is epic, and it’s huge, and I don’t think we’ve seen the end of it.»

More than 90 people — most from Minnesota’s large Somali community — have been charged since 2022 in what has been described as the nation’s largest COVID-era scheme. How much money has been stolen through alleged money laundering operations involving fraudulent meal and housing programs, daycare centers and Medicaid services is still being tabulated. But prosecutors say it could total as much as $9 billion.

Advertisement

Some of the dozens who have already pleaded guilty in the case used the money to buy luxury cars, real estate, jewelry and international vacations, according to prosecutors, with some of the funds also sent overseas and potentially into the hands of Islamic terrorists.

«I think if Minnesotans aren’t angry already, they need to look at their pay stubs, look at how much gets taken out in taxes, and ask themselves, what did that get me? Did that get me anything? Did that fill a pothole, or did I buy someone a Rolex?» Tafoya said. «I mean, that’s what, really what we’re talking about here.»

«This fraud is massive. We need to get to the bottom of it. We need to ask hard questions, get to the facts, make it stop, hold people accountable, and that’s why I’m running,» she added.

Advertisement
Michele Tafoya inches closer to Senate run

Former sportscaster turned political activist and commentator Michele Tafoya is seen at the Fox News Channel studios on April 18, 2024, in New York City. (Roy Rochlin/Getty Images)

Tafoya grabbed national attention when she met last month with members of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the Senate GOP’s campaign arm, which had been recruiting her to launch a campaign.

Republicans are hoping to break their nearly quarter-century-long losing streak in Senate elections in Minnesota.

Asked how she could break the losing streak, Tafoya told Fox News Digital, «I think people are really hungry for that change, and I think that’s what I represent. We’re going to go out, and we’re going to fight for every vote, every Republican vote. We’re going to fight for Democrat votes, and we’re going to certainly fight for the independents.»

Advertisement

DEMOCRATS EYE NARROW PATH TO SENATE MAJORITY, BUT ONE WRONG MOVE COULD SINK THEM

Tafoya joins a crowded GOP Senate primary field that already includes 2024 Senate nominee Royce White, a former NBA basketball player; retired U.S. Navy officer Tom Weiler, a 2022 GOP congressional nominee; former state Senator David Hann and former Navy SEAL Adam Schwarze.

Minnesota’s primary isn’t until August, and Trump has remained neutral to date in the race.

Advertisement

Tafoya said she «would be honored to have the endorsement of the President, for sure, but this is going to take me winning over Minnesotans, first and foremost.»

Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flannagan, a progressive, is facing off against more moderate Democratic Rep. Angie Craig, who appears to have the backing of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, in the race for their party’s nomination.

Tafoya, a longtime NFL sideline reporter and announcer, gave up her career at NBC Sports in 2022 as she became more politically active, saying at the time that she wanted to pursue other opportunities. She served as co-chair of 2022 Republican gubernatorial nominee Kendall Qualls’ unsuccessful campaign against Walz.

Advertisement

Pointing to her successful career in TV sports, Tafoya said, «I gave that all up because I love this country, and I’m concerned about it, and it’s a country that I’m leaving to my two kids, and I felt that it was more important for me to be involved somehow in making this place better.»

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

«I certainly plan to let people know that my intentions are true, that I’m doing this for love of country and love of Minnesota,» Tafoya added. «I’m grateful for the career that I had, but this feels like a sense of duty to me. I just can’t turn my back on this state.»

Advertisement

And the first-time candidate said, «I’m jumping in with both feet, and I’m ready to go.»

midterm elections,minnesota fraud exposed,immigration,enforcement,senate elections,republicans elections,donald trump,minnesota,tim walz,elections

INTERNACIONAL

Música para bebés cuando suenan las alarmas y preocupación por la gente mayor que no baja a los refugios: así viven la guerra los argentinos en Tel Aviv

Published

on


Cuando las alarmas suenan en su celular, Jennifer silencia el teléfono y, con un nudo en la garganta, pone música para bebés. Tom, su primer hijo, nació hace seis semanas y, mientras pueda, Jenny va a tratar de que las sirenas que anuncian la oleada de misiles sobre Tel Aviv no rocen los oídos de su bebé.

Jennifer es porteña. Tiene 38 años y emigró a Israel hace 7. Su hermano mayor y uno de sus primos ya vivían en la capital israelí y ella, que trabajaba como contadora en Buenos Aires, se entusiasmó con mudarse y capitalizar las posibilidades que Israel ofrece a los judíos de otras partes del mundo que, como ella, deciden hacer pie en su territorio.

Advertisement

Con las ayudas y los cursos de hebreo financiados por el Estado, Jennifer se instaló en la capital y consiguió un puesto como contadora. “Te ayudan a integrarte, a diseñar tu currículum en hebreo”, cuenta a Clarín.

Ahora está con licencia por maternidad: los primeros tres meses son pagos y, aunque ella decida prolongar su baja, conserva el puesto de trabajo por un año.

“Desde que llegué, se pudrió todo -ironiza Jennifer-. Primero el coronavirus y luego la guerra. Al principio, cuando escuchaba las sirenas, me agarraban ataques de pánico”.

Advertisement

Sin embargo, no está en sus planes volver, por más que en la Argentina de hoy gobierne un presidente tan en sintonía con la religión judía como Javier Milei.

Buscó intencionalmente el bebé que acaba de dar a luz en Tel Aviv y sigue apostando a su vida en Israel.

Cien mil argentinos

Advertisement

Los argentinos que viven aquí, según fuentes de la embajada de nuestro país, son unos 100 mil. Representan la comunidad latinoamericana más numerosa en suelo israelí.

A principios de marzo, con el espacio aéreo de Israel cerrado, los argentinos varados por el conflicto eran unos 200. La cifra va disminuyendo a medida que las compañías aéreas, sobre todo la línea israelí El Al, reanudan, a cuentagotas, sus vuelos.

En la madrugada de este domingo, las alarmas no dejaron dormir en Tel Aviv. Irán lanzó siete misiles cargados con bombas de racimo que dañaron calles y edificios en el centro de la capital.

Advertisement
Un policía israelí inspecciona los restos de un vehículo incendiado después de que Israel interceptara un misil balístico de Irán, este domingo, en Tel Aviv. Foto: EFE

Este domingo, la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica amenazó de muerte al primer ministro israelí, Benjamin Netanyahu. “Sin descanso”, será la persecución al primer ministro, según advirtieron.

El ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Israel, Gideon Saar, afirmó, por su parte, que la ofensiva contra Irán durará hasta que se eliminen las “amenazas existenciales”.

Irán confirmó el debut de Sejil, un misil balístico de combustible sólido que alcanza hasta 2.000 kilómetros y carga ojivas de entre 500 y 1.000 kilos.

Refugio para el bebé

Advertisement

Para evitar corridas con el recién nacido en brazos, Jennifer y su pareja, Eyal, armaron el cuarto del bebé en la habitación blindada que tienen en el departamento donde viven, en el centro de Tel Aviv.

Contar con un cuarto de seguridad fue la condición indispensable cuando buscaron casa. “Dormimos todas las noches allí para que Tom no se altere y para no tener que levantarnos de madrugada, cada vez que suenan las sirenas”, dice Jenny mientras toma mate en el living de su casa, un cuarto piso del barrio de Ramat Gan.

En la habitación blindada hay provisiones de sobra. Pañales, mamaderas, jarra térmica para calentar agua y leche de fórmula para recién nacidos. En un cuerpo de mamá que acaba de dar a luz, el estrés que segregan los tiempos de guerra a veces complica hasta los gestos más primarios, como amamantar.

Advertisement

Los papás de Jenny, Ruthy y Sergio, viajaron a Tel Aviv en enero desde Buenos Aires. “La idea era acompañarla durante las últimas semanas de embarazo, llegar a tiempo para el nacimiento del bebé y ayudarla con la rutina diaria. Pero la guerra trastocó todo”, dice a Clarín Ruthy, que desde su casa porteña, a 12.300 kilómetros de donde acaba de nacer su primer nieto, controla las alarmas que saltan en Tel Aviv.

“Se descargó la app y, cuando ve que sonó alguna, nos llama o nos manda whatsapp para saber si estamos a salvo”, cuenta Jenny.

“Dios nos ayudó. Y no nos abandona”

Advertisement

La primera de la familia que se enteró que Jennifer esperaba un bebé, sin embargo, fue su abuela, la bobe Raquel. “Guardé el secreto”, dice a Clarín, orgullosa de su discreción.

Raquel vive en Parque Chas, en la misma casa en la que nació, hace 91 años. El 29 de julio cumplirá los 92. “Dios nos ayudó. Y no nos abandona”, dice Raquel, lúcida, conversadora y de buen talante.

“Vine para acompañar el nacimiento de mi primer bisnieto y lo pude hacer -agrega-. Es una lástima que no podamos pasear más, por las alarmas. Pero estoy contenta de estar acá”.

Advertisement
A los 91, Raquel, flamante bisabuela de Tom, viajó desde Buenos Aires para estar presente cuando el bebé naciera. No sabe si va a poder volver a su casa.

No es la primera vez que Raquel visita en Isreal: “Ya vine otras siete veces. La primera fue en el 79 o el 80, porque mis hijas viajaban a hacer tareas comunitarias a los kibutz”.

Además de sus nietos y bisnieto, Raquel tiene una hija, amigos y ex alumnos -fue maestra- radicados en distintas ciudades israelíes. “Estoy preocupada porque la gente grande, de mi edad, ya no va a los refugios cuando suenan las sirenas -comparte-. Tengo amigos que me dicen: ‘No tengo fuerzas para bajar las escaleras’. Yo les digo que tienen que hacer caso”.

“No se pueden entregar así”, se queja.

“Cuando suenan las sirenas, todos los edificios tienen la puerta abierta para que la gente que está por calle pase a refugiarse -subraya Raquel-. En Buenos Aires, ¿Quién le abre la puerta de su casa a extraños?”

Advertisement

Con los segundos contados

La distancia entre la casa de Jennifer y el departamento que sus papás y su abuela alquilaron por Airbnb se recorre, caminando con serenidad, en 15 minutos. Jenny comprobó que, a paso veloz y con el cochecito del bebé, puede reducir los minutos a casi la mitad: logra hacer el recorrido en 8.

“Eso me da tiempo a volver a casa si suenan las alertas en el celular ya que nos dan 10 minutos para buscar refugio antes de la sirena”, cuenta Jennifer.

Advertisement
Jennifer, con Tom en brazos, acompañada por su familia argentina. De izquierda a derecha: Sergio, su papá; Ruthy, su mamá; su pareja, Eyal; su abuela Raquel y su primo Matías, que vive en Tel Aviv.

Ruthy ya piensa en la despedida: “Me angustia dejarlos, cuando tengamos que volver a Buenos Aires. Todo lo que tenemos se queda en Israel. Pero me tranquiliza ver que están más cuidados que en Argentina”, dice.

“Lo que valen diez minutos en la vida (el lapso entre las alarmas en los celulares y las sirenas que anuncian la llegada de un ataque) lo aprendes acá”, reflexiona Sergio, el esposo de Ruthy.

Los padres y la abuela de Jennifer llegaron a Israel el 19 de enero, en tiempos serenos, y tienen fecha de regreso a Buenos Aires para el 3 de abril. ¿Podrán volver a casa?

El portavoz de las Fuerzas de Defensa de Israel (FDI), Effie Defrin, confirmó este domingo que, por lo menos hasta la Pascua judía -es decir, hasta dentro de tres semanas-, continuarán las operaciones contra Irán.

Advertisement

“Tenemos miles de objetivos por delante”, aseguró Defrin.

Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Iran arrests dozens accused of spying for Israel in new internal crackdown

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Iranian authorities say they have arrested dozens of people accused of spying for Israel across several provinces, according to state media reports over the weekend.

Advertisement

Fars, a news agency affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), reported Sunday the West Azerbaijan prosecutor’s office had arrested 20 individuals in the northwestern city of Urmia for allegedly providing Israel with information about military, police and security sites.

On Saturday, Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence said it had arrested several «enemy operatives» across the country, including a 10-member group in Mazandaran province and another 10-member network in Khorasan Razavi province, according to Tasnim, a semi-official news agency.

Authorities said the suspects transferred the locations of military installations and economic infrastructure and shared coordinates of public places, academic institutions and research centers with Israel.

Advertisement

IRANIAN REGIME SPREADING ANTI-ISRAEL PROPAGANDA ACROSS DOZENS OF SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS: REPORT

Policemen stand on top of a patrol car during a rally supporting Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, successor to his late father Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as Iran’s supreme leader, in Tehran, Iran, on March 9, 2026. (Vahid Salemi/AP)

In southern Khuzestan province, intelligence officials also reported arresting a three-person «terrorist team» accused of carrying out armed attacks against security forces and government facilities. 

Advertisement

The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Israel has relied on tips from ordinary Iranians to identify targets for strikes inside Iran, citing a senior Israeli security official.

The newspaper said information about potential targets is sent through Israeli Persian-language social media accounts and is verified by Israeli authorities before strikes are carried out.

CIA URGES IRANIANS TO USE BURNER PHONES, TOR TO CONTACT US IN PERSIAN-LANGUAGE VIDEO

Advertisement
A woman holds an Iranian flag during a funeral ceremony at the Imamzadeh Saleh shrine in Tehran.

A woman holds an Iranian flag during the funeral and burial of Ali Shamkhani at Imamzadeh Saleh in northern Tehran, Iran, on March 14, 2026. (Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)

In a separate development, Bahraini authorities said Sunday they arrested five people accused of passing sensitive information to the IRGC and helping recruit operatives for potential attacks inside the country.

According to a statement from Bahrain’s Police Media Center, the suspects allegedly collected and transmitted coordinates and images of sensitive locations, including hotels, to the IRGC.

IRANIAN REGIME SPREADING ANTI-ISRAEL PROPAGANDA ACROSS DOZENS OF SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS: REPORT

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Officials said one suspect previously received training at IRGC camps in «trafficking persons and recruiting operatives to participate in implementing terrorist plots.»

The five detainees were referred to Bahrain’s Public Prosecution, while a sixth suspect identified in the case is believed to be a fugitive abroad.

Advertisement



war with iran,iran,israel,world

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Top California librarian questioned about missing $650K tied to Dolly Parton child literacy program

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

California state librarian Greg Lucas is facing scrutiny from lawmakers after roughly $650,000 tied to a statewide literacy program connected to Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library could not be accounted for.

Advertisement

The issue surfaced during a Thursday Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Subcommittee No. 1 on Education hearing, which examined how funds were distributed for California’s participation in the book-gifting program.

Documents shared by the subcommittee as part of its hearing agenda claim that a nonprofit created to help administer the program reported spending roughly $1.2 million, while bank statements provided to Senate budget staff showed $555,000 in expenditures, leaving about $649,000 without supporting documentation.

«I find this to be incredibly concerning,» said state Sen. Sasha Renée Pérez, D-Pasadena, chair of the subcommittee. «There’s $650,000 that’s been unaccounted for in a program, a bipartisan effort that was intended to increase literacy among children. This is incredibly serious.»

Advertisement

TRUMP ADMIN UNCOVERS ‘STAGGERING’ $8.6 BILLION IN SUSPECTED CALIFORNIA SMALL BUSINESS FRAUD

California state Sen. Sasha Renée Pérez speaks during a press conference at Pasadena City Hall in Los Angeles County on June 23, 2025. (Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images)

State Sen. Shannon Grove, R-Bakersfield, also criticized the lack of documentation, saying the situation raised serious concerns about transparency and oversight.

Advertisement

«That makes no sense,» Grove said during the hearing. «And that reeks of horrific no transparency and potential fraud.»

The California state library did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Lawmakers said Senate budget staff had requested financial records from the Strong Reader Partnership, the nonprofit created to help administer the program, multiple times, including receipts, invoices and bank statements to corroborate expenses.

Advertisement

EX-NONPROFIT BOSS ALLEGEDLY SWIPED $1.2M MEANT FOR HOMELESS PROGRAMS TO FUND LAVISH LIFESTYLE, DA SAYS

Shelves filled with nonfiction books inside the West Hollywood Library.

Senate Bill 1183, signed in 2022, created California’s statewide Dolly Parton Imagination Library program, which sends free books to children from birth to age 5 to encourage early literacy. (Noah Sauve/iStock Editorial via Getty Images)

According to the subcommittee, those requests were made on several occasions between November 2025 and February 2026, but the documentation had not been provided.

During the hearing, Lucas acknowledged that lawmakers had received bank statements accounting for roughly $555,000 in spending but disputed the claim that the funds were unaccounted for.

Advertisement

«I don’t believe that’s correct,» he said. «I mean, we received a final report on the disposition of the money by the Strong Reader Partnership, which has expressed, and we’ve passed this on to you as well, the difficulty in obtaining some of this information because they no longer have any money or members of the partnership since the money was transferred to the Imagination Library.»

He added that his agency has repeatedly asked the nonprofit for additional records and pledged to continue requesting the information.

PROPOSED CALIFORNIA WEALTH TAX DRIVES BILLIONAIRE EXODUS TO FLORIDA REAL ESTATE, LOCALS CONFIRM

Advertisement
Members of the California Senate Budget Subcommittee on Education seated at a curved wooden dais.

Members of the California state Senate, during a hearing on education, speak with Greg Lucas, California’s top librarian, on March 12, 2026. (Credit: California State Senate)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

A spokesperson for the state library told ABC10 in a statement: «The California State Library takes seriously its responsibility to ensure transparency and accountability in the taxpayer dollars entrusted to it. The State Library has provided the Legislature with all documentation in its possession and has repeatedly requested additional records from the Strong Reader partnership. The California State Library remains committed to cooperating fully with all legislative oversight and maintaining accountability in the administration of public funds.»

Pérez gave Lucas seven days to produce the financial records, saying the subcommittee expected invoices and receipts detailing how the money was spent.

Advertisement

california,education,politics

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Tendencias