Trump Names Vance ‘Fraud Czar,’ Touts Nationwide Crackdown on Abuse of Federal Funds
President Donald Trump announced Friday that Vice President J.D. Vance will take the lead in combating fraud across the United States, declaring he will now serve as the administration’s “fraud czar.”
In a post on Truth Social, Trump said fraud in the U.S. “is massive and pervasive” and emphasized that Vance’s new responsibilities would play a key role in shaping the country’s future. He added that “the job he will be doing, in conjunction with many great people within the Trump Administration, will be a major factor in how great the future of our Country will be.”
“We will call him the ‘FRAUD CZAR,’” Trump continued, “and his focus will be ‘EVERYWHERE,’ but primarily in those Blue States where CROOKED DEMOCRAT POLITICIANS, like those in California, Illinois, Minnesota (Somalia beware!), Maine, New York, and many others, have had a ‘free for all’ in the unprecedented theft of Taxpayer Money. The numbers are so large that, if successful, we would literally be able to balance our American Budget.” The President did not offer evidence for these assertions.
The vice president’s office pointed to an Executive Order signed by Trump on March 16 that created a federal anti-fraud task force aimed at coordinating efforts to combat misuse of government funds. The order states that the group will “coordinate and accelerate a comprehensive national strategy to stop fraud, waste, and abuse within Federal benefit programs, including programs administered jointly with State, local, tribal, and territorial partners,” and names Vance as its chairman.
Vance convened the task force for the first time last week in a closed-door meeting. Ahead of the session, he indicated that tackling fraud would require coordination across multiple levels of government, describing it as a “a whole-government approach.”
“This is not just the theft of the American people’s money,” Vance said, according to The Associated Press. “It is also the theft of critical services that the American people rely on.”
Addressing fraud has become a central pillar of Trump’s second-term agenda, with the administration focusing particular attention on certain states. Minnesota has been a repeated target, with federal childcare funding frozen and more than $250 million in Medicaid funds temporarily suspended amid allegations of misuse. Trump has also cited those claims in defending stepped-up immigration enforcement actions in Minneapolis.
California has also been a major focus. In his Friday post, Trump stated that “raids have already started in L.A.” A day earlier, federal authorities announced the arrest of eight individuals accused of involvement in healthcare fraud schemes in and around Los Angeles. That same day, the White House’s rapid response account on X highlighted that Vance’s task force had suspended more than 200 hospice and healthcare providers in the state.
Officials in both Minnesota and California have pushed back, saying their governments have long worked to combat fraud. They also pointed to past pardons issued by Trump to individuals convicted of fraud-related offenses.
Earlier this year, Vance revealed plans to create a new Justice Department position focused specifically on fraud investigations, reporting directly to him and the president. Weeks later, Trump selected Colin McDonald for the role of Assistant Attorney General for National Fraud Enforcement. McDonald was officially sworn in on Wednesday by Vance.
