Somali Immigrants in Minnesota: Profile of a Struggling Group

Tim Walz thinks they’re great and wants to recruit more for Minnesota.

Somali Immigrants in Minnesota:
Profile of a Struggling Group

Nearly every Somali household with children (89%) receives some form of welfare

Washington, D.C. (December 10, 2025) — A new report from the Center for Immigration Studies, Somali Immigrants in Minnesota: Profile of a Struggling Group, by Jason Richwine, documents the profound socioeconomic disparities between native Minnesotans and the state’s rapidly growing Somali population, now exceeding 75,000. In a state long known for its Scandinavian-style prosperity and high human-development indicators, the contrast “could hardly be greater.”

The findings reveal a community facing deep hardship —and burdening Minnesota’s social-service systems.

Key Findings:

  • Severe child poverty
    • 52% of children in Somali households live in poverty
    • Only 8% of children in native-headed homes are poor
    • One in eight poor children in Minnesota lives in a Somali household
  • Low education and limited English
    • 39% of working-age Somalis lack a high school diploma (vs. 5% of natives)
    • Half of long-term resident Somali adults still cannot speak English “very well”
  • Extensive welfare use
    • 54% of Somali households receive food stamps (vs. 7% of native households)
    • 73% are on Medicaid (vs. 18% of natives)
    • 89% of Somali households with children receive welfare
  • Overcrowding and public-health concerns
    • Somali households represent 10% of all overcrowded homes in Minnesota, despite making up less than 1% of all households.

Richwine notes that although recent fraud cases have drawn attention, welfare usage would remain extremely high even without fraud because poverty rates among Somalis are so elevated. “The way to reduce immigrant reliance on welfare,” he states, “is not only to tighten enforcement, but to reduce the number of new arrivals with very low earning power.”

The report underscores how a small but disadvantaged immigrant population can reshape the social landscape of a state once celebrated for its low poverty and high social trust.

2 replies
  1. Tim
    Tim says:

    Allied post-war propaganda has been telling us for 80 years that America is “absolutely enviable.” It spends billions every year to reinforce this message. But having to share your living space with negroes for hundreds of years is anything but enviable…

    It is rather pitiful, because those who have been harmed and robbed of their ethnic coherence are clearly the descendants of European immigrants, a large proportion of whom are German. You have to allow this thought to sink in to understand it at all.

  2. Tim
    Tim says:

    Once again, unsuspecting black citizens are having to endure structural racism motivated by malicious envy and resentment, simply because the wonderful, highly talented, and charitable Tashella Sheri Amore fought her way out of long-term poverty to achieve a material existence worth living! Tashella didn’t do nothing! This is an unacceptable scandal that cries out for “burn, loot, and murder”!

    https://www.americanpartisan.org/2025/12/social-justice-gone-wild-oklahoma-blm-leader-indicted-on-fraud-money-laundering-charges/

    https://nypost.com/2025/12/12/us-news/how-oklahoma-pastor-spent-3-15m-of-embezzled-blm-okc-money/

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDC5j-2EqIQ

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