Administration officials working with Vice President JD Vance have expanded their efforts to weed out fraud, moving on from Medicare to unemployment insurance in all fifty states.
According to Wall Street Journal reporting, acting Labor Secretary Keith Sonderling sent a letter to state governors warning the administration would use "every available tool" to protect taxpayer money. That includes a novel threat: "withholding administrative funds from states" for the first time in history.

A Labor Department spokesman openly acknowledged the likely outcome: states losing federal administrative funding "would be their system shutting down as administrative funding is what covers the cost to operate the program," the Journal reported.
Since the Great Depression, the federal government has partnered with states to provide unemployment assistance to workers who lost their jobs through no fault of their own. The system is funded primarily through state unemployment taxes paid by employers, with the federal government covering administrative costs.
According to the Journal's Philip Wegmann, the administration's target is clear: California, which the Trump team described as a "particularly glaring" example of fraud and mismanagement. The state is more than $20 billion in debt to the federal government, which California attributes to pandemic-era challenges and says it is repaying. The Trump administration, however, blames the debt on "years of fraud, improper payments, and mismanagement."
According to the report, the numbers tell a different story. While more than 40 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits at the pandemic's height, the number has normalized to approximately 1.8 million currently receiving benefits. Yet the administration is using pandemic-era fraud concerns as a smokescreen to consolidate federal control over state programs.
At a moment when the country faces a 4.3 percent unemployment rate, the administration is threatening to starve state unemployment systems of operational funding—potentially abandoning millions of struggling workers who rely on these benefits as temporary support while searching for employment.


