Nagel’s attack lands at the intersection of law, ethics, and raw political survival. He argues that Omar’s MEALS Act, passed with broad bipartisan support during COVID-19, unintentionally created a wide-open lane for fraud — and that the epicenter of that scheme sitting in her district is no coincidence. He underscores her campaign events at Safari Restaurant, its now-convicted owner, and staffers later tied to the scandal, painting a picture of a political ecosystem too close to the money.
Omar, who has not been charged or formally accused by law enforcement, frames the debacle as a systemic failure of rushed emergency programs, insisting that weak guardrails — not malice — allowed bad actors to exploit the system. As Trump hurls incendiary attacks at Somalis and calls Omar “garbage,” the stakes become even higher: a community vilified, a congresswoman under siege, and voters forced to decide whether this is a story of corruption, scapegoating, or both.