The Senate on Tuesday confirmed Colin McDonald to serve as an assistant attorney general at the Department of Justice, placing him in charge of leading federal efforts to combat fraud nationwide, as reported [1] by The New York Post.
The vote saw support from both parties, with 52 Republicans and 47 Democrats backing the nomination.
McDonald had most recently served as an associate deputy attorney general at the DOJ and brings more than a decade of experience as an assistant U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of California.
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Today the Senate confirmed Colin McDonald 52-47 as the first-ever Assistant Attorney General for National Fraud Enforcement — a brand new…
— M.A. Rothman (@MichaelARothman) March 25, 2026 [2]
In his new role, McDonald will work alongside Justice Department officials and Vice President JD Vance, who chairs President Donald Trump’s Task Force to Eliminate Fraud.
The initiative is part of a broader administration effort to address large-scale fraud cases affecting federal programs.
“Colin McDonald is a great choice and will be a key asset in the War on Fraud,” Vance told The Post.
“The Task Force to Eliminate Fraud will help coordinate the interagency effort to root out and identify fraudsters, and separately, Colin will have nationwide jurisdiction at the Justice Department to prosecute the bad guys,” the vice president noted.
“This is an important step by Congress to help the Administration protect taxpayers and vulnerable Americans from criminal fraudsters.”
HUGE NEWS: The Senate just advanced President Trump’s WAR ON FRAUD appointee, Colin McDonald to be Assistant Attorney General — 51-45
Awesome! Now get him fully confirmed and start prosecuting the CRAP out of more fraudsters nationwide
Make sure to DEPORT the foreign ones! pic.twitter.com/MN6pODpR2V [3]
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) March 24, 2026 [4]
Vance announced his leadership of the task force earlier this month during a White House press briefing, following multiple federal investigations into alleged fraud schemes in Minnesota and California.
The cases involve claims that taxpayer funds were improperly directed toward social service programs, including child care centers.
A former federal prosecutor in Minnesota has estimated that fraud in that state alone could exceed $9 billion.
Federal officials have taken action in response, including a decision by Vance and Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, to withdraw $259.5 million in Medicaid funding from Minnesota over fraud concerns this year.
“In states across the country, fraudsters are depriving vulnerable citizens of basic social services, stealing billions of your tax dollars, and eroding America’s social fabric,” a Vance spokesperson said in a statement.
“This fraud has happened on such a massive scale that it’s endangering the future viability of America’s entire social safety net,” the spokesperson added.
“The Trump Administration is responding with a whole-of-government War on Fraud that includes multiple stakeholders who will follow the fraud wherever it leads.”
Vance has previously indicated that fraudulent spending tied to taxpayer funds in Minnesota could reach as high as $19 billion.
