Sherrod Brown didn’t just lose his Senate seat in 2024 because Ohio voters rejected Kamala Harris’s radical border agenda. He lost because Ohio became a real-world case study in what happens when Washington Democrats treat red states as dumping grounds for mass refugee resettlement with zero accountability.
Now, as Brown plots his political comeback, Ohio is once again paying the price. First, it was Haiti. Now it’s Somalia.
During the Biden–Harris years, Brown positioned himself as a loyal foot soldier for the administration’s open-borders framework. As border crossings exploded, Ohio cities like Springfield were inundated with thousands of Haitian migrants under federal parole and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) schemes backed by Brown and his allies.
Local residents raised alarms about overwhelmed schools, housing shortages, public health concerns, and law enforcement strain – with reports that some were eating household pets. Instead of listening, Brown doubled down, defending Border Czar Kamala Harris’s policies while dismissing constituents as hysterical or misinformed. That arrogance cost him his seat, but Brown never changed. He got worse.
Fast forward to 2025, and Ohio is now facing a second, parallel crisis: the rapid expansion and political consolidation of Somali refugee communities, particularly around Columbus, a development Brown has openly encouraged for over a decade.
Earlier this week, resurfaced footage showed Somali-born Democrat State Rep. Ismail Mohamed making a stunning admission that should disqualify any public servant in America:
“Our main objective is to discuss things that concern Somalia. It is our country, our people! Our aim is a united front to lobby for Somalia.”
A sitting Ohio legislator is openly prioritizing another country’s interests over the voters who elected him.
Ismail Mohamed’s rise is not an accident. A post from Sherrod Brown’s official campaign account shows Mohamed proudly wearing a Brown T-shirt while giving the senator a guided tour of Columbus’s Somali enclave at the International Mall. Brown publicly thanked him:
“Made a quick stop at the International Mall in Columbus. Thank you, @ismailforohio, for showing me around.”
Brown was a political constituency he helped engineer – one totally dependent on government support.
As far back as 2009, Voice of America reported that Brown met with Somali community leaders and actively coached them on how to advocate for Somalia’s interests. In 2011, Brown issued an official Senate letter congratulating Somali students in Ohio, boasting that the state had become the second-largest Somali population in the United States, behind only Minnesota.
When Joe Biden took office, Brown worked hand-in-glove with Kamala Harris to transform temporary refugee presence into permanent political power. In 2023, Brown cosponsored the SECURE Act, legislation designed to fast-track TPS recipients into lawful permanent residency. His co-sponsors included:
- Chris Van Hollen — who traveled to El Salvador to advocate for illegal immigrants
- Bernie Sanders
- Elizabeth Warren
- Ben Cardin — whose office became synonymous with scandal and degeneracy
This is the crowd Sherrod Brown keeps, yet he still brands himself a “moderate.” The results are now visible inside the Ohio State House.
Another beneficiary of Brown’s demographic strategy is Munira Abdullahi, elected from the same Somali community infrastructure and now Chair of the Ohio Democrat Women’s Legislative Caucus.
Abdullahi is an open admirer of Rep. Ilhan Omar — the same Ilhan Omar who has repeatedly inserted herself into election operations outside her own district and state. Omar even promoted Ohio ballot drop-off information during the 2020 election cycle.
This is how it starts. Minnesota didn’t flip overnight. Ohio is now on the same trajectory. Sherrod Brown didn’t just support open borders. He cultivated foreign-aligned political blocs, leveraged refugee resettlement for electoral gain, and helped create a system where state legislators openly admit their allegiance lies elsewhere.
If Ohio eventually sends an Ilhan Omar-style figure to Congress, Sherrod Brown won’t just share responsibility; he’ll be one of the architects.
And that’s exactly why the idea of re-electing him in 2026 should be unthinkable for any Ohioan who still believes American representatives should put America first.
The post Sherrod Brown Is To Blame For Ohio’s Third World Refugee Crisis appeared first on Loomered.

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