Hour 2 of The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show focuses on a sweeping examination of massive government fraud, welfare abuse, and systemic failures in federal and state entitlement programs, beginning with breaking developments in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where the FBI executed search warrants at more than 20 locations tied to an ongoing fraud investigation. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton detail how federal, state, and local authorities are probing alleged large-scale fraud involving government-funded childcare and learning centers, arguing that the Minnesota case is likely only the tip of the iceberg of nationwide abuse enabled by lax oversight and politically protected constituencies.
Throughout Hour 2, the hosts argue that COVID-era emergency spending permanently removed guardrails, creating an environment where Medicaid, SNAP, childcare subsidies, and other welfare programs became what Buck calls a “wide-open piggy bank.” They highlight additional fraud cases across Ohio and California, including Medicaid, hospice, prescription drug, and COVID uninsured program scams, citing examples where individual doctors allegedly submitted hundreds of millions of dollars in fraudulent claims and were paid staggering sums before being caught. Clay and Buck emphasize that many of these schemes were only discovered because the fraud became so extreme it could no longer be hidden.
A central theme of Hour 2 of the program is the argument that government involvement itself incentivizes fraud, distorts markets, and drives up costs while degrading quality. Clay contrasts declining prices in private-sector products like flat-screen televisions with skyrocketing costs in government-controlled sectors such as healthcare, using MRI pricing and insurance reimbursement as examples of how bureaucracy punishes efficiency and transparency. Buck reinforces the point by arguing that many of these programs should not exist at all, asserting that taxpayer dollars should never be routed through loosely monitored, for-profit intermediaries.
The discussion expands into a broader critique of the modern welfare state, with a deep dive into SNAP (food stamp) spending, eligibility, and abuse. Citing new data, the hosts note that tens of millions of Americans receive food assistance, that a significant percentage of recipients are classified as obese, and that benefits often function as a long-term entitlement rather than a temporary safety net. Clay and Buck argue that SNAP has effectively become a form of universal basic income, discouraging work and accountability, while taxpayers fund unhealthy food consumption with little restriction or oversight.
Hour 2 also features an extended conversation about nutrition, public health, and government policy, including whether food assistance should be limited to staples such as protein, milk, fruits, and vegetables rather than junk food and sugary snacks. The hosts criticize food industry lobbying and processed food manufacturers for shaping federal nutrition rules, while discussing emerging medical interventions such as GLP-1 medications, which they argue may reduce obesity, addiction, and compulsive behaviors by curbing cravings and “food noise.
Midway through the hour, breaking news interrupts the discussion as the Department of Justice announces a new indictment of former FBI Director James Comey, along with charges against a top aide to Dr. Anthony Fauci. Clay and Buck analyze the legal and political implications, expressing skepticism that Comey will ever face prison time while still welcoming the indictments as a step toward accountability. They also discuss prior procedural failures at DOJ that led to earlier indictments being dismissed, underscoring ongoing concerns about competence and credibility within federal law enforcement.
The latter portion of Hour 2 of The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show returns to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner security breach, with calls from retired law enforcement officials and former police commanders. These callers sharply criticize the Secret Service response, citing failures in situational awareness, training standards, and hiring practices. Drawing on concepts like the OODA loop and alertness “condition levels,” they argue that agents appeared unprepared and reactive rather than proactive as an armed suspect sprinted past them.
The hour closes with Clay and Buck reinforcing the broader takeaway of Hour 2: whether in entitlement spending, law enforcement, or public safety, systems without accountability inevitably fail. They warn that fraud, inefficiency, and lowered standards are not isolated problems but structural ones—and unless those incentives change, taxpayers and public safety will continue to bear the cost.
Make sure you never miss a second of the show by subscribing to the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton show podcast wherever you get your podcasts! ihr.fm/3InlkL8
For the latest updates from Clay & Buck, visit our website https://www.clayandbuck.com/
Connect with Clay Travis and Buck Sexton:
FB - https://www.facebook.com/ClayandBuck/
IG - https://www.instagram.com/clayandbuck/
YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/clayandbuck
Rumble - https://rumble.com/c/ClayandBuck
TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@clayandbuck

Daily Review with Clay and Buck - Apr 28 2026
1:00:28

Hour 1 - Is Trump Too Kind?
36:50

Hour 3 - Please Save My Father's Life
36:51