Ilhan Omar steered millions in public funds to a clinic run by her sister

 March 14, 2026

A Minneapolis health clinic led by Rep. Ilhan Omar's older sister collected millions of dollars in public funding during the congresswoman's time in state and federal office, with Omar herself playing a direct role in securing key appropriations for the facility.

People's Center Clinics & Services, which operates in Minneapolis' Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, received $2.2 million through a 2017 Minnesota capital budget that Omar publicly championed.

She later secured an additional $1 million in congressionally directed federal funding for the facility's upgrades. Omar's sister, Sahra Noor, served as CEO of People's Center from July 2014 until April 2018, a tenure that overlapped with Omar's first term in the Minnesota House of Representatives, which began in January 2017.

The connections between Omar's legislative work and her sister's professional role have drawn renewed scrutiny, alongside long-running allegations surrounding Omar's past marriage.

The money trail

The numbers tell a straightforward story. People's Center has collected approximately $33 million in grants from the Department of Health and Human Services since 2002. Within that stream of federal dollars, Omar's direct contributions stand out:

  • $2.2 million in state funding through the 2017 Minnesota capital budget, which Omar highlighted her role in obtaining
  • $1 million in additional federal funding secured by Omar while serving in the U.S. House of Representatives

Omar celebrated the completion of renovations funded by these appropriations at a 2022 event, appearing alongside Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, and state Sen. Omar Fateh. Two years later, in April 2024, the People's Center formally acknowledged Omar's role in securing the $1 million in congressionally directed funding, as KTSA reports.

When questions surfaced about the arrangement, Omar offered a single line of defense. In April 2022, she stated:

"Neither I nor my immediate family has any financial interest in this project."

That claim rests on a narrow reading of "financial interest." Noor served as CEO of the organization that directly benefited from her sister's legislative efforts. Whether or not Omar personally profited, the appearance of a sitting legislator steering public money to an entity run by a sibling is exactly the kind of arrangement that corrodes public trust.

The sister's tenure and departure

Noor's LinkedIn profile lists her as CEO of People's Center from July 2014 through April 2018. During that window, she signed agreements that expanded the clinic's operations, including a 2015 contract pharmacy arrangement under HHS's 340B Drug Pricing Program with Degdeg's Carepoint Pharmacy. That pharmacy reportedly lost its license in 2017.

After stepping down as CEO, Noor relocated to Africa and launched a healthcare consulting firm in Kenya called Grit Partners. Her husband, Mohamed Keynan, followed a similar trajectory.

Keynan previously held several roles in the Minnesota government before returning to Africa, where he served as chief of staff to then-Somali Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khayre and later as a policy adviser to former Somali President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, widely known as Farmaajo.

The pattern is worth noting. A family occupies positions of influence across Minneapolis politics, a federally funded health clinic, and foreign governments. Public dollars flow. Roles shift. People relocate. And the congresswoman insists there is nothing to see.

The accountability gap

In most industries, a leader who directed millions in public funds to an organization run by a close family member would face an ethics inquiry at a minimum.

In Congress, members routinely recuse themselves from votes that touch their personal financial interests. Omar did not recuse. She championed the funding publicly and celebrated the results at a ribbon-cutting event surrounded by fellow Democrats.

No one at that 2022 event appears to have asked the obvious question: Should a congresswoman be steering taxpayer money to a clinic her sister ran? Klobuchar stood beside her. Frey stood beside her. Fateh stood beside her. The Democratic ecosystem in Minneapolis treated the arrangement as unremarkable.

That silence is its own kind of answer.

What "no financial interest" actually means

Omar's defense hinges on the word "financial." She and her immediate family may hold no equity stake in People's Center. But the definition of conflict of interest has never been limited to direct profit.

A sibling's career advancement, an organization's growth under family leadership, the political capital gained from delivering millions to a community institution: these are interests. They may not show up on a financial disclosure form. They show up everywhere else.

Washington is full of politicians who technically follow the rules while violating every principle the rules were written to protect. Omar has built a brand on fighting corruption and demanding accountability from powerful institutions. The standard she applies to others now applies to her.

Millions in public money. A sister at the helm. A pharmacy that lost its license. And a congresswoman who says her family had no interest in any of it. The facts are on the table. The question is whether anyone in a position of oversight will bother to read them.

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