Toby Doeden struck a chord with a number of leaders in South Dakota yesterday with his comments on how South Dakotans aren’t the ones being hired for high tech jobs, so we need to reject those opportunities for our state. The flood gates opened with Erin Tobin, and now others are chiming in AND THEY ALL DISAGREE WITH DOEDEN’S LACK OF VISION AND CONFIDENCE IN SOUTH DAKOTA.
First, Senator Tim Reed who has actually done economic development notes why Toby doesn’t know what he’s talking about:
Even Democrats who may disagree on a lot with Republicans understand that South Dakotans are capable and up to the task. And that Toby is unfit to lead.
As family members jump in to try to doeden-splain Toby’s words, they’re getting rebuked … although one doesn’t have to be an attorney like Austin to understand that inferring that South Dakotans are incapable is utterly indefensible:
Ben Koisti notes that no matter how much media coaching Toby gets, he still doesn’t get it.
And one of my favorites, from South Dakota tech entrepreneur Matt Paulson who has made a very lucrative career out of being one of those “tech people”..
(I’ll add to this as I catch any others posting to social media. )
Mike Karbo is Director of the Midwest Region for the American Petroleum Institute (API)
Restoring American Energy Dominance Starts in South Dakota by Mike Karbo
President Trump has been clear since the first day of his campaign that he intends to lead the charge to restore American energy leadership. Delivering on that promise requires us to start building, especially in South Dakota, given the critical role South Dakota energy plays both in our state and across the country.
To continue to deliver on ever-increasing demand, South Dakota needs to build more infrastructure. Infrastructure is essential to protecting American energy independence, and it enables a future where our nation’s oil, natural gas, and other liquid fuels power the world.
This future is actually a return to something we know works well. During the president’s first term, the U.S. became the world’s top energy producer through efforts to prioritize American energy independence that cut red tape, approved infrastructure projects like pipelines, and gave American workers the freedom to build.
Now those efforts are back in action. But to continue to build on this momentum, we need to prioritize physical projects that safely transport gas and liquids. Pipelines are one of the most efficient and environmentally friendly ways to do so.
The silent majority of South Dakotans understand what’s at stake. With foreign rivals like China and Russia locking up critical minerals and industries in the battle for the edge on energy, we can’t afford to give up or slow down, especially when our farmers, truckers, and manufacturers are all depending on reliable energy to do their jobs and keep our economy running. When energy stops moving, so does everything else.
To truly compete, we need to be honest about what the modern energy landscape looks like. That includes being open to new options and tools to help meet the demand for energy while staying ahead. One of those tools is carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS).
CCUS is a crucial part of ensuring American energy security and is vital to advancing American energy leadership. Like other infrastructure, CCUS can bring enormous benefits to nearby communities, often far greater than even the publicly announced investments. Infrastructure enables economic activity and can generate income for local businesses and create well-paying jobs.
This type of technology has been safely used for decades in oil and gas applications, and it is even more vital to support the fuels we need to stay competitive today. CCUS is a practical step toward empowering American energy and keeping our nation moving forward.
Just as roads, rail, grain elevators, and other infrastructure helped turn South Dakota into an agricultural powerhouse, CCUS is part of the next generation of projects that can strengthen the economy and protect critical industries.
South Dakota is well-positioned to succeed, and the time to start building is now. Let’s get back to doing what we know works. The president’s agenda, American energy security, and South Dakota’s economic future depend on it.
Toby Doeden must not think much of DSU cyber program graduates, as in this video, starting around 1:25, he uses scare-tactics to run down data center development, claiming they are only going to hire California liberals to work in data centers:
I mean *it is DSU* but I say that as an SDSU grad doing some good-natured trash-talking. (I’m sure Matt Paulson, a DSU alum who has done quite well for himself in cyberspace would disagree.)
Here’s another problem besides Toby thinking South Dakotans are too dumb to be hired in data center operations. Toby Doeden’s attack on Data Centers flies in the face of President Trump’s data center action plan to make sure that they’re built in America (one of the things even his detractors should not find fault with):
The Plan identifies over 90 Federal policy actions across three pillars – Accelerating Innovation, Building American AI Infrastructure, and Leading in International Diplomacy and Security – that the Trump Administration will take in the coming weeks and months.
and..
“Winning the AI Race is non-negotiable. America must continue to be the dominant force in artificial intelligence to promote prosperity and protect our economic and national security. President Trump recognized this at the beginning of his administration and took decisive action by commissioning this AI Action Plan. These clear-cut policy goals set expectations for the Federal Government to ensure America sets the technological gold standard worldwide, and that the world continues to run on American technology,” said Secretary of State and Acting National Security Advisor Marco Rubio.
Unless South Dakota has shut our doors for business permanently, we need to welcome data centers AND the jobs and development they’ll bring to our communities.
(Or, we could screw it up like we have with bio-jet fuel and ethanol.)
Flags at Half-Staff at State Capitol in Honor of Louis Sebert
PIERRE, S.D. – Today, Governor Larry Rhoden ordered that flags be flown at half-staff at the State Capitol from sunrise until sunset on Friday, August 1, 2025, in honor of former state legislator Louis (Lou) Sebert. He served in the South Dakota State House of Representatives from 1999 to 2006.
Funeral Mass will be held at 10:30 AM CT on Friday, August 1, 2025, at Holy Spirit Catholic Church. Graveside services will follow at Calvary Cemetery in Mitchell.
Rounds Advances Major Housing Wins for South Dakota in Committee Markup
WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) today successfully advanced key housing priorities for South Dakota during a bipartisan markup in the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee. As part of the Road to Housing Act, Rounds secured the inclusion of four of his bills, delivering the first major update to the Rural Housing Service in over a decade, eliminating burdensome red tape that hinders housing development in local communities and empowering communities with greater flexibility to address homelessness through locally driven solutions.
“Access to safe affordable housing is critical to the strength and future of our communities. I’m proud that my legislation became key provisions in this bill, including modernizing rural housing programs, cutting burdensome regulations and giving local communities more tools to address homelessness and housing shortages,” said Rounds. “These are real wins for South Dakota. President Trump and Secretary Scott Turner have made it clear that increasing our housing supply is a national priority and this legislation moves us in the right direction.”
Rounds’ legislation included in the Road to Housing Act:
Rural Housing Service Reform Act: This bill would to improve federal rural housing programs and strengthen the supply of affordable housing in rural America by modernizing and strengthening several U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) rural housing programs. The Rural Housing Service Reform Act addresses longstanding challenges with maturing Section 515 properties, aligns income calculations with HUD standards, streamlines foreclosure and loan approval processes, and invests in IT upgrades to improve efficiency. It would also ease access to home repair loans and expand eligibility for USDA loan guarantees to include properties with accessory dwellings and in-home daycares.
Reducing Homelessness Through Program Reform Act: The legislation would cut federal red tape for homeless service providers by easing burdens on Continuum of Care organizations by moving to a two-year funding application and removing barriers that delay access to housing and services. It also strengthens local responses by improving coordination with healthcare and law enforcement, supporting workforce development, enhancing data use, including AI, and expanding feedback channels to inform HUD policy and improve federal accountability.
Better Use of Intergovernmental and Local Development (BUILD) Housing Act: The bill would modernize the NEPA review process by increasing capacity sharing between HUD and state and local governments, aligning HUD’s standards with other agencies through delegated housing reviews, and granting the agency greater flexibility by allowing it to designate certain housing assistance as “special project funds.”
These bills were incorporated into the Road to Housing Act, sponsored by Senator Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). The comprehensive proposal would expand and preserve the housing supply by removing regulatory barriers, promoting innovative construction, addressing blight and supporting disaster recovery, while also improving housing affordability, expanding homeownership, reducing homelessness and increasing access for veterans. The bill advances accountability and oversight by promoting evidence-based policies, strengthening program integrity and improving coordination and transparency across federal housing programs to make efficient use of taxpayer dollars.
South Dakota Democrats are in the media today, complaining about efforts by Governor Larry Rhoden to deport illegal aliens who are in state prison after being convicted of felony crimes.
In a press release from South Dakota Democrats, House Minority leader Erin Healey noted:
“This operation with ICE creates fear and uncertainty for immigrant families. When we turn state troopers and DOC agents into ICE enforcers, we’re not protecting anyone. We’re tearing families apart, hurting our economy, and damaging trust with law enforcement.”
In a story posted by the Dakota Scout, the Governor’s staff provided an example of the families being ‘torn apart’ by deportation:
The governor’s office is defending the initiative as a targeted public safety effort aimed at removing individuals convicted of serious crimes from the state. Rhoden’s press secretary, Josie Harms, cited two recent ICE deportation cases that originated in South Dakota: a Honduran woman convicted of child sexual exploitation who was deported, and an Eritrean man convicted of sexual contact with a child. The latter is still in DOC custody awaiting deportation.
I think the criminal’s families were torn apart by their sex crimes against kids moreso than these people being removed from the country.
Democrats are protesting that illegal aliens or others who came to this country who have been tried, convicted, and sent to prison are being removed from the country for child sexual exploitation, and child molestation?
I don’t think that’s a hill I would die on if I were the Democrats.
Major Public Safety Initiative in Sioux Falls Metro Area
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Today, Governor Larry Rhoden announced Operation: Prairie Thunder – a comprehensive, targeted public safety initiative to protect South Dakotans, especially in the Sioux Falls metro area.
“We are keeping South Dakotans strong, safe, and free. When it comes to safety, one of our biggest opportunities to move the needle is right here in Sioux Falls, and that’s where Operation: Prairie Thunder comes in,” said Governor Larry Rhoden. “We are taking decisive action to hold criminals accountable and protect our communities.”
Governor Rhoden announced Operation: Prairie Thunder at a press conference at the Sioux Falls Public Safety Campus. Operation: Prairie Thunder has two main components:
A targeted anti-crime initiative in the Sioux Falls metro to interdict drugs, investigate gang activity, hold parole absconders accountable, and deter lawlessness; and
A comprehensive effort to support the work of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) secure our borders and deport illegal alien criminals.
The targeted anti-crime initiative in the Sioux Falls metro includes:
Providing 10-15 Highway Patrol troopers for monthly saturation patrols over the next five months;
Deploying aerial assets including the South Dakota National Guard (SDNG) Lakota helicopters and the South Dakota Highway Patrol airplane to help with drug interdiction and traffic enforcement;
Utilizing Department of Corrections (DOC) Parole Agents and the Absconder Apprehension Unit to assist with apprehensions and lists of fugitives, absconders, and other intelligence; and
Coordinating all efforts through the existing local crime task forces in the Sioux Falls area.
The comprehensive effort to support ICE’s work includes:
Equipping the South Dakota Highway Patrol to assist with ICE’s actions to keep America safe – a partnership that the Governor previously obtained;
Activating six SDNG soldiers to assist ICE with administrative functions; and
Enabling DOC to work with ICE to deport offenders and transfer violent offenders for federal incarceration and assist ICE with processing and transportation of illegal alien criminals.
“Our work alongside ICE boils down to this: Highway Patrol will support ICE with arrests. The National Guard will support ICE with processing and administrative functions. And DOC will support ICE with transportation, identifying illegal immigrants in our prisons, and getting them paroled to ICE custody,” continued Governor Rhoden.
To facilitate the DOC component of supporting ICE, Governor Rhoden sent a letter of intent for a 287(g) agreement between DOC and Ice under the Jail Enforcement Model. He sent this letter to the Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem and Acting Director of ICE Todd Lyons. You can find the letter here.
At the announcement, Governor Rhoden was joined by state, federal, city, and county law enforcement leaders including Sioux Falls Mayor Paul TenHaken, Lieutenant Governor Tony Venhuizen, and Secretary of Public Safety Bob Perry. You can find a picture here.
Governor Rhoden is committed to working with local leaders to identify additional ways to address these issues to keep South Dakota strong, safe, and free.
Get the popcorn! The Hansen/Lemming attacks against Toby Doeden continue as another one of the lemmings is going after the Doeden campaign for calls that Hansen can’t win and should drop out.
Recently, former Turner County GOP Chair Tammy Weis (who kept trying to cut Gov Noem off at their gop-like dinner a few years back) is on social media attacking the Doeden campaign manager. And it appear that she’s attacking Doeden supporters in general for suggesting that Hansen drop out because he isn’t going anywhere: