SDGOP’s June FEC Report: $700 raised, $3.9k spent, $36k cash on hand.

The SDGOP filed it’s June 2025 FEC Report a little early this month. No reason not to, as it appears the financials are pretty simple to do when you’re unable to raise anything, except a donation from the treasurer who probably didn’t want to see the party completely skunked this month.

SDGOP_June2025FECReport by Pat Powers on Scribd

You can’t help but ask yourself, how does the South Dakota Republican Party – the state’s largest political organization –  only manage to have a single donation in a month? Seriously?

Especially when it appears to be a pity donation from the State Party’s treasurer.

That’s correct. State GOP Treasurer Sen. Tina Mulally was the lone donor with a $700 check. Plus they earned $4.25 interest on the remaining balance in their account which seems to be inexorably decreasing as funds drip – drip – drip out on the inevitable expenditures.

$704.25 raised. $3904.71 spent. and $36,644.41 remaining in the bank for the federal account at the moment.

So, so bad. It’s really painful to see at this point.  You really have to ask why the GOP can only raise a $700 pity donation from the treasurer when we have over 320,000 registered Republicans in South Dakota?

At some point you have to consider that the problem is the populists now in charge of the party, and not the people who put R on the voter registration card.

What’s the phrase?  A man reaps what he sows. And the cultivation doesn’t seem to be going so well nowadays.

Senator Mike Rounds’ WEEKLY ROUND[S] UP: June 2-8, 2025

WEEKLY ROUND[S] UP: June 2-8, 2025
by US Senator Mike Rounds

We are back in session in Washington D.C. after a week working back in South Dakota. I was fortunate to spend the week of Memorial Day at events in Watertown, Brookings, Vermillion and Huron. In Huron, I spoke at a ceremony to dedicate the United States Postal Service (USPS) office as the First Lieutenant Thomas Michael Martin Post Office Building. You can read more about that event here. Now, we’re back in D.C. meeting with constituents and taking votes on the newest members of President Trump’s administration. We are also working on the reconciliation package in order to extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. More on my week in my Weekly Round[s] Up:

South Dakota groups I met with: South Dakota members of Doctors for America; South Dakota Growth Energy; South Dakota members of the McKesson Corporation; South Dakota Realtors; the South Dakota Trucking Association; Jeff Kippley, Vice President of the National Farmers Union; the South Dakota Cattlemen’s Association; Blue Star Families; and a group of South Dakota Legislators and Landowners.

South Dakota towns represented: Aberdeen, Aurora, Brookings, Canton, Custer, Dell Rapids, Gary, Huron, Kyle, Leola, Mitchell, Pierre, Rapid City, Sioux Falls, Spearfish, Union Center and Watertown.

Other meetings: Christopher Fox, nominee for Inspector General of the Intelligence Community; Darrel Hackett, President of BMO Harris Bank; Mark Dimondstein, President of the American Postal Workers Union; Joseph Aoun, President of Northeastern University; Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Director of the National Institutes of Health; Dr. Fabiola Gianotti, Director-General of CERN; Rob Larew, President of the National Farmers Union; Jack Dever, nominee for General Counsel at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence; Steve Witkoff, Special Envoy to the Middle East; and Gerald Goodfellow, CEO of the Small Business Consulting Corporation.

I spoke at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Annual Capital Markets Summit and the Special Competitive Studies Project’s AI Expo. I also attended our weekly Senate Bible Study, where our verse of the week was Philippians 4:8, and our weekly Senate Prayer Breakfast, where Senator Roger Marshall of Kansas was our speaker.

Hearings: I attended two hearings this past week: one closed hearing in the Select Committee on Intelligence and one in the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Classified briefings: I attended one classified briefing this past week.

Votes taken: 15 – all on nominees for members of President Trump’s administration. I voted to confirm all of these nominees.

My staff in South Dakota visited: Bison and Fort Pierre.

Steps taken: 53,845 steps or 25.21 miles.

Video of the week: I joined Fox Business on Friday morning to discuss the Senate’s work on the reconciliation bill:

Lincoln County Commissioner uses anti-Semitic slur on camera at meeting, claims “I’ve never had a Jew tell me not to say it;” Claims LGBTQ movement is only one complaining.

Lincoln County Commissioner Doug Putnam seems to be in full “offend everyone” mode, as he defends his use of an anti-semitic slur of “jewing someone down,” by claiming that he’s somehow ok because no Jew has ever complained to his face about him being a neanderthal ass, and claims the people offended by his remarks must be LGBTQ sympathizers.

As noted in the Dakota Scout Story:

Lincoln County Commissioner Doug Putnam refused to apologize this week after being publicly confronted for making a remark widely considered antisemitic during a recent commission meeting.

“Evidently, I said something wrong, and I’m supposed to apologize, which I won’t,” said the first-term GOP commissioner, addressing blowback he’s received for saying “I thought you’d Jew them down” two weeks ago during a discussion on a lease contract. 

and..

After the meeting, Putnam suggested that those offended by his remarks are aligned with the LGBTQ movement and that most don’t take offense.

Read the entire story here.

Whaaaaat?

I’m not sure how low some politicians can go, but you’d have to think we’re getting close to the bottom of the barrel. And then we’re amazed all over again.

Putnam is the District 4 Lincoln County Commissioner, with the Lincoln County Commission website noting that his term of office is up on December 31, 2028.

I notice that it has his contact information if anyone was so inclined to educate him.   Not that I think education is his strong point.

South Dakota War College’s Tale of the Tape Summer 2025 edition: GOP Candidates continue to come and go for 2026

New candidates have arrived, and others have departed since we last looked at the races for statewide office from top to bottom. And, it is time for a long overdue update of the “SDWC Tale of the Tape” for a rundown of rumor, conjecture and who you can expect might actually be running on the Republican side of the ticket in South Dakota for the 2026 election.

Congressman Dusty Johnson’s Landmark Digital Assets Legislation Passes Committee

Johnson’s Landmark Digital Assets Legislation Passes Committee

Washington, D.C. – Today, the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act passed the House Agriculture Committee by a vote of 47-6 to establish a clear regulatory framework for digital assets in the United States.

U.S. Representative Dusty Johnson (R-S.D.), Chairman of the Agriculture subcommittee on digital assets, introduced this legislation in May along with Committee on Agriculture Chairman G.T. Thompson (R-PA), Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN), Committee on Financial Services Chairman French Hill (R-AR), and Financial Services subcommittee on digital assets Chairman Bryan Steil (R-WI).

“Over the next few years, blockchain technology will transform most every industry,” said Johnson. “Unfortunately, regulatory uncertainty has pushed innovation and investment overseas. Our bill creates clear rules of the road, ensuring America will power the future of blockchain and digital assets.”

Click here or the image above for Johnson’s remarks in last week’s Agriculture Committee hearing.

The CLARITY Act is also cosponsored by U.S. Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH), House Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Angie Craig (D-MN), Rep. Don Davis (D-NC), Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY), Bill Huizenga (R-MI), and Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ).

Click here for the text of the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act.

Click here for a section-by-section.

Click here for a one-pager.

###

Press Release: NEW NFIB SURVEY: Small Business Optimism Increases in May

NEW NFIB SURVEY: Small Business Optimism Increases in May
Taxes are now small business owners’ single most important problem

PIERRE, SD (June 10, 2025) – The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index increased by three points in May to 98.8, slightly above the 51-year average of 98. Expected business conditions and sales expectations contributed the most to the rise in the index. The Uncertainty Index rose two points from April to 94. Eighteen percent of small business owners reported taxes as their single most important problem, up two points from April and ranking as the top problem. The last time taxes were ranked as the top single most important problem was in December 2020.

“Although optimism recovered slightly in May, uncertainty is still high among small business owners,” said NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg. “While the economy will continue to stumble along until the major sources of uncertainty are resolved, owners reported more positive expectations on business conditions and sales growth.”

“South Dakota’s small businesses are experiencing a slight boost in optimism, particularly regarding sales expectations,” said NFIB South Dakota State Director Jason Glodt. “Yet, the concern over labor quality and taxes continues to affect the overall outlook. Lawmakers in Washington, D.C. and Pierre must prioritize small business solutions, like making the Small Business Tax Deduction permanent, to bolster Main Street and allow our communities to grow and thrive.”

Key findings include:

  • A net 1% (seasonally adjusted) of owners viewed current inventory stocks as “too low” in May, up 7 points from April and the highest reading since August 2022. This was the largest monthly increase in the survey’s history.
  • The net percent of owners expecting better business conditions rose 10 points from April to a net 25% (seasonally adjusted).
  • The net percent of owners expecting higher real sales volumes rose 11 points from April to a net 10% (seasonally adjusted). This component contributed the most to the Optimism Index’s improvement.
  • Twenty-two percent (seasonally adjusted) plan capital outlays in the next six months, up four points from April and the highest reading of this year.
  • The percent of small business owners reporting labor quality as the single most important problem for business fell three points from April to 16%.
  • Fourteen percent of owners reported that inflation was their single most important problem in operating their business, unchanged from April.
  • When asked to rate the overall health of their business, 14% reported excellent (up one point), and 55% reported good (down one point). Twenty-eight percent reported the health of their business was fair (up one point) and 4% reported poor (unchanged).

As reported in NFIB’s monthly jobs report, a seasonally adjusted 34% of all small business owners reported job openings they could not fill in May, unchanged from April. Of the 55% of owners hiring or trying to hire in May, 86% reported few or no qualified applicants for the positions they were trying to fill. A seasonally adjusted net 12% of owners plan to create new jobs in the next three months, down one point from April.

Labor costs reported as the single most important problem for business owners rose one point in May to 9%.

Seasonally adjusted, a net 26% reported raising compensation, down seven points from April. A seasonally adjusted net 20% plan to raise compensation in the next three months, up three points from April.

Fifty-six percent of owners reported capital outlays in the last six months, down two points from April and the lowest reading of this year.

Of those making expenditures, 40% reported spending on new equipment, 26% acquired vehicles, and 15% improved or expanded facilities. Ten percent spent money on new fixtures and furniture and 5% acquired new buildings or land for expansion.

In May, the percent of small business owners reporting poor sales as their top business problem remained at 9% for the fifth consecutive month. A net negative 13% of all owners (seasonally adjusted) reported higher nominal sales in the past three months, down five points from April.

The net percent of owners reporting inventory gains was unchanged from April at a net negative 5%, seasonally adjusted. Not seasonally adjusted, 14% reported increases in stocks and 16% reported reductions. A net 1% (seasonally adjusted) of owners viewed current inventory stocks as “too low” in May, up seven points from April and the highest reading since August 2022.

Seasonally adjusted, a net 31% plan price hikes in May, up three points from April. The net percent of owners raising average selling prices was unchanged from April at a net 25%, seasonally adjusted. Unadjusted, 10% of owners reported lower average selling prices and 38% reported higher average prices.

The frequency of reports of positive profit trends was a net negative 26% (seasonally adjusted) in May, five points worse than in April. Among owners reporting lower profits, 36% blamed weaker sales, 13% cited the rise in the cost of materials, 11% cited usual seasonal change, and 8% cited labor costs. For owners reporting higher profits, 52% credited sales volumes, 27% cited usual seasonal change, and 8% cited higher selling prices.

Five percent of owners reported that financing and interest rates were their top business problem in May, up two points from April. Twenty-five percent of all owners reported borrowing on a regular basis, down one point from April. A net 4% reported their last loan was harder to get than in previous attempts, down one point from April. A net 7% reported paying a higher rate on their most recent loan, up one point from April.

Ten percent (seasonally adjusted) of owners reported that it is a good time to expand their business, up one point from April. Despite the increase, this remains a low reading historically.

Eighteen percent of small business owners reported taxes as their single most important problem, up two points from April and ranking as the top problem. The last time taxes were ranked as the top single most important problem was in December 2020, when it tied for first with labor quality. The percent of small business owners reporting government regulations and red tape as their single most important problem remained at 9%. Four percent reported competition from large businesses as their single most important problem, down three points from April.

The NFIB Research Center has collected Small Business Economic Trends data with quarterly surveys since the fourth quarter of 1973 and monthly surveys since 1986. Survey respondents are randomly drawn from NFIB’s membership. The report is released on the second Tuesday of each month. This survey was conducted in May 2025.

###        

For over 80 years, NFIB has been advocating on behalf of America’s small and independent business owners, both in Washington, D.C., and in all 50 state capitals. NFIB is nonprofit, nonpartisan, and member-driven. Since our founding in 1943, NFIB has been exclusively dedicated to small and independent businesses, and remains so today. For more information, please visit nfib.com.

Looks like the landlord endorsement is in from Toby’s Tenant; Rep. Schaefbauer officially endorses Doeden for Gov

(One of Brandei’s Constituents sent this over.)

It looks like the all-important landlord endorsement is in from State Representative Brandei Schaefbauer, as she endorses the man she pays rent to for Governor:

Of course, don’t forget, she also has a tendency to represent his interests in the legislature as well:

In case you forgot about that one, you can review it here.

Guest Column: Happy Father’s Day by Thomas E. Simmons

The opinions expressed here are the author’s and do not reflect the views of the Board of Regents, the University of South Dakota, its Knudson School of Law, their employees, faculty, or administrators. The foregoing represents Simmons’ views as a private citizen.

Guest Column: Happy Father’s Day
Thomas E. Simmons

I remember the first time I appreciated Ronald Reagan. It was a smidgen over forty-five years ago. I was watching the news with my dad. I was twelve. My dad was forty-four. The Republican presidential primaries were heating up.

In February of 1980, Reagan was trying to best Bush in the primaries. New Hampshire’s was a key primary and Bush had just won Iowa. Reagan was the underdog. A panel-style debate, attended by Bush (along with Bob Doyle, Howard Baker, John Anderson, and Phil Crane), and financed by Reagan’s campaign, was scheduled in a New Hampshire auditorium. Before the debate could begin, there was a dust-up about something and someone instructed the sound man (a Mr. Green) to mute Reagan’s microphone.

Regan stood up. He was vigorous and frustrated, yet in control of his temper, his words, and his actions. He said in an expressive, assertive, and offended voice: “I am paying for this microphone, Mr. Green.” The auditorium erupted in the applause of Reagan’s supporters. And the microphone stayed on.

As a kid, I didn’t understand who had paid for the microphone or anything else about the context of the sound bite. Most contemporary voters were probably equally uninformed. (I’ve since watched the full debate.) What I could see even as a twelve-year-old, however, was the tenacity and the measured leadership that Reagan had modeled.

It was a small thing, but small things are not nothing. Indeed, small things can be quite revealing of a person’s character.

Reagan had stood up for himself and his campaign respectfully, articulately, and effectively. He had done the right thing at the right time and in the right way. He was clear-headed and assertive. His spur-of-the-minute performance evidenced a model disposition toward virtuous actions. In my young brain, I connected those predispositions of Regan on display in the sound bite with the effective predispositions for leading the free world.

I wasn’t wrong. Reagan had what it took to lead the country and the world as well. He had a fine moral compass. He was an august statesman who didn’t take himself too seriously, though he took his county and its moral compass very seriously indeed. He was a man of generosity, sincerity, courage, and unbending loyalty to his wife, Nancy.

He had gravitas. He had a sense of humor. He had vision. He was someone a young boy and his father could look up to.

The memory I treasure of this television moment also underscores my reminiscence; that of an decades-old impression that two television viewers had shared, father and son. I was too young to yet choose a party or even conceptualize between right and left. But on that day, my dad and I were both in agreement that Reagan could stand up and fight, with dignity, for what he thought was right. We both liked what we saw and we shared a common conviction.

We both witnessed the same thing on the TV screen: A man who cared deeply about what was just and what was unjust, a man who could distinguish between right and wrong, and a man with the vigor and tenacity to frame a message and convince others of its rightness. A virtuous herald. A man with a vision of the country’s leadership role on the world stage. A man we could respect, even if we wouldn’t endorse everything he said or did.

I was reminded of the New Hampshire auditorium event when I heard, more than four decades later, that Dennis Quaid would be playing Ronald Reagan in a major Hollywood picture. Quaid, in an interview with Dr. Jordan Peterson, conceded that he was initially reluctant to play Reagan because, inter alia, he didn’t think he looked much like the former president.

But the jawlines match. The tenacity and clear-eyed vision of what’s being confronted do too; those characteristics align between the actor and the president he played. Quaid was well-cast.

My father died in May of 2006 on the airplane that was carrying him back to Rapid City. He was returning from the Mayo Clinic where the inevitability of his advanced cancer had been confirmed. He’d been diagnosed just ten days earlier and given ten days to live. He died in the evening somewhere up high in the air over South Dakota. His doctor’s mortality prediction of ten days had been correct – almost to the hour.

Happy Father’s Day, Dad.

To see the microphone in question from the New Hampshire debate, head to Simi Valley, California. It’s on display at the Reagan Presidential Library. Someday, I hope to do so myself and rekindle those memories of my father once again.

Thomas E. Simmons
University of South Dakota Knudson School of Law
Vermilion, SD