Release: Hoffman seeks reelection to State Senate

Hoffman seeks reelection to State Senate

State Senator Brent “B.R.” Hoffman announced his intention to seek reelection to the State Senate.  He represents District 9, which includes northwestern Sioux Falls, Hartford and Wall Lake.  A first-term lawmaker, Hoffman said he only recently decided to seek a second term and doesn’t take it lightly.  “It’s a tremendous privilege to work for the people of District 9,” he said.

He also said he was encouraged to seek reelection by colleagues, including long-time Senator Al Novstrup.  “I’ve been in or around the legislature for nearly 25 years, and Senator Hoffman is one of the best freshmen I’ve ever seen,” he said.  Rep. Mary Fitzgerald added, “Senator Hoffman is in Pierre to accomplish things and not to spotlight himself.  He’s certainly one of our best legislators.”  For his part, Hoffman said, “I’m grateful for the encouragement…and for the opportunity to work with people better and smarter than myself.”  He’s known as a hard-working campaigner and was first elected to the senate by a 67-33 margin over a 15-year state representative.  Prior to that, he served on a city council and a school board, also defeating incumbents by large margins.

Senator Hoffman has carried substantial bills like Senate Bill #146, “Truth in Sentencing,” perhaps the most notable law to come out of the last session.  For the next session, he has authored bills on school safety, criminal justice, eminent domain, nuclear energy and prison reform, all at the suggestion of constituents.  Hoffman is a Republican and a leader for conservative causes such as life, limited government, fiscal responsibility and law and order.  He has 100% ratings from Right to Life, Protecting South Dakota Kids, the National Rifle Association and South Dakotans for Criminal Justice.  His committee assignments include Commerce and Energy, Judiciary, Taxation and Military and Veteran’s Affairs.  He has never missed a committee meeting or a vote.

Prior to his service in the state legislature, Sen. Hoffman served a distinguished career as a military officer and survived the attack on the Pentagon on 9/11.  After the military, he worked in real estate, then raised his kids after his wife passed to cancer, writing her biography, “Life After.”  He holds several degrees, including an M.B.A. from the University of South Dakota.  His son, Silas, is a U.S. Marine, and his daughter, Lydia, is a student at the University of Nebraska.

New item for my collection.. not exactly political, but as part of an organization that operated in that sphere.

Picked up a new item for my political button collection this week. Well, not exactly..

Advertised for sale as a Mitchell for Capital button, it wasn’t terribly expensive, and the vintage was of that era, so I took a chance on it. But, as I did a deep dive into it’s history, I found out that it has nothing to do with the SD State capital fights. But, it relates to an organization that operated in the political sphere.

So what is “SDTMA?” Turns out that it represented traveling salesmen. The South Dakota Traveling Men’s Association held a convention on June 21-22 of 1907, where they had US Senator Robert La Follette from Wisconsin as their keynote speaker. The South Dakota Traveling Men’s Association was organized in 1904 to represent South Dakota traveling salesmen, as an offshoot of formerly being under the same group in Minnesota.  At the convention, the group had Governor Coe Crawford in attendance providing introductory comments for Senator LaFollette, as well as “paying tribute to the individuality of the traveling man.”

Kind of a neat button, which actually fits well into my frame of “Mitchell memorabilia” from the earlier part of the 1900’s.

Attorney General Jackley Joins Multi-State Effort To Strike Down Firearm Magazine Ban

Attorney General Jackley Joins Multi-State Effort To Strike Down Firearm Magazine Ban

 PIERRE, S.D. — South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley has joined 24 other state Attorneys General in filing an amicus brief challenging a California law that would ban firearm magazines that can hold more than 10 rounds.

The amicus brief asks the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to uphold an earlier ruling by a U.S. District Court in California that the firearms ban denies a citizen the federal constitutional right to use common weapons of their own choosing for self-defense.

“This ban is another intrusion on the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens,” said Attorney General Jackley. “It is important that Attorneys General nationwide remain vigilant against any legislation that infringes upon an individual’s Second Amendment rights.”

Other Attorneys General who are part of this brief are from: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming.

The brief can be read here:

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Sen. Jim Stalzer notes that Minnehaha Co Chair CAN be removed, according to bylaws.

Despite the protestations of former attorney-at-law R. Shawn Tornow, one State Senator notes that he believes that Tornow CAN be removed from his office as Chair of the Minnehaha County GOP, as a majority of Central Committee members at the last meeting sought to do:

I believe R. Shawn Tornow is in error when he claims he cannot be removed from office.

SD GOP Bylaws: Section III – County Central Committee

⦁     Officers: The elected officers of a County Central Committee are the county chairman and county vice chairman, who shall be of the opposite sex, a county secretary, a county treasurer, a state committeeman and a state committeewoman, who shall hold their offices for a term of two years or until their successors have been elected.

7. Meetings: Rules of Order: The rules contained in the current edition of Robert’s Rules of Order Newly Revised shall govern the County Central Committee in all cases to which they are applicable and in which they are not inconsistent with these bylaws and any special rules of order the County Central Committee may adopt; however, unless any member objects, the committee may act informally at the discretion of the county chairman.

Roberts Rules of Order:  62-16• If the bylaws provide that officers shall serve “for __ years or until their successors are elected,” the officer in question can be removed from office by adoption of a motion to do so.

Read that here.

With that being said, does that mean that Tornow won’t call another Central Committee meeting during his term of office?

SDWC Top Ten Political stories of 2023 (Part 3 – The top two)

If you’ve enjoyed the top ten SDWC political stories of 2023, I would encourage you to check out the latest podcast from Dakota Town Hall, where I join hosts Jake Schoenbeck and Murdoc Jurgenson on an audio review of the SDWC top ten issues.  Alway enjoyable.

And with that, After parts one and two, on to part three, and the top two stories of 2023!

2. State Senator Julie Frye Mueller and her harassment of a legislative employee.

Is Julie Frye Mueller being a creep a bigger issue than pipelines or conflicts of interest? Maybe, maybe not. But it encompasses and represents some of the other issues that have already popped up in the top 10, and it completely overshadowed political discussion for months.

The complaint is literally the most awful behavior that you can imagine an employer doing to an employee, as related by Joe Sneve at the Dakota Scout:

Frye Mueller was accused of creepy behavior that went over the line in being crude, lewd and potentially sexually harassive. Because who suggests to an employee that her spouse”bump-start” her breastfeeding.. while Frye-Mueller’s husband stood there. Not to mention her crazy rant on vaccination, etcetera.

That horrendous incident set off legislative hearings, which many – myself included – thought she could have been (and maybe should have been) expelled for. But, in the South Dakota legislature, it’s challenging to get an expulsion for sharing a bed with a legislative page, so probably not going to happen for bad lactation counseling.

But stupidly, Frye Mueller would not take her lumps for her wildly inappropriate behavior and move on. Along with her only defender for her behavior, State Senator Tom Pischke, Frye-Mueller and her ally actively pursued trying to bring charges against those who sat in judgement of her awfulness, and acted to suspend her – to separate her from the employee – during the time when the harassment investigation/hearing was going on.

Pischke and Frye Mueller actually called on the Attorney General and the Hughes County States Attorney to bring charges against the 27 State Senators who acted to protect the victim and created boilerplate “Victim Impact Statements” which they shopped around to their allies.

What seeking his fellow Senator’s arrests earned for Pischke was a seat on the floor next to Frye-Mueller during caucus time, as now both found themselves expelled from the Senate Republican caucus.

This wasn’t the end of things by any means, as after the legislative session several Republican County Committees ignored the fact that Frye-Mueller was tried by a jury of her peers of the conduct, and censured for her actions. They actually gathered some of the funds contributed to them by donors seeking to support Republicans running for office, and sent them to Frye-Mueller for some sort of legal defense purposes to fight the action taken by her colleagues.

The fight continued underground during intervening months with Frye Mueller having threatened a further lawsuit.  As a result of Piscke’s actions (in part, there are other reasons) he earned himself an early primary opponent.

And at one Republican event, Frye-Mueller went so far as to claim that the complaint was in fact false, and fabricated by Legislative Leadership:

After Senator Pischke read his speech off, Frye Mueller got up and gave a fish story which I hadn’t heard to date:

“ you could see this was an orchestrated attempt.. and what Senator Schoenbeck.. and yes you’re watching.. and if you are good for you. His goal I believe was to have me hang my head and walk off the floor. And never come back. And that wasn’t going to happen. 

Because I believe he’s the one who made up those words, as that staffor didn’t say those words, and I didn’t say them either as in my kangaroo court I testified to.”

Watch that here at about 1:08 into the video.

In response, Senator Schoenbeck provided a tidbit that many were unaware of:

The whole senate leadership met with Julie in my office. Pischke was there (at her request for moral support) and she admitted almost all of it, the rest she wanted to only tell her whip (the weird stuff she did on lactation). Pischke admonished her for her inappropriate behavior, in front of all of us.

Next day, he’s standing by her at a press conference denying everything. There’s a reason nobody trusts these people. It’s a small state. You can’t behave and lie like that and expect it to be forgotten.

Read that here.

A month or so after this, Frye-Mueller also found herself with a primary election opponent.

Given this is one of the wildest stories in South Dakota politics, OF COURSE at the end of December, it wasn’t done as of yet. The long promised lawsuit that Julie Frye-Mueller had promised against the state senate finally materialized. To interesting effect:

Schoenbeck, a veteran trial lawyer, also dismissed the legal theory under which Frye-Mueller is seeking Court intervention.

“Unless you’ve studied Klingon, you’re not going to be able to understand it,” he said, referring to the aliens in the science fiction series Star Trek. “And I don’t want to badmouth the Klingons, but this is not in English.”

Read that here.

And that’s where we ended up with this side-show rolling into 2024.

 

1.  Rise of the election truthers/populists.

Yes, I know this is inside baseball. But, on my list, I don’t think anything has affected the landscape of South Dakota politics more than the “election truthers/populists.”  And maybe that’s a catch-all phrase that doesn’t adequately encompass the movement of what we might otherwise term a group of activists whose politics seem to be driven more by what they read on facebook than their knowledge of government or a sense of civic duty.  It is populism run amok as the group is less about supporting Republican or Democrat candidates as much as they are against Government doing anything than dismantling itself.

The small clusters of people along this vein have been happy to co-opt various Republican organizations to serve their needs, without actually supporting the Republican party, and they are just as quick to abandon them as they are to claim them.

Secretary of State Monae Johnson can attest to this.

Johnson rode the wave into office in 2022, yet in 2023 as she attempted to govern, she found that the election truthers who had propelled her into office turned on her as and labeled her a swamp dweller, and at this point are in an active state of war against her as their activists attack her in word, and their officeholders use their position to actively sabotage the Secretary of State’s office.

The truthers/populists seem more intent on burning everything down in pursuit of their own goals as opposed to serving the needs of their community.

If a debate were to come up to find a solution to how to fund our highway repairs, and for example, the future of the gas tax was that it would not generate sufficient revenue because of an influx of electric vehicles, they wouldn’t debate replacement income through a wheel tax or tolls to pay for road upkeep – it would devolve into a debate of the federal government subsidizing electric vehicles, and how we shouldn’t accept federal funding of our highways.. and the potholes in our roads would remain in disrepair.

It’s all well and good to debate ideology ad nauseum, but the average South Dakotan doesn’t subscribe to the same intense reliance on dogma. They just want their damn road fixed, because it ruined their second tire rim, and someone should be fixing the road. The truthers/populist can whip people up on select targeted issues, but they quickly lose interest in participating in the debate when the long-term societal effects set in.

These groups successfully took over a handful of Republican County organizations in late 2022/early 2023, and their handiwork has been evident since that time. The Yankton County GOP fell to their minions, and now instead of hearing from candidates at their annual events, their GOP faithful is subjected to 45 minute power-point presentations on election conspiracies from SD Canvassing.

The largest county republican organization, Minnehaha County, had the same happen. And they find themselves with a leadership team who finds more value with garage sales than meeting a quarter million voters. A leadership team that they now find themselves facing having to pry out of office like a stubborn engorged deer tick. And those are just a couple of quick examples.

These groups are more interested in self-aggrandizing than getting people elected. And their eagerness to upset the applecart is going to come to fruition this year.  The end result of these groups means that there could quickly be a shift in the balance in the state’s next election cycle, as increasingly competitive Democrats find themselves facing off in elections against some weak and disorganized Republican county organizations who let them steal the limelight because the public at large isn’t buying the bag of crazy that the facebook adherents are attempting to sell.

To me, the rise of the truther/populist groups is the biggest political story of the year, as if they have their way, what they are going to accomplish is to swing the pendulum back from Republican leadership, and give Democrats the leg up in state politics that they have been unable to achieve on their own over the last several election cycles.

 

And those are the top ten political stories for SDWC for 2023!

Senator Jim Mehlhaff Announces Re-election to District 24 Senate

Senator Jim Mehlhaff Announces Re-election to District 24 Senate

Date: January 2, 2024

Pierre, SD – District 24 Senator Jim Mehlhaff announced his intention to seek re-election Tuesday for a second term.

“It has been an honor to represent Hughes, Haakon, Stanley, Hyde, and Sully counties in the State Senate,” said Sen. Mehlhaff. “I have worked hard to be an engaged, accessible, and thoughtful conservative member of the legislature. I look forward to earning your support again as I seek a second term.”

Mehlhaff was first elected to the State Senate in 2022. During his first term in office, he has served on the Committees of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Judiciary, and as the Vice-Chair on the Local Government and Retirement Laws committees. In between legislative sessions, Mehlhaff was selected by legislative leadership to serve on the County Funding Summer Study, Unified Judicial System’s (UJS) Indigent Legal Services Task Force, Interim Rules Review Committee, and the Medical Marijuana Advisory Board.

If re-elected, Mehlhaff will continue to bring his common-sense conservative approach to issues impacting the people of District 24.

“I learned a great deal working on issues and legislation over the past year. I intend to keep working hard, and hope the people of District 24 will trust me to put my experience to work in a second term,” Mehlhaff said.

Jim and his wife Annie have lived in the Pierre area for nearly 30 years and have two children.  They are active members of Ss. Peter and Paul Catholic Church.

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Release: Ernie Otten Announces Candidacy for the SD District 6 Senate Seat / Wendi Hogan to announce for D6 House

Ernie Otten Announces Candidacy for the SD District 6 Senate Seat / Wendi Hogan to announce for D6 House

[TEA, SD] [January 1, 2024] — Ernie Otten has officially declared his intention to run for the open District 6 Senate seat in the South Dakota State Legislature. With a background in construction and a wealth of legislative experience, Otten is poised to bring his dedication, hard work, and financial responsibility back to the service of the District and State in the Senate chamber.

Ernie Otten expresses his gratitude to his cousin, Senator Herman Otten, for his 12 years of dedicated service to the District and State. Senator Herman Otten has been an integral part of the legislature, first in the House and the past four years in the Senate. Due to family commitments, Senator Herman Otten has decided not to seek re-election, paving the way for Ernie Otten to continue the legacy of strong representation for District 6.

Ernie Otten has a proven track record in public service, having previously served eight years in the Senate for District 6 before term limits led him to run for the House. During his Senate tenure, Ernie Otten served on Agriculture & National Resources, State Affairs, Taxation, and Transportation. Notably, he chaired Taxation and Transportation Committees.

In his current role in the House, Ernie Otten is an active member of the Appropriations and GOAC (Government Operations and Audit) Committees, currently serving as the chair of GOAC. He had served on the Taxation and Transportation Committees.

Reflecting on his background in construction, Otten remarked, “My construction background has prepared me with real-world business experience, learning that hard work, making difficult decisions, and being financially responsible builds character and success.”

Mr. Otten may be reached at ernie.otten@gmail.com or by calling/texting 605-368-5716.

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Wendi Hogan, Harrisburg, has also taken out petitions and will be announcing her Candidacy for the open SD District 6 House Seat.

Sen. Schoenbeck wins the internet today with his response to Julie Frye Mueller’s lawsuit

Senator and Senate President Pro Tempore Lee Schoenbeck wins the Internet today with his response to Senator Julie Frye Mueller’s lawsuit (as represented by former Speaker of the House Steve Haugaard) demanding she be put back on committees. From the Dakota Scout:

Schoenbeck, a veteran trial lawyer, also dismissed the legal theory under which Frye-Mueller is seeking Court intervention.

“Unless you’ve studied Klingon, you’re not going to be able to understand it,” he said, referring to the aliens in the science fiction series Star Trek. “And I don’t want to badmouth the Klingons, but this is not in English.”

Read the entire story here.

Minnehaha GOP meeting ends in no confidence in chair, and chaos

Sounds like the Minnehaha County Central Committee meeting went from bad to chaos today, according to reports.

After 2/3 of the Minnehaha County GOP at the meeting voted to add a motion of no confidence to the agenda, a vote was held where a majority expressed their dissatisfaction with the quality of the chair.

No surprise, but I’m hearing they expressed they have no confidence in R. Shawn in a vote that went 28-23, but Tornow declared they could not remove him, and he would be chair until an election was held.

As they moved towards a similar no-confidence vote on the Secretary, a substitute motion for adjournment was called by a Tornow ally which the chair quickly recognized, supposedly without a vote, despite not being through the meeting agenda, because he saw the way this was going.

Tornow’s tenure has been marked by a lack of competence, and that fact has not been missed by a majority of the central committee. He might try to cut off his detractors by adjournment, but R. Shawn might just have been put on notice that his days are numbered.

Minnehaha County GOP to vote on Tornow removal.

My insiders in Sioux Falls are giving me updates on this morning’s Minnehaha County GOP meeting as they happen. The Minnehaha Central Committee will be voting soon to overthrow Tornow in Minnehaha County, with a huge mandate, as they voted on adding it to the agenda with a vote of 37 yes 16 no and 6 abstained.

If you have that many voting to add it to the agenda, it’s a good indication that R. Shawn might not just be a former attorney-at-law, but former GOP Chair as well.

Stay tuned..