Is it me, or is the Minnehaha County GOP trying to ignore the Trump event out west.

South Dakota GOP announces President Trump coming to South Dakota for major event on July 19..

 

Minnehaha County Republican Party facebook, July 20 forward…

Is it me, or is the Minnehaha County GOP’s leadership actively avoiding any mention to Minnehaha County Republicans the fact that former President and front-running Republican candidate Donald Trump is coming to South Dakota on September 8?

(They must be busy planning the next rummage sale.)

Reports coming out claiming that Senator Castleberry is not likely to run again due to dispute with state over COVID funds. Will a resignation take place before January? Unfortunately, it may be unavoidable.

For the last week, I’ve been hearing reports through sources that South Dakota State Senator Jessica Castleberry is not likely to seek re-election to her District 35 Senate seat in light of the dispute she’s having with the State of South Dakota over her business receiving over $600,000 in COVID funds.

This morning, the Dakota Scout is reporting that they are hearing reports of the same rumors as well:

And since Attorney General Marty Jackley publicly called for the Pennington County legislator to return the funds or face criminal penalty, Castleberry has told numerous colleagues she will not run for the office again in 2024, according to multiple sources of The Dakota Scout.

Read that here.

I think that goes without saying that Senator Castleberry would be challenged to mount a successful campaign in light of the not insignificant fiscal demands being made of her business. There’s not a lot of businesses that have $603,000 of liquidity, especially if they had to apply for pandemic relief.  It would be challenging for anyone to run a campaign in that kind of environment.

What is not being speculated as much is whether the issue the Senator is facing will bring on a resignation prior to the next legislative session. It’s not being spoken of as yet, but as was the case with former Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg, sometimes a person has to read the room.

Go back to January of this year, and recall the Senate hearings for disgraced State Senator Julie Frye-Mueller over her harassment of a legislative employee with lewd breast sucking advice, while her lobbyist husband stood at the Senator’s side. At the time there were those questioning if expulsion might be appropriate, with the Senate finally deciding on censure, with GOP leadership continuing to ban Frye-Mueller from committee assignments.

Those hearings were over Frye-Mueller’s conduct outside of the legislative chambers, and there remains a lot of bitterness with Frye-Mueller and her ally Senator Tom Pischke over the Senate taking action. So much so that they tried to gin up false charges against most of the Senate for kicking her out of the Senate Chamber while they investigated, going so far as Pischke & Frye-Mueller holding a press conference demanding those Senators be arrested. No one in law enforcement, whether it was the Attorney General or the local states attorney took them seriously, because let’s face it. They’re idiots.  As Senate Leader Lee Schoenbeck noted at the time, “She should be embarrassed,” Schoenbeck said. “She and her bully friends need to go away and leave our workers and citizens alone.”

At the time, Senator Jessica Castleberry was one of the Senators that Frye-Mueller and Pischke were trying to demand the arrest of, according to the affidavit they were passing around, when they were shot down hard. Pischke also earned himself the boot from the Republican Legislative caucus to go along with Frye-Mueller’s dis-invitation from same.

Now think of what’s happened in the months since.  The political environment has not gotten kinder and more conciliatory. Unfortunately, that’s the environment that Senator Castleberry is stuck working with.

With the Governor herself requesting an investigation citing the “ethics of the malfeasance,” even in the best case scenario, with the guidance being issued by the South Dakota State Supreme Court that legislators could not accept COVID funds (starting page 4 here), I have the feeling that the Senate will have no choice but to take up the Castleberry issue. Even as much as Senators like Senator Castleberry personally.

Under Legislative rules, the very first item in the legislative code of conduct reads as follows:

CHAPTER 1B. LEGISLATIVE CODE OF CONDUCT

1B-1. Maintenance of ethical standards. The people of South Dakota require that their legislators maintain the highest of moral and ethical standards as such standards are essential to assure the trust, respect and confidence of our citizens. Legislators have a solemn responsibility to avoid improper behavior and refrain from conduct that is unbecoming to the Legislature or that is inconsistent with the Legislature’s ability to maintain the respect and trust of the people it serves. While it is not possible to write rules to cover every circumstance, each legislator must do everything in his or her power to deal honorably with the public and with his or her colleagues and must promote an atmosphere in which ethical behavior is readily recognized as a priority and is practiced continually, without fail.

Read that here.

Even if the over half-a-million in funds can be repaid in full, I don’t know that legislative hearings on it are avoidable. I can think of at least two who will press it, if no one else does.

I have no doubt that Senator Castleberry put the funds into her business to keep it afloat, as many businesses did during COVID. Personally, I’ve known her to be a hard working businesswoman who lives frugally, so I don’t believe any of this took place because she had greed or avarice in mind.  But the fact of the matter is that as much as she’s liked, if she is a member of the legislature in January, there will be Senate hearings, adding to the Senator’s legal troubles over accepting the funds and increasing her legal expenses in responding to the matter.

As I noted in my column in April of 2022, noting former Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg’s situation, The thing about the political life is that for 99% of people involved in it, it really isn’t forever. It will end at some point, and there will be another chapter that has nothing to do with being elected to something.  I’d say “change is hard.” And people avoid change. But I’d argue that if you see that change is coming like a freight train; if you can see that the end is coming no matter what you do, you might also do some soul searching as to “why are you prolonging something that you know is going to end?” Because sometimes it’s just better for a person’s own mental and spiritual health to just begin that next chapter.  You can’t control what other people think. But you can control what you do for yourself.

This is going to be challenging enough for Senator Castleberry to address, and it’s a crappy thing to have to deal with for her, especially considering that she believed she was in the right at the time.  But, one way or another, this is not going to be a result that remotely resembles being good. Either it ends in more than likely repayment of $603,000, or it ends in repayment of $603,000 and a public show via a Senate trial. (Let’s not say trial, and use the term conduct or ethics hearing, since it’s confusing people.-pp)

I’d hope that she chooses the path that causes herself the least amount of anguish, and allows her to address what’s taken place and to move forward.

The Hill: Thune one of two front-runners in shadow race to replace McConnell as Senate GOP Leader

As many people across the country witnessed the moment when Kentucky Senator and Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell lost his words during a press conference recently, speculation has run rampant as to who will be replacing Senator McConnell as Minority Leader if he steps down. As the #2 person in the Senate, South Dakota Senator and Minority Whip John Thune is one of the front runners for the position, and an article in “The Hill” goes into further detail:

McConnell’s health came back into the spotlight Wednesday when he froze midsentence while delivering his opening remarks at the weekly Republican leadership press conference and had to step away from the podium and return to his office for a few minutes to recover.

and..

The lawmaker noted that Senate Republican Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) ran the Senate floor this month during the debate and votes on the annual defense authorization bill, with his staff working in close coordination with floor staff to get agreements on amendments and resolve objections.

“Thune is running the floor, he’s running the [National Defense Authorization Act] negotiations,” the lawmaker said.

and..

The senator said the shadow race to one day replace McConnell has boiled down to Thune, Sen. John Cornyn (Texas), who previously served as Senate GOP whip, and Senate Republican Conference Chairman John Barrasso (Wyo.).

Read the entire story here.

South Dakota Republican Party newsletter features Trump Rapid City event; Wiik says Trump will “bring a message to all South Dakota Republicans”

The South Dakota Republican Party distributed the latest edition of their newsletter “The Majority Report” with “Republican Party Hosts President Donald Trump for Rally in Rapid City” splashed across the front page in anticipation of the former President’s visit to Rapid City in early September.

2023 Majority Report July 28-2 by Pat Powers on Scribd

Limited Tickets at $25 each are available by going to www.sdgop.com, or directly from the Monument at https://www.themonument.live/events/detail/trumprally.  In their e-mail sending it out, it appears the GOP may also have some exclusive VIP opportunities as well, but a person has to contact the party directly for information on those exclusive events.

Governor Kristi Noem will also be a featured speaker at the Rally on Friday September 8th at the Monument in Rapid City.

US Senator John Thune’s Weekly Column: A Strong Economy Helps Us Compete with China

A Strong Economy Helps Us Compete with China
BySen. John Thune

The threat that China poses both militarily and economically is widely recognized. I’m proud that the Senate recently passed a strong defense bill that will enable the U.S. military to better deter Chinese aggression. But we also need to compete with China from a position of economic strength, and a key part of doing that is strengthening American industry and building a more resilient economy.

There’s widespread agreement that competing with China requires stronger industry at home. But how we go about doing this matters. The president and Democrats in Congress have shown a preference for costly taxpayer subsidies for select industries. The level of government involvement in the economy they envision is a significant departure from our tested free enterprise system. And it’s worth asking, what will be the result of increased government involvement in our economy in the long term? Will it stifle innovation in our most important engines of growth? Will small businesses and start-ups be able to compete with large, government-subsidized firms?

We now know that the green energy subsidies included in Democrats’ so-called Inflation Reduction Act are largely going to large companies and often to companies based in foreign countries, including China. And the Biden administration has implemented subsidies for semiconductor manufacturers in a way that goes far beyond the scope of the program. They are giving preference to companies using union workers and, in some cases, conditioning funding on companies offering employee benefits that align with their social agenda. This is the opposite of creating a level playing field – it’s government using taxpayer dollars to pick winners and losers.

I believe that government should be focused on creating conditions in which businesses large and small can grow, innovate, and create jobs. Republicans’ 2017 tax reform provides an example of this sort of pro-growth policy at work. It lowered our sky-high corporate tax rate to make American businesses more competitive and made it easier to recover the cost of a small business, farm, or ranch investing in themselves. The result was a stronger economy with rising wages and job creation, and companies bringing production back to the United States. Republican-led tax reforms have made our economy more resilient, and making these pro-growth policies permanent would give American businesses and entrepreneurs the certainty they need to compete and grow.

We also need to resume a real and robust trade agenda. Trade opens new jobs and opportunities for American workers. It opens new markets for our agricultural products and other goods and services. And while the Biden administration has been largely inactive on trade for over two years, the rest of the world has not. In fact, China is negotiating or implementing a number of new trade agreements. It’s clear that if the United States stays on the sidelines on trade, China will be happy to fill the vacuum. So, competing with China will require that we stay engaged and lead on trade.

The United States must rise to the occasion to compete with China. We have to compete from a position of economic strength, but we won’t get there with the heavy hand of government meddling in the economy. I believe that America succeeds when innovators and entrepreneurs are empowered to do what they do best and government steps out of the way. I’ll continue to push for pro-growth policies that put us in the best position to create opportunity at home and compete around the world.

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Congressman Dusty Johnson’s Weekly Column: Bringing Clarity to Cryptocurrency

Bringing Clarity to Cryptocurrency
By Rep. Dusty Johnson
July 28, 2023

Cryptocurrencies are confusing. Is it real money? Is it digital money? Is it worth the investment? Is it risky?

Many people see a great advantage to investing in the digital asset market. However, the past few years have been riddled with lawsuits, bankruptcies, and complications for digital asset developers and investors. Because of a lack of regulatory framework, digital asset companies encounter a higher risk of regulation-by-enforcement by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). A recent District Court decision in the Ripple Labs case held that Ripple’s token, XRP, is not a security in and of itself, highlighting the fact that legislation from Congress is past due.

Every market expert I have spoken with or heard testify in the House Ag Committee says this regulatory gap needs solved so the market can innovate and thrive with certainty. Earlier this month, the House Ag Committee and House Financial Services Committee introduced a historic bill to do just that. The Financial Innovation and Technological (FIT) for the 21st Century Act is the product of months of collaboration between the two committees, bipartisan joint committee hearings, and conversations with experts.

This week, it passed with bipartisan support out of both committees. This type of collaboration is unprecedented and could be the most substantial piece of digital asset legislation in the history of Congress.

The European Union, Britain, and authoritarian countries like China have established regulatory frameworks and protections for developers which has led many digital asset companies to move overseas. I don’t own any cryptocurrency, but if we want to remain the global leader in technology and financial innovation, we have to be engaged in the area. As the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Digital Assets, I was proud to secure committee passage on this important legislation.

Both our committees will push to get this legislation on the House floor for a vote this year so we can bring clarity to cryptocurrency.

View my remarks from the Ag Committee hearing here.

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Governor Kristi Noem’s Weekly Column: Telling a Story of Hope

Telling a Story of Hope
By: Governor Kristi Noem
July 28, 2023

The United States of America was created because of a sense of hope. Our founders had the hope that one day we would be a nation of greatness, of self-governance, and of Freedom.

In too many communities across America, that hope has diminished. There are Americans who do not believe in our founding principles, who are not patriotic, and who do not have hope for this nation’s future. That could not be further from the truth in South Dakota.

In South Dakota, we’re telling a story of hope. And we’re doing it by making our state the best place in America to live and to raise a family.

People want to raise a family here. In fact, we have the highest birth rate in the nation! We have built a culture of life. We have prioritized taking care of moms and their babies both before birth and after. When people are happy, healthy, and free to make the best decisions for themselves, they want to bring more beautiful children into this world.

As a parent and a grandparent, myself, I know how important it is for all of our parents to spend time with their newborn babies. That’s why I have prioritized family bonding by expanding Paid Family Leave (PFL) benefits for state employees. We worked hard to pass PFL for state employees in 2020, and we expanded it earlier this year.

We’re not focusing solely on children and new parents. We have also given a new sense hope to hundreds of others across South Dakota.

When I launched the “Meth, We’re on It” campaign in 2019 alongside the Department of Social Services, we were attacked by the mainstream media. The campaign was provocative, and it worked. We have had incredible success combatting the meth crisis in our state. In 2020, South Dakota had the largest drop in drug overdoses in the country. Only two states had a decrease. New Hampshire dropped by less than 1%– South Dakota dropped by 16%. Then, in 2022, we had the largest drop in the nation once again. This time, our overdoses dropped by 17.6%.

The media attacked us for the campaign, but it worked. It saved lives. And it made a difference in the lives of so many families.

This success is not just a happy coincidence. It is proof that our policies work. Our focus on the individual needs of our people is really making a difference. I could never produce these results on my own – neither could any of our state agencies. Many of our agencies have worked together to tackle this challenge.

One of the biggest contributions has been the Department of Tribal Relations’ annual Meth Summit. Secretary Flute and his team has been dedicated to helping our tribes fight the meth epidemic, and hundreds of lives have been saved because of their tireless efforts.

In South Dakota we don’t complain about things, we fix them. That’s something that my dad always told me. We are not a people who look at problems and think that it’s someone else’s job to solve them. We pick ourselves up and figure out how to fix things. We dedicate ourselves to the betterment of our communities, our state, and our great nation.

That perspective is hard to come by these days, but that’s what makes South Dakota even more special. Our state is a beacon of Freedom for the nation. We are a state that truly has a story to tell – and I couldn’t be prouder that our story is a story of hope.

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Thune Supports Annual Defense Bill, Ellsworth Air Force Base Priorities

Thune Supports Annual Defense Bill, Ellsworth Air Force Base Priorities

“I remain committed to ensuring that Ellsworth Air Force Base and its surrounding communities have everything they need for the B-21 bomber mission so Ellsworth can continue to serve as one of our nation’s essential military assets for decades to come.”

WASHINGTON — U.S. Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) today issued the following statement after the Senate overwhelmingly passed the bipartisan National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). The bill contains numerous priorities that benefit South Dakota and the future B-21 bomber mission at Ellsworth Air Force Base, including authorization for $5.3 billion for continued aircraft development and initial procurement and $396 million for the construction of three new facilities on the base. The NDAA also includes a 5.2 percent pay raise for servicemembers, requires the Pentagon to create a plan to counter cartels’ human and drug trafficking on the border, and prioritizes military modernization to combat the growing threat from China. Thune recently spoke on the Senate floor about the NDAA’s importance to the men and women at Ellsworth Air Force Base and to the advancement of the future B-21 bomber mission.

“The NDAA is one of the most important measures Congress passes every year, and I’m pleased that the Senate passed it today with overwhelming bipartisan support,” said Thune. “The bill strengthens our national security and Ellsworth Air Force Base’s position in defending it, addresses concerns about U.S. military readiness, and provides support for Ukraine in its war with Russia. I remain committed to ensuring that Ellsworth Air Force Base and its surrounding communities have everything they need for the B-21 bomber mission so Ellsworth can continue to serve as one of our nation’s essential military assets for decades to come.”

NDAA priorities for South Dakota include:

  • $396 million for B-21 military construction, including:
    • Fuel System Maintenance Dock, $75 million
    • Phase Hangar, $160 million
    • Weapons Generation Facility, $160 million
  • $5.31 billion for B-21 development and procurement, including:
    • Research, development, test, and evaluation of the B-21 Raider, $2.325 billion
    • B-21 procurement, $1.617 billion
    • Advance B-21 procurement, $708 million
  • $5.25 million to complete National Guard Readiness Center
    • BG Dean Mann Sioux Falls Readiness Center, $5.25 million
  • Continued procurement of long-range munitions used by the B-1 bomber and future B-21, including:
    • Joint Air-Surface Standoff Missile, $1.685 billion
    • Long-Range Anti-Ship Missile, $187.7 million
    • Long-Range Standoff Weapon, $958.2 million

Thune-Sponsored Provisions:

Critical Minerals University Affiliated Research Center (UARC)

The bill includes a provision for the Department of Defense to create a UARC for critical minerals to focus on applied research, commercialization, and workforce development with schools like South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.

Quantum Workforce

The bill includes a provision to bolster Department of Defense engagement in quantum information science and workforce development by utilizing existing partnerships, scholarships, and research programs within the department.

Equipping Ground Forces with Small Drones

The bill requires the Department of Defense to develop a strategy to equip ground combat units with small drones or unmanned aerial systems like those being put to use in Ukraine, especially the quadcopters with payload release mechanisms that have been used to notable effect against Russian armor.

Strategy on Attritable Decoys

The bill’s report language requires the Department of Defense to create a comprehensive strategy on the use of attritable decoys in the Indo-Pacific, noting that deception activities, including the use of decoys, provide cost-effective options for complicating adversary decision making.

National American Indian Veterans, Inc (NAIV) Congressional Charter

The bill includes an amendment introduced by Thune and Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) that would grant a federal charter to the NAIV.

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Governor Noem supported SDGOP in securing former President, will be at Rapid City Rally w/Trump on Sept 8.

An article at ArgusLeader.com today notes something I’ve been hearing for a few weeks behind the scenes; that Governor Kristi Noem has been instrumental in helping the South Dakota Republican Party’s efforts to bring President Trump back to South Dakota for a Rapid City rally to support the South Dakota Republican Party:

Noem told reporters Thursday that she supported GOP Chairman John Wiik in securing the former president as a speaker.

“I think there was a little follow up with me to just see if that was something I would support,” Noem said. “I talked to [Trump] directly two days ago so we’ve been talking.”

Read the entire article here.

Taffy Howard rejecting Trump event because benefits SDGOP, claiming Trump “being used,” and declares “I don’t want to help in any way”

For someone who wanted to be the Republican nominee for Congress last year, former State Representative Taffy Howard sure hates the Republican Party.

After her loss to Dusty Johnson, during the last Republican Convention, when she wasn’t trying to kill the resolution thanking the leadership of the Republican Party, Howard was trying to gin up a demand that the South Dakota Republican Party return convention and meal fees, and to vote delegates money to themselves out of the party treasury.

Since then, she has done even less for South Dakota Republicans, spending much of her time attacking the GOP, and it’s candidates.

But in a new low, Taffy is trying to decide whether she’s going to boycott the SDGOP’s showcase event with former President Donald Trump, because it might in some way, shape or form benefit the South Dakota Republican Party which has invested time and money to put the event together.

Literally, what might be the biggest event that the Republican Party has put on in South Dakota in modern history has Taffy declaring that “I don’t want to help in any way,” because she has that much loathing for the Republicans who have been elected, and the Republican voters who have put them in office:

..while I have a deep admiration for what Trump has been able to accomplish, I do believe he is being used by the establishment elites in our state to give themselves some standing with their conservative constituents, which I don’t want to help in any way.

Read Taffy Howard’s screed here.

Understand that this is the same Taffy Howard who was happy to drown herself in Trump kool-aid, and was happy to show up and participate at the Pillow Guy election denier event in Sioux Falls, and went so far in her campaign to declare the 2020 election as stolen and “Trump should still be President.

Yet, she hates the GOP so much so that when the party is able to bring the former President in for an event, her reaction is that he’s being used, and she declares “I don’t want to help in any way.”  You really have to ask herself that if she hates the Republican Party that much, and rejects the people who South Dakota Republicans voters have chosen to put in office to that extent, and goes as far as she does, why is she still registered as a Republican?

Seriously. Someone should point out to Taffy that she should check her overinflated sense of self at the door, and that it’s not about her.

While I might be looking at my options in the next presidential race, I will be the first one to point out that this is the biggest single event the South Dakota Republican Party has been able to put together featuring the party’s front running presidential hopeful/former President in my 35 years of being involved.  It’s a huge win for the SDGOP, and ultimately a high profile boost for all Republican candidates in the state, current, and those to come in the next election. A rising tide raises all ships.

If a person thinks Republicans should be elected over Democrats, Real Republicans should want the party to be successful. We need it to be successful. And it has been for decades, with Republican elected officials who have the support of the majority of Republicans and the majority of South Dakotans.

Either Taffy supports the Republican party or she doesn’t. And if she doesn’t, she should drop the act and get out of the way.