
Column: Week 7 Update
It was a historic week in the State Senate, but for all the wrong reasons. When Kristi Noem first appointed me to the Senate and then when the people of District 8 elected me to the office, you expected me to show up and vote on every bill.
Last week, members of the Senate dodged votes to avoid tough decisions and play political games. That is unacceptable and would not have been allowed in the previous 99 sessions and definitely not when I helped lead the Senate Republicans.
South Dakotans elected us to show up to work and do our job. If anyone can’t meet that basic expectation, they should be voted out or resign. It’s a disgrace to the people of South Dakota and a disrespect to the Legislature. John Carley and the senators who supported his absence should be ashamed and they will have to answer why they were unable to deliver millions of dollars of tax relief opportunities to South Dakota.
Three of my colleagues lost close family members in recent days, and they still showed up to represent their district. When I heard Carley’s various excuses, the BS meter didn’t just spike—it broke. District 29 deserves better, and the Senate’s institutional integrity deserves better.
Carley dodged three key pieces of legislation on purpose. One would have sent property tax rebates to homeowners. Another supported President Trump’s quest for American energy dominance by cutting red tape related to projects generating onsite power for themselves. The last would have reenergized South Dakota’s economic development tools to create new, good-paying jobs and create new property tax revenues that would help lower costs for hard working South Dakotans. Thanks to Carley and those that supported him, those bills didn’t move to the House where they would have passed.
Usually, you hear about political dysfunction in Congress, but South Dakota has typically risen above petty politics and dishonesty to focus on making the state a better place. Sadly, some Senators and House members subscribe to a different class of politics, and all of South Dakota is worse off as a result.
This is why I suspended my campaign for Congress. It is clear to me that my leadership skills are needed in South Dakota right now to move us back to a place of Reagan Republicans and America First Trump Republicans.
When I kicked off my Congressional campaign, “America First, South Dakota Always” became my platform and mission. I still hold true to this mantra as I move forward making South Dakota a better place, and we need to elect Legislators with that same vision—do what is best for South Dakota based on conservative principles to improve the lives of our people, especially the next generation.
I was reminded on Thursday what I’m fighting for in South Dakota. It’s the next generation. The fourth-grade students at Madison Elementary visited the Capitol as part of their Little Legislators program. Every year, they write bills, debate them, vote on them, and they follow the work we do in the legislature. We need to set a good example and deliver results for them.
Our kids truly are our future, but only if we can keep them in South Dakota. I’ve worked my professional and political career to make sure our kids have opportunities to stay in South Dakota. While others think “economic development” is a dirty phrase, I wholeheartedly disagree. Economic development means more jobs, better pay and a higher quality of living. It means rural towns are vibrant, not dying. And it means you can visit your kids and grandkids in South Dakota instead of somewhere else in the world.
As I move into the final two weeks of session, I’ll keep fighting for the next generation, and I’ll continue to lean on America First, South Dakota Always. It’s not a catchphrase; it’s a mission to do what’s best for the people of our great state.