Secretary of State Monae Johnson statement on declining GOAC command to appear
Senator Taffy Howard’s committee, the Legislature’s Government Operations and Audit Committee, was today demanding that the Secretary of State appear in front of their committee with regards to a contract between the office and voting equipment vendor KNOWiNK.
It appears as if the election goofballs at SD Canvassing have been planning on hijacking the meeting, since they made a graphic up for it and had posted the following to social media in the last few weeks…

..making specific note to mention they claim it could “connect to George Soros,” as if that’s going to make them sound more sane? Keep in mind that this is the same group that’s running Heather Baxter for SOS because Baxter is willing to indulge their nuttery, and Secretary of State Monae Johnson isn’t.
Unfortunately for the election conspiracists, the Secretary of State had actual work to do today, as she noted in a statement the office released to the media:
“We’ve consistently answered every question GOAC has asked over the past several months, and many of the current topics are rehashing issues we’ve already addressed.
My staff and I are at a county auditor training that has been scheduled for two years. The staff who would accompany me to GOAC would also be testifying, but they are attending this training.
We have not been served a subpoena and therefore have not seen any specific requests. Once we are formally served, we will review and respond accordingly.
In the meantime, I am fulfilling my duties by serving the people of South Dakota and help training the county auditors I work with daily.”
I’ll have to go back and listen to the audio, but given that Taffy was part of the group that is demanding that the governor cut spending by 5%, after she was personally proposing an entire package of new taxes, one would think she has more important work to do than to indulge a special interest group’s goofiness.


Pierre, SD – District 24 Senator Jim Mehlhaff announces his intention to seek re-election for a third term.
Jackley, 55, is a particularly formidable candidate. Currently in his fourth term as South Dakota’s chief law enforcement officer, Jackley has been elected statewide three times. He has universal name recognition thanks to his high-profile run in the 2018 Republican gubernatorial primary, which he ultimately lost to then-Rep. Kristi Noem. He raised $526,000 during the third quarter, a robust sum that proves he has considerable backing among the state’s tight-knit donor class. And
Energy has helped him make connections across the state. Crabtree is regarded as a strong retail politician, though he’s largely unknown beyond his hometown of Madison and raised just $206,000 — less than half of Jackley’s haul — during the third quarter.
