The greatest threats to North Dakota are policies coming out of Washington, D.C. I see it every day and feel a sense of responsibility to do something about it.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
We should show Washington how we do it in North Dakota. I'm running to stop the over-regulating of our economy and start growing it.
Our single greatest challenge is the ability to move power to markets outside North Dakota.
When my parents first arrived there, North Dakota had just been admitted to the Union, and the country was still wild and harsh.
Washington, D.C., has a much greater risk than Manchester, N.H. They both need some level of funding, but they ought not to be done per capita. Congress is to blame for some of this.
We need to make people understand that there is a definite connection between what happens in their everyday lives and the decisions we make in Washington, D.C.
We have the resources and technology to produce more energy than we consume and break our long-standing dependence on foreign sources of oil. All we need is the will. In fact, there's a path to follow, one that North Dakota blazed over the last decade by building a comprehensive energy plan we called Empower North Dakota.
I think that there was a lot of undisclosed money that came into South Dakota, driving a message to paint me as a Washington partisan, which I don't believe that I am, but it was a message that resonated, after pounding it away for a number of weeks.
Anybody who has stood on the prairie in North Dakota has felt the force of the wind and knows that our state has an inexhaustible supply of wind power. The potential here to create jobs and draw millions of dollars in new investment to North Dakota is enormous.
The greatest threat to the security of the people of North Korea comes from the government of North Korea.
I resent Washington telling states, or the residents of those states, what to do and what to think.
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