So there was tomfoolery. In the wee hours of March 31, 2020, Senator Brock Greenfield (R-2/Clark) made this statement in the Capitol to the South…
Tag: Marty Jackley
The Senate’s special committee investigating Senators Brock Greenfield and Kris Langer for legislating while intoxicated held its first meeting yesterday to set rules and arrange…
We learn from Dakota War College (a phrase one can rarely use) that Marty Jackley is suckling from the public teat again. DWC reports that…
Today the state formally filed its opposition to Marty Jackley’s request for $86,905 in attorney fees for his and his colleagues’ labors on behalf of…
Bob Mercer notices that Governor Kristi Noem has ended the Prostrollo family’s hold on the state Board of Economic Development: The Prostrollo era that lasted through two…
How much will Mark Mickelson’s folly, Initiated Measure 24, cost you, the taxpayers of South Dakota, now that Judge Charles Kornmann has declared its obvious…
The Aberdeen American News this weekend celebrated our court victory in overturning Initiated Measure 24, Mark Mickelson’s loopholey ban on out-of-state contributions to ballot question…
I went to court yesterday, said nothing dumb, didn’t torque off the judge (not noticeably, at least), and sat next to Marty Jackley without starting a fistfight. That felt like four wins right there.
In my first visit to a federal courtroom, suing to overturn an unconstitutional ban on out-of-state contributions to South Dakota ballot question committees, I sat in front of the bar with the following cast (as seated from right to left, as viewed by Judge Charles Kornmann):
- my lawyer, Jim Leach, who came to Rapid City over forty years ago to work for the Wounded Knee Legal Defense/Offense Committee, and now is representing my ballot question committee and myself in SD Voice and Cory Heidelberger v. Kristi Noem, Jason Ravnsborg, and Steve Barnett;
- myself, political blogger, educational technologist (happily burning a personal day from work for this legal excursion), ballot question activist;
- Marty Jackley, establishment Republican, former Attorney General, and frequent target of criticism on this blog, representing a host of mostly money-driven plaintiffs in a separate but equal lawsuit, South Dakota Newspaper Association, South Dakota Retailers Association, South Dakota Broadcasters Association, South Dakota Chamber Ballot Action Committee, Thomas Barnett, Jr., and Americans for Prosperity v. Steve Barnett and Jason Ravnsborg;
- Ryan Morrison, a Kentucky attorney from a Washington, D.C., conservative non-profit who said nothing during the proceedings save some eager whisperings to his co-counsel Jackley;
- Stacy Hegge, Assistant Attorney General, fellow proud SDSU grad, saddled with defending the state against my counsel and against the man who was her boss just five months ago;
- Kea Warne, director of the Division of Elections for the Secretary of State, dragged from Pierre to miss her high-school-senior son’s tennis matches (Ryan won all three of his singles and two of his three doubles).
Here’s what I saw and heard and thought.
Marty Jackley’s effort to consolidate his big-money clients’ lawsuit against Initiated Measure 24 with my humble challenge to that very same unconstitutional ban on out-of-state…
Maybe that’s why he was talking nice about Dakota Free Press last year…. In a motion filed Friday, general attorney Marty Jackley and his helper Allen…