South Dakota
Harris’ and Trump’s contrasting plans for agriculture and climate change action • South Dakota Searchlight
Hans Breitenmoser believes that regardless of a farmer’s political affiliation, everything comes down to the weather.
“Whether you grow cows or grow corn or both, we live and die by the weather forecast,” said Breitenmoser, a 55-year-old dairy farmer from Lincoln County, Wisconsin.
That’s why the impact of climate change policies from Donald Trump and Kamala Harris on the agriculture sector is top of mind for the lifelong farmer.
Investigate Midwest researched the Trump and Biden-Harris administrations to better understand what could be at stake this election at the intersection of environment and agriculture. While President Joe Biden is not seeking reelection, his four years in office offer possible clues for what a Harris presidency might mean as the vice president has become the Democratic nominee.
The Biden-Harris administration has poured billions into agriculture practices meant to curtail greenhouse gas emissions, but some environmentalists say not all of the practices are climate-friendly. Meanwhile, Trump has a history of downplaying the threat of climate change, and various Republican playbook strategies plan on slashing funding to “climate-smart” agriculture programs.
“You’ve got one administration that’s taken this thing seriously and understands that we can have a robust economy while becoming greener, and then you’ve got the other side who doesn’t even think there’s a problem,” Breitenmoser said.
Hans Breitenmoser, right, talks with Democratic Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers on his farm in Merrill, Wisconsin, during June Dairy Month in 2021. (Photo provided by Hans Breitenmoser)
Climate change — predominantly caused by human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels, deforestation and industrialized agriculture — has made the weather more volatile and extreme.
Extreme weather touches every aspect of agriculture. Increased flooding has drowned crops across the Midwest, droughts have brought the nation’s beef supply to historic lows and farmworkers are also more prone to heat-related injury and illness.
“As the weather changes, it’s going to have a profound impact on how we do business,” said Breitenmoser, who has had to spend more money on hay in recent drought years and is currently debating having to spend more money on nitrogen to perk up a wet soybean crop.
Ranjani Prabhakar, the legislative director of healthy communities for Earthjustice, a nonprofit environmental law center, worries another Trump administration would immediately roll back funding for farming practices aimed to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
“There’s a possibility that $19 billion of historic generational climate investments in agriculture could be completely lost,” she said.
The nation’s agriculture sector accounted for 10% of all greenhouse gas emissions in 2022, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data. The agency cites cattle production, rice crops and the application of chemical fertilizers as major sources of climate pollution.
But Republican leaders see Biden’s agricultural policies and investments in climate change as restrictive and onerous for the nation’s farmers. This division has delayed a highly anticipated Farm Bill and signals how either administration could approach climate change after the election.
Jeff Kaufmann, a livestock farmer, former Iowa state lawmaker and current chairman of the state’s Republican Party, told Agri Pulse that he expects to see the end of “blind climate change policies” that won’t hinder agricultural producers under a new Trump administration.
“I think you are going to see fairness based on science and we haven’t had that in four years,” Kaufman said.
U.S. Rep. Glenn GT Thompson, a Pennsylvania Republican who chairs the House Committee on Agriculture, told Investigate Midwest he supports voluntary, locally-run and incentive-based conservation efforts for agriculture producers, and rebukes the Biden administration’s imposal of climate regulations onto American farmers.
“Agriculture has done more to reduce carbon emissions than anything else, certainly (more than) any government regulation,” said Thompson, speaking at this year’s Republican National Convention.
Thompson, calling American farmers the “original climate champions,” said farmers who use conservation practices have been able to create healthy soils and sequester carbon to avoid releasing it into the atmosphere.
The secret to keeping the nation’s farmers at the center is making the programs voluntary and locally-led, rather than imposing broad rules and regulations, Thompson added.
Biden-Harris climate investments, pitfalls
To combat climate change’s effects on farming, the Biden-Harris Administration allotted an historic $22 billion to fund “climate-smart” agriculture two years ago. This funding was part of the administration’s sweeping investments in clean energy and climate solutions, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, or IRA.
Included in the bill was funding for farm operations to implement cover crops and proper management of nutrient application, be it fertilizer or livestock waste, as well as no-till and strip-till farming.
But, this influx of funding has created a division between lawmakers tasked with crafting the industry’s most important piece of legislation, the Farm Bill. The most recent version now puts the USDA in charge of managing IRA funds for agriculture.
Republican lawmakers have said they want to strip the word “climate” from the legislation, while Democrats have said they won’t budge on funding for these climate-smart practices. Biden spokesperson John Podesta said last year the administration is willing to fight for climate-smart agriculture as it is popular for farmers and will be “successful in the upcoming farm bill negotiations.”
Additionally, Harris argued for increased funding for clean energy jobs and energy efficiencies while in the White House. During her time as California attorney general, she created an office responsible for litigating against polluters who operated in historically disadvantaged communities.
At the Sept. 10 presidential debate, Harris extolled the current administration’s push for clean energy jobs and manufacturing, while also promoting the nation’s increase in domestic oil production and her support of fracking.
However, Harris hasn’t been detailed about her specific approach to climate change and agriculture, and her campaign did not respond to a request for comment.
Still, environmental justice and climate change advocates have rallied in support of Harris since she became the Democratic nominee.
“Vice President Harris has fought to hold polluters accountable and deliver for the hardest-hit communities her entire career. We are confident that she is ready to carry forward President Biden’s historic legacy and set a new high bar for climate ambition in America,” Lena Moffitt, the executive director of climate advocacy group Evergreen Action, said in a statement.
Harris selected Tim Walz as her vice presidential running mate. The current governor of Minnesota, Walz has an extensive climate-focused and clean energy track record and also worked on Farm Bills during his time in Congress. His background in agricultural policy is a boon to Harris, but environmental groups have called out past actions supporting industrialized, emissions-heavy agriculture and allowing the Line 3 pipeline to continue construction in his state.
While the Biden-Harris administration has been lauded for climate efforts, some environmental groups believe the administration has not gone far enough. Despite the investments in climate, the country exported record amounts of fossil fuels under the Biden-Harris Administration.
Environmental groups have urged the Biden-Harris administration to stop investing in methane, a major contributor to climate pollution.
Methane, a potent greenhouse gas that warms the atmosphere faster than carbon, is produced by livestock waste and ruminant livestock. These animals, like cattle, sheep and goats, have unique digestive systems and diets linked to increased methane emissions.
The EPA estimates that methane from animals makes up 11% of the agriculture sector’s greenhouse gas emissions. The Biden Administration announced rules in 2021 to reduce the country’s methane emissions across various sectors, including agriculture.
A major initiative seen across the country has been the capture of methane on farms using technologies known as biogas digesters.
Digesters are massive, air-tight domes where livestock waste is converted into fuel through a process known as anaerobic digestion. Once the methane is turned into a fuel source, it is often used on the farm to power routine operations, or it can be sold to a pipeline grid for additional farm revenue.
The Inflation Reduction Act set aside billions of dollars in tax credits for new digester facilities and technologies, billed as a clean energy source. However, digesters are a controversial climate solution in the agricultural space.
Various environmental and climate groups have called on the Biden Administration to remove government support for digesters, believing that digesters incentivize large-scale, industrial livestock operations that are linked to environmental pollution and public health problems.
Digesters still leak and emit methane, and according to the USDA, the tracking of methane leaked from digesters is limited.
Earlier this year, a group of Democratic lawmakers sent a letter to the USDA asking for the removal of digesters from government-funded programs, arguing that the supposed climate tool is “an inefficient use of taxpayer dollars and an ineffective way to advance climate goals.”
Trump’s climate reversal
Trump has a lengthy record of downplaying and reversing climate change policy and has announced plans to reverse Biden administration investments in climate funding.
“It actually sets us back, as opposed to moves us forward. And [I will] rescind all unspent funds under the misnamed Inflation Reduction Act,” Trump said in early September, according to Politico.
Earlier this year, Trump made promises to a roomful of oil executives to revert pollution regulations and pauses on oil expansion made by the Biden-Harris Administration on his first day of office, according to a recent Washington Post report.
Pipeline won’t capture all carbon emitted by ethanol plants
It wouldn’t be the first time he has rolled back environmental protections.
Trump’s climate track record includes more than 100 reversals of climate and environmentally-focused rules that originated in the Obama era. A New York Times analysis found that the majority of his rollbacks were aimed at EPA rules that limited greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles and power plants, as well as those protecting the nation’s wetlands.
During his first presidency, the USDA stopped publishing government studies that mentioned climate change, according to a 2019 Politico investigation. He also pulled the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement on climate change.
Trump’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.
The Republican Party’s official 2024 platform makes no mention of climate change nor its impact on agriculture. The platform document outlines plans to expand American-made fossil fuel production.
Another conservative policy playbook has more direct plans to roll back policy and funding for climate solutions in agriculture.
The 2025 Presidential Transition Project, an initiative circulated and organized by right-wing policy groups and advocacy organizations, has released plans to secure conservative policies under a Trump administration. Trump has disavowed any relation with this controversial document, but numerous authors of the manifesto have previously worked for him.
“Never before has the whole conservative movement banded together to systematically prepare to take power day one and deconstruct the administrative state,” Paul Dans, director of Project 2025, told Energy & Environment News last year.
Project 2025 outlines that the next USDA would remove the country from any “schemes” to produce sustainable food or provide funding for climate-smart practices for producers.
“From the outset, the next Administration should: Denounce efforts to place ancillary issues like climate change ahead of food productivity and affordability when it comes to agriculture,” the document states.
Project 2025 also outlines plans to defund the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Weather Service, which it described as “one of the main drivers of the climate change alarm industry.”
Paul Overby, a North Dakota grain farmer and volunteer with the environmental advocacy group Citizens Climate Lobby and a self-described “traditional Republican,” said he worries that the partisan fight over climate change in agriculture conversations will continue to derail an already delayed Farm Bill.
He said that he would be willing to compromise on taking the words “climate change” out of the Farm Bill if funding for conservation was increased because “the net result would be the same.”
“The focus on climate has — unfortunately — become partisan,” he said.
Jennifer Bamberg contributed to this reporting.
South Dakota
FCS Football Recruiting Roundup: South Dakota, Montana State Target 2027 Defensive Standouts
Welcome to another edition of the FCS Football Central Recruiting Roundup.
As spring practice winds down, recruits are still continuing to get on campus to visit schools and meet with their coaching staff. I caught up with some of the latest prospects who received an offer from an FCS program after their visit.
Amarie King | 2027 | DB | 5’7″ 140 lbs | Case High School | Racine, WI
King received his latest offer from South Dakota on April 17 after speaking with defensive coordinator Billy Kirch.
“Coach Kirch told me bout the offer, and that conversation went well. He told me a lot about the school, and asked me what my family and parents do. He said that my film was amazing and that he wanted to offer me,” King said.
“My recruitment is going well, although it is a little stressful here and there, but I am really just being patient and trusting the process, and keep working.”
He has visits to South Dakota and Drake coming up. Last season, he finished with 44 tackles, eight pass breakups, and six interceptions for the Eagles.
After a great conversation with coach kirch I’m blessed to I’ve received my first division 1 offer from @SDCoyotesFB @AntonGraham_ @MJ_NFLDraft @CoachBKirch @joshmanchigiah pic.twitter.com/jaxIYac67A
— Amarie King (@Amarieking27) April 17, 2026
Jayden Harris | 2027 | ATH | 6’2″ 170 lbs | Manteca High School | Manteca, CA
Harris picked up his latest offer from Montana State on Friday when he was in Bozeman for the Bobcats’ Junior Day, and meeting with cornerbacks coach Jordan Lee, defensive coordinator Bobby Daly, and head coach Brent Vigen.
“First, it was Coach Lee, then I had meetings with Coach Daly and Coach Vigen, who broke the news while we were talking. They want me to come in and play early. They like my versatility as a defensive back, and that’s why they offered me,” Harris said.
“The visit was cool! The snow was coming down, and the coaches still showed love. Recruiting is going well right now. Most schools that are in touch with me see something in me for sure, especially since I’m a zero-star athlete, so that’s love. I feel like I’m the best DB in California, and my measurements and production speak for themselves.”
He also has offers from Idaho, Washington State, and Sacramento State. He has upcoming visits to Arizona State and New Mexico.
Last season, he finished with 63 tackles, 11 pass breakups, nine interceptions, six tackles for loss, two sacks, two forced fumbles, and two pick-sixes for the Buffaloes.
Blessed to receive an offer from Montana State University 🐾 @ballcoachLee @CoachBobbyDaly @CoachSauve @CoachSmith59 @bvigen @BrandonHuffman @Rivals_Recruits @GregBiggins pic.twitter.com/ofYdjJKcmK
— Jay Harris (@JaydenOHarris) April 18, 2026
Maurice “MJ” Harrell | 2026 | DB | 6’1″ 170 lbs | Hutchinson CC | Hutchinson, KS
Harrell picked up his first Division I offer from Houston Christian on April 17 after he spoke with cornerbacks coach DeMarcus Coleman.
“Coach Coleman called and told me he liked what we saw from the videos I sent him, and that he wanted me to be a part of his program,” Harrell said.
Last season, he finished with 20 tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss, one sack, and a fumble recovery for the Blue Dragons. Mercyhurst, Division II UTPB, and Missouri Southern are some other schools he has been in contact with.
Blessed To Receive my first d1 offer from Houstan Christian University pic.twitter.com/OBD9ITQZHS
— MauriceHarrell (@M_Harrell19) April 18, 2026
Jadhari Young | 2026 | WR | 6’1″ 200 lbs | De Anza College | Cupertino, CA
Young received his latest offer from Eastern Illinois on April 15 after speaking with wide receivers coach Tino Smith.
“Coach Smith called me, and we had a long and great conversation. He told me he believes in me and that he thinks I can be great under his coaching,” Young said. “My recruitment has been going great since I graduated two weeks ago. A lot of coaches have expressed a lot of interest in me.”
Young also has offers from Sacramento State, Prairie View A&M, and Chicago State. Last season, he hauled in receptions for 559 yards and seven touchdowns for the Mountain Lions. He was named a Golden Coast Conference First Team selection.
He will be taking his official visit to Eastern Illinois on April 24. Gardner-Webb, West Florida, Monmouth, Stony Brook, and UMass are some other schools he is hearing from.
Blessed to receive my 5th D1 offer from Eastern Illinois University — Dhari Young “DEBO” (@dharigogetit) April 15, 2026
Thank you Coach @coachtinosmith for believing in me💯 pic.twitter.com/yMZjnsfRvK
AJ Moore | 2027 | RB | 5’9″ 200 lbs | College of Dupage | Glen Ellyn, IL
Moore received his first Division I offer from Lindenwood on April 17 after speaking with running backs coach Lane Lawson.
“Coach Lawson called and offered me. He just told me he’d be really excited to have me over and thinks I could be a part of something special with the program they got going over there,” Moore said.
Last season, he finished with 81 carries for 518 yards and five touchdowns, while adding nine receptions for 73 yards and two touchdowns for the Chaparrals, who won their fifth consecutive NJCAA Division III national championship. Moore is working on scheduling his official visit to Lindenwood.
#AGTG After a great conversation with @CoachLawsonLU I am blessed to have my first division 1 offer from Lindenwood University @LindenwoodFB @Dupage_Football @JUCOFFrenzy @AllenTrieu @JordanWesty1 pic.twitter.com/DGLjZC4gIA
— AJ Moore (@ajmoore6_) April 17, 2026
Leshem Nyante | 2027 | OT | 6’5″ 265 lbs | Anna High School | Anna, TX
Nyante picked up his latest offer from Texas Rio Grande Valley on April 17 after he spoke with offensive line coach Jeff Bowen.
“Coach Bowen reached out this morning to officially extend the offer. It was a great talk, and he mentioned they really liked my film and how I would fit their system. So we are focused on building that relationship now,” Nyante said.
“I’m really grateful for how my recruiting process is unfolding so far. Things are definitely moving fast with spring ball right around the corner, and it’s been great seeing the increase in interest every week.”
He also has offers from Arkansas State, Division II Midwestern State, and East Central University. Old Dominion, Texas State, UTEP, and New Mexico are some other schools he is hearing from. Nyante will be taking an official visit to Arkansas State in June.
#AGTG After a great conversation with @CoachJeffBowen , I am blessed to receive a D1 offer from @UTRGVFootball !!@8_parr @Coach_Rigg @tylerdedwards33 @Sevier5 @jessedstew @AnnaCoyotesFB @CoachTBush @Perroni247 @SWiltfong_ @CKennedy247 pic.twitter.com/6o9H13baAb
— Leshem (Shem) Nyantee (@leshemnyantee10) April 17, 2026
Matthew Lashley | 2027 | DB | 6’1″ 198 lbs | Riverside City College | Riverside, CA
Lashley received his latest offer from East Texas A&M on April 15 after speaking with safeties coach Luke Jaicks.
“Coach Jaicks called and offered me. He’s a great coach, and I would love to play for him,” Lashley said. “My recruitment is going well; it’s starting to heat up after spring ball.”
He also has an offer from Southern Utah. Last season, he finished with 14 tackles and two interceptions for the Tigers.
Blessed to receive another D1 offer to @Lions_FB! @JacksonSimon25 @nilsonsports pic.twitter.com/X4iLU8VRID
— Matthew Lashley (@MatthewLashley_) April 15, 2026
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South Dakota
Nature: Prairie chickens in South Dakota
South Dakota
Democrats fail to field candidates for a majority of South Dakota legislative seats
(SOUTH DAKOTA SEARCHLIGHT) – Democrats are running for 46 of South Dakota’s 105 legislative seats — leaving 56% of seats without a Democratic candidate.
That doesn’t bode well for the party ahead of November, said Michael Card, professor emeritus of political science at the University of South Dakota.
“It doesn’t put them in a position to actually put forward their ideological policy preferences and have much of a success at getting those enacted,” Card said.
In the state Senate alone, Democrats have failed to field a candidate for 22 seats, which is nearly two-thirds of the chamber. In the House, Democrats have failed to field a candidate for 38 seats, which is 54% of the chamber.
There is only one Democratic legislative primary in the state: a state Senate race in District 26, which includes the Rosebud Reservation.
There are no statewide Democratic primaries, after announced candidates for governor and U.S. House dropped out or failed to gather enough petition signatures to make the ballot, leaving one Democrat in each of those races.
Statewide candidates will have less name recognition than Republican candidates ahead of the general election, since they didn’t have primaries, Card said. In the Legislature, Card said Democrats “are guaranteeing they won’t get a majority.”
In contrast, Republicans have primary races for governor, U.S. House and U.S. Senate. Five legislative districts do not have Republican primaries, but do have Republican candidates. There is a Republican candidate running for every legislative seat, except for one House seat in District 27, which includes the Pine Ridge Reservation.
Card said there are several factors leading to poor candidate turnout among Democrats, including a self-fulfilling cycle of failure.
“A lack of winning makes fewer people willing to take a chance on running for office,” Card said. “Why run if I think I’m going to lose?”
Democrats haven’t held a statewide office since 2015, and they haven’t held a majority of either legislative chamber since 1994.
Joe Zweifel, deputy executive director of the South Dakota Democratic Party, said the organization worked “really, really hard” to convince Democrats to run for office.
“But you can’t force people to run for office,” said Zweifel, of Sioux Falls, who’s running for a legislative seat himself in District 12.
He’s heard the open seats called a “failure.” But he disagrees, choosing to focus on the Democrats who did step forward.
“We’re running quality, good candidates in those races,” Zweifel said.
The South Dakota Democratic Party hopes to build on legislative successes, such as a new law from Rep. Kadyn Wittman, D-Sioux Falls, that commits state funding to cover the family portion of reduced-price school meals.
“That specifically is a return on investment for our donors, and it shows that Democrats are doing good things for the people of South Dakota,” Zweifel said.
Wittman’s success helped inspire Democratic District 13 House of Representatives candidate Ali Rae Horsted, of Sioux Falls, to take a second run at the Legislature. Horsted ran unsuccessfully for the Senate against Sen. Sue Peterson in 2024, garnering 42% of the vote.
Horsted plans to build on that success and the name recognition she already has in the district. She hopes she’ll have “better odds” in this election, since there are two House seats for every district.
Horsted said it would better serve South Dakota if the state had a more balanced Legislature. While the latest Legislature was 92% Republican, 52% of voters in South Dakota are Republican. South Dakota has the lowest percentage of Democrats, 7.6%, in the Legislature nationwide.
“I think it’s important that people have options on the ballot,” Horsted said, “and people are able to vote for candidates that represent their values and their vision for the future of South Dakota.”
Makenzie Huber is a lifelong South Dakotan who regularly reports on the intersection of politics and policy with health, education, social services and Indigenous affairs. Her work with South Dakota Searchlight earned her the title of South Dakota’s Outstanding Young Journalist in 2024, and she was a 2024 finalist for the national Livingston Awards.
South Dakota Searchlight is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.
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