Midwest
Ramaswamay targets Haley after snowstorm derails her campaign stop in Iowa
DES MOINES, Iowa – Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy is using a snowstorm in Iowa to take aim at GOP nomination rival Nikki Haley.
After Haley canceled an event Monday morning in Sioux City, in the northwest corner of the state due to a snowstorm, Ramaswamy took to social media to spotlight that “I’m headed to Sioux City for our event right now. We’re not canceling.”
Ramaswamy, the multimillioinaire biotech entrepreneur and first-time candidate who for months has been a very vocal critic of Haley, charged that the former South Carolina governor who later served as ambassador to the United Nations in the Trump administration, scrapped her event in Sioux City to “avoid embarrassment.”
He tweeted out a clip of an NBC News report that showed a nearly empty Horizon Family Restaurant in Sioux City, where the Haley countdown-to-caucus event was supposed to have been held. But the clip that Ramaswamy posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, didn’t include the portion of the report where the correspondent noted that Haley’s stop was canceled because of heavy snow.
HALEY HEADLINES FOX NEWS TOWN HALL – 6PM ET MONDAY IN IOWA
Ramaswamy, who drove two and a half hours from Des Moines to Sioux City, continued to jab at Haley, saying at a campaign event in the city that “some saw a snowstorm, canceled events in northwest Iowa. We got four events. We’re keeping them intact.”
But Ramaswamy apparently made no reference to former President Donald Trump’s campaign, which also canceled an event due to the storm that had dumped a few inches of snow in portions of western and southern Iowa by midday, with more forecast.
The Trump campaign “indefinitely postponed” an event in Ottumwa, where former Arkansas Gov. MIke Huckabee, a two-time GOP presidential candidate, and his daughter, current Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders – who served as Trump’s White House press secretary – were scheduled to stump on the former president’s behalf.
GREAT EXPECTATIONS: THE PRESSURE’S ON FOR TRUMP, DESANTIS, AND HALEY TO PERFORM IN IOWA’S CAUCUSES
Haley’s campaign didn’t respond to the slight from Ramaswamy, but noted that they texted supporters early Monday morning to alert them that the Sioux City event had been canceled due to the snow and poor driving conditions.
Haley has soared in recent months, thanks in part to her well-regarded performances in the first three Republican presidential primary debates.
Over the past month, Haley has caught up with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the latest Iowa polls and in national surveys, for a distant second place behind Trump, who remains the commanding frontrunner for the nomination as he makes his third straight White House run. Iowa’s Jan. 15 caucuses lead off the GOP presidential nominating calendar.
Later Monday, Haley will take questions from “Special Report” chief political anchor Bret Baier and “The Story” executive editor and anchor Martha MacCallum, who will host a Fox News town hall in Des Moines. The hour-long town hall starts at 6 p.m. ET and will be in front of a live audience.
Haley has also surged to second place and narrowed the gap with Trump in New Hampshire, which holds the first primary and votes second – just eight days after Iowa.
FIRST ON FOX: HALEY FUNDRAISING SOARS THE PAST THREE MONTHS
Ramaswamy, who’s polling in the single digits in the latest surveys in Iowa, has been repeatedly crisscrossing the Hawkeye State in recent months, often making numerous campaign stops per day. On Monday, his wife Apoorvaa filled in for Ramaswamy at one event, so the candidate could make it to the northwestern part of the state, which is heavily Republican.
Haley’s been drawing healthy crowds as she campaigns in both Iowa and New Hampshire. Her most recent visit to Sioux City came last month, when she drew a couple hundred people to her event.
There’s been plenty of acrimony between Ramaswamy and Haley in recent months, as they repeatedly clashed at the GOP presidential primary debates.
Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley face off during the Republican presidential primary debate hosted by Fox News in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Aug. 23, 2023. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Ramswamy wasn’t the only candidate to jab at Haley over the snowstorm.
A text from the DeSantis campaign earlier Monday also took aim at Haley over the Sioux City cancellation, claiming that she scrapped the event “because she can’t stop making gaffes.”
Haley’s failure to mention slavery when answering a question late last month about the causes of the Civil War quickly went viral, and provided instant ammunition for her GOP presidential competitors. So did her comments this past weekend that you “change personalities” from Iowa to New Hampshire and last week that New Hampshire voters “correct” the results of the Iowa caucuses.
Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.
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North Dakota
8 Best Small Towns In North Dakota For A Crowd-Free Summer
North Dakota might be the country’s most underrated summer state, and that is exactly the point. While the crowds pile into busier places, its towns stay quiet under wide prairie skies. You can boat and fish and catch outdoor theater without ever fighting for a parking spot. Some towns sit in the Badlands, others along the Missouri River or up near the Canadian border. These eight prove a crowd-free summer is still easy to find.
Medora
Medora has fewer than 200 full-time residents and still feels like the liveliest stop for miles. The Marquis de Mores, a French nobleman, founded the town in 1883 and left behind buildings you can still walk through, while his wife funded St. Mary’s Catholic Church, the oldest Catholic church still in use in the state. The big summer event is the Medora Musical, entering its 61st season this June at the open-air Burning Hills Amphitheater, with live music and history nightly except Mondays. Right next door, Theodore Roosevelt National Park’s South Unit reopened its full 36-mile Scenic Loop Drive in late 2025 after a six-year closure, so the bison, wild horses, and painted buttes of the Badlands are all back in reach. Golfers can take on Bully Pulpit, named USA Today’s number-one public course in 2025, where the back nine climbs straight into the buttes. And come July 4, 2026, Medora gains the brand-new Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library, a 100,000-square-foot attraction minutes from the park.
Valley City
Valley City calls itself the City of Bridges, and the drive in on the Sheyenne River Valley National Scenic Byway shows you why, rolling past wooded river bends and historic spans. Most road-trippers blow right by it on I-94 between Fargo and Jamestown, which is their loss. The Hi-Line Railroad Bridge runs nearly 3,900 feet long and sits about 162 feet above the river, ranking among the longest and highest single-track rail bridges in the country. In summer, Lake Ashtabula is the place to fish, boat, ski, or swim, while downtown hosts Summer Nights on Central every second Thursday from June through September. Just outside town, the 213-foot Medicine Wheel at Medicine Wheel Park lines up with the solstices, a quietly remarkable thing to find on the prairie.
Dunseith
Dunseith sits right on the Canadian border, where Turtle Mountain’s wooded slopes meet a string of quiet lakes. Its claim to fame is the International Peace Garden, a 3.65-square-mile spread straddling the US and Canada where you can wander flower beds and cross between two countries almost without noticing. Summer is the sweet spot to visit, since the grounds stay uncrowded outside the early-July national holidays, and the garden rents kayaks by the half-day. Lake Storman anchors the recreation here, and just up the road stands the W’eel Turtle, a sculpture built from more than 2,000 painted wheels. Cap the day with prime rib at Dale’s Cafe, then mark your calendar, because the first International Indigenous Peace Powwow lands here in early July 2026.
Mandan
Most people treat Mandan as the road to Bismarck, which keeps Fort Abraham Lincoln and the Missouri River bottomlands refreshingly quiet all summer. Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park is the oldest state park in North Dakota, complete with a reconstructed military fort, and it is where George Custer rode out on his doomed 1876 march to the Little Bighorn. The Mandan Rodeo, one of the world’s oldest continuously running rodeos, fills early July with denim, boots, and wide-brimmed hats, a tradition that predates North Dakota’s statehood by about a decade. If the kids need a break from history, the Raging Rivers Waterpark has tube slides, speed slides, and a lazy river to burn off the afternoon.
Garrison
Garrison bills itself as the Walleye Capital of the World, and the title is earned out on Lake Sakakawea, the reservoir the Garrison Dam created on the Missouri River back in 1953. Anglers in the know come for some of the best walleye water in the upper Midwest, while everyone else drives past toward flashier spots. Fort Stevenson State Park spreads over 500-plus acres of camping, biking, hiking, and boating under wooded bluffs, on the site of a frontier outpost now partly beneath the lake. Grab a shake at the Four Seasons Restaurant and Ice Cream Parlor, then poke around the North Dakota Firefighters Museum to see antique trucks and old firefighting gear.
Jamestown
Fargo, 100 miles east, hogs the eastern North Dakota spotlight, but Jamestown quietly offers just as much history and a lot more roadside character. Out front of the North American Bison Discovery Center stands the World’s Largest Buffalo, a 26-foot, 60-ton concrete bull built in 1959 by sculptor Elmer Petersen. Inside, exhibits trace the bison’s history and survival, and a live buffalo herd grazes nearby. For open-air time, Jamestown Reservoir and Pipestem Dam offer swimming, fishing, boating, and miles of trails. Jamestown is also the birthplace of Louis L’Amour, the best-selling Western novelist, and you can trace his early life on the self-guided Trail of Louis L’Amour, centered on a kiosk at the Alfred Dickey Public Library.
Walhalla
In the state’s far northeastern corner near the Canadian border, Walhalla flies under almost everyone’s radar. The Pembina Gorge nearby holds one of the largest unbroken blocks of forest in North Dakota, and this summer it gets a major upgrade, as Pembina Gorge State Park opens in June 2026 as the state’s 14th state park and its first new one since 1989. The Pembina River threads the gorge for seasonal kayaking, and Frost Fire Summer Theatre stages Broadway-style musicals on an outdoor stage right above it through July. History buffs should not skip the Gingras Trading Post State Historic Site, where fur trader Antoine Blanc Gingras built a hand-hewn log store and home that rank among the oldest buildings still standing in the state.
Washburn
Forty miles north of Bismarck, where most day-trippers turn around, Washburn keeps one of the richest Lewis and Clark stories almost to itself. The Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center walks you through the brutal winter of 1804 and 1805, and just west, Fort Mandan State Historic Site holds a full-size replica of the fort where the expedition waited it out. Nearby, Cross Ranch State Park runs wild along the Missouri River, with prairie-and-cottonwood trails for hiking, fishing, and paddling under the watch of bald eagles. When lunchtime hits, the Cabin Bar and Grill turns out one of the best burgers in the region.
Summer In North Dakota
North Dakota is one of America’s best-kept summer secrets, not just a box to tick on the way to visiting all fifty states. Between the Badlands, the Missouri River, and a string of welcoming towns, you get real outdoor adventure without the crowds that turn a trip into a chore.
Ohio
Payne, Ohio man cycles from coast to coast
PAULDING, Onio (WANE) – From the coastline along Maine to the Washington State shore, Jesse Ward is riding his bike across America.
The 4,300-mile trip is along the northern part of the United States.
The trip started on May 6 in Bangor, Maine. He hopes to reach his final destination of Anacortes, Washington in early August.
WANE 15 ran into Ward in Paulding, Ohio last week. He was almost back to his hometown of Payne, Ohio to visit family along his quest.
Ward, who now lives in Ashville, North Carolina, got into cycling in college and decided to go for a coast-to-coast trip about five years ago.
“As I was looking at different routes, following the Northern Tier route, I noticed that it actually went through my hometown, so that was pretty appealing, and it’s going through a lot of states I’ve never been to or thought about, so I thought that would be a great way to discover and see the country,” Ward said.
A tradition of cross-country rides is to dip the bike tires in one ocean at the beginning of the journey and dip them in the other ocean at the end. From Bangor, Ward rode to Bar Harbor, Maine to see the ocean before heading west again.
“I’ve never been to the Pacific, so I’ll swim, and I know that they have quite a few ferries that go up to the islands there, so I want to go discover some of that stuff too, but probably take a day off,” he laughed.
His road bike is designed to absorb road vibration and carry heavy loads. It also has 27 gears to help with climbs.
Ward is staying at hotels, AirBnBs and camping along the way.
He pushes through the challenges,
“Rainy days with lots of climbing are the hardest,” he said. “Back in New Hampshire and Vermont, I had about two and a half days of rain, and I had the most climbing during that spell as well.”
And he soaks in the majestic moments along the way.
“Niagara Falls, definitely. I went over to the Canadian side and saw the falls from there, and it was first time I’ve ever done that, so that was a really rewarding experience, like just felt like, you know, the peak of the mountain. It’s like you’re here. This is a really good, finale for that section of the country,” he said.
As of June 12, Ward was about half way finished and in Iowa. When his trip is over, he plans to take a train from Seattle back to Charlotte.
“Then I’ll either bike back home or I have some friends with trucks. They can come pick me up,” Ward laughed.
South Dakota
South Dakota leaders approve funding for projects in Rapid City, Lake County and Sioux Falls
RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) – The South Dakota Board of Economic Development has approved funding for three projects focused on business growth, infrastructure improvements and investment in Rapid City, Lake County and Sioux Falls.
A $7.5 million Revolving Economic Development and Initiative Fund loan was approved for Elevate Rapid City to purchase and develop 128 acres for a new business park. State officials said the project will help meet growing demand for industrial and commercial sites while supporting industries including national defense and advanced manufacturing.
The board also approved a $500,000 Local Infrastructure Improvement Program grant for reconstruction of County Road 17 in Lake County. The road serves the Dakota Ethanol facility near Wentworth, which is expanding production by 50% and increasing commercial traffic in the area. Officials said the improvements will support the transportation of agricultural products and accommodate future growth.
In Sioux Falls, Smithfield Packaged Meats Corporation was approved for a reinvestment payment of up to nearly $30 million tied to its planned $1.29 billion meat processing and packaging facility in Foundation Park. The new facility will replace the company’s downtown Sioux Falls operation and is expected to retain more than 3,100 jobs while supporting South Dakota’s agricultural industry.
Gov. Larry Rhoden said the investments reflect the state’s commitment to planning for future economic growth. State officials said the programs are designed to encourage business expansion, infrastructure development and job creation across South Dakota.
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