No congressional leader is more at risk of getting caught in the crossfire of Donald Trump’s coming trade wars than Senate Majority Leader John Thune.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign promise to impose steep tariffs on imports -- including those coming from close U.S. allies -- has some of his fellow Republicans in Congress worried about its potential hit to their home-state economies.
Many economists — from liberals and progressives to conservatives and libertarians — were hoping that President Donald Trump would abandon his tariff proposals. But on Thursday, January 30, Trump reiterated his desire to impose 25 percent across-the-board tariffs on goods coming into the United States from Mexico and Canada.
President Donald Trump said Monday that he expects to put 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico starting on Feb. 1, while declining to flesh out his plans for taxing Chinese imports.
President Joe Biden has sparked outrage after commuting the sentence of Leonard Peltier in a last-minute move before leaving office Monday.
The Office of the Attorney General of Canada has asked a Winnipeg ... the injunction states that the Dakota are the “original inhabitants of the lands both south and north of the 49th parallel ...
The results are in from the North Dakota Game and Fish Department’s annual midwinter waterfowl survey, which looked at how many Canada geese and mallards there are in the state.
As President Donald Trump threatens to slap blanket tariffs on all products from Canada and Mexico, Politico reports that Sen. John Thune (R-SD) and fellow Republicans from agricultural states are getting "heartburn" as their states are most likely to suffer from such actions.
A Las Vegas judge will allow testimony from three women who said Nathan Chasing Horse sexually abused them when they were teenagers in the trial against him, even though two of them are not named
One of my favorite enjoyments is going on road to new and familiar destinations. It is that time of year that I feel the road is calling me once again.
The prairie dog caught in Trap 69 was angry. And who could blame her? After waking up in her burrow on a mid-September morning, she’d waddled innocently
Brian Hefty came to Manitoba Ag Days on Jan. 22 to give a speech about how to “push the limits” for crop yields.
 The South Dakota farmer did