Newsmax: GOP Sen. Daines: Iran Deal Fight Similar to Obamacare
The battle over the Iran nuclear deal in Congress is much like the fight over Obamacare in 2010, Sen. Steve Daines told Newsmax TV on Tuesday. “This has become only partisan in the support for the agreement,” the first-term Montana Republican told “Newsmax Prime” host J.D. Hayworth. “There’s no bipartisan support for this agreement.“This is a little like Obamacare, where it became only the Democrats on one side — but there were Democrats and Republicans opposed to Obamacare.” Daines noted that many top Democrats, including influential New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, opposed the deal that would release as much as
Bound 4 Life: Senator Steve Daines Reveals the Pro-Life Agenda Ahead: “This is Ground That We Can Fight On and Win”
It’s a life change few would consider. After decades in the corporate world, including for an innovative technology company, Steve Daines of Bozeman, Montana ran for Congress in 2012. Only two years later, he upped the ante last November and contended for the seat of a popular retiring U.S. Senator… winning by a landslide. What drives this family man, a fifth generation Montanan, to serve in Washington, DC – over 2,000 miles from his home? In an exclusive interview, Daines shares what inspired him to enter public office and how his faith guides him to prioritize policy issues. Bound4LIFE: Senator
Char-Koosta News: Salish Kootenai College Awarded New Grants
PABLO — Salish Kootenai College will receive $2.3 million from the U.S. Department of Education as part of more than $50.4 million in new grants to support American Indian Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities in a dozen states. Tribal colleges in Montana received $10.2 million. Under the Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities Program, the formula-based grants will help eligible higher education institutions increase their self-sufficiency by providing funds to strengthen their academic quality, management and overall fiscal stability. “Tribal institutions serve a valuable role for American Indian students,” said William Mendoza, executive director, White House Initiative on American Indian and
Flathead Beacon: Goguen to Deliver Keynote Address at High Tech Jobs Summit
Michael Goguen, a venture capitalist and philanthropist who has a home in Whitefish, will be a keynote speaker at the upcoming Montana High Tech Jobs Summit in Bozeman. Goguen will be a featured speaker at the summit co-sponsored by Montana U.S. Sen. Steve Daines. The event is Sept. 13-14 at Montana State University. Goguen is slated to speak on Sept. 14 along with Doug Burgum, a co-founder and general partner at Arthur Ventures. This will be the first biannual high tech summit and is following in the footsteps of former U.S. Sen. Max Baucus’s Montana’s Jobs Summit. The event aims
Flathead Beacon: Montana Congressional Delegation, Governor Urge LWCF Reauthorization
With the deadline looming for one of Montana’s most instrumental federal funding tools, U.S. Sens. Jon Tester and Steve Daines and Gov. Steve Bullock say reauthorizing the measure is vital to maintaining the region’s public lands. On Sept. 30, the half-century old Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) will expire unless Congress votes to reauthorize a program that has provided $16 billion for conservation projects, including about $500 million in Montana, making the money available for matching grants to buy fish and wildlife habitat and increase access for recreation like hunting and fishing. Both Tester and Daines have voiced strong
Flathead Beacon: Tester, Daines Look for Bipartisan Support for Firefighting Bill
WEST GLACIER – Although Sens. Jon Tester and Steve Daines reside on opposite sides of the aisle, both agree something must be done to rein in the skyrocketing cost of suppressing wildfires. On Aug. 23, Montana’s senators were in West Glacier for a briefing on the Sheep Fire, which has burned more than 500 acres on the southern edge of Glacier National Park and threatens the community of Essex. The visit came just weeks after they joined other western senators in sponsoring legislation that would reform how the U.S. Forest Service funds the battle against wildfires. A new report from
Flathead Beacon: Bipartisan Collaboration Preserves the North Fork
BLANKENSHIP BRIDGE – It didn’t matter that a noxious veil of smoke blotted out the peak-studded horizon on Aug. 24 because everyone who converged here was focused on the crystal-clear, coruscating waters of the North Fork Flathead River, which forms the western boundary of Glacier National Park. A coalition of unlikely bedfellows gathered on the banks of the North Fork, just north of Columbia Falls, to commemorate a historic measure to protect the sparkling river that rolled beside them. Energy executives mingled among fish biologists, while land managers, business champions, community boosters, tree huggers, and tree cutters all milled about
Bozeman Daily Chronicle: Daines Talks Conservation, LWCF in Ennis
The sun beat down on the Madison Valley as U.S. Sen. Steve Daines sat smiling in a lawn chair holding a 97-day-old trumpeter swan — one of five that would be released into the restored wetlands of O’Dell Creek. “They’re magnificent animals,” Daines said, shortly before riding an all-terrain vehicle to a pond where the swan would be released. The Senate is on recess, so the Republican is back in town. On Tuesday, he went to Ennis and visited the Granger Ranches near O’Dell Creek, the site of a major wetlands restoration project over the last decade. Releasing swans there
Missoulian: North Fork Flathead Protection Celebrated by Tester, Daines, others
BLANKENSHIP BRIDGE – “Thank you’s” may have flowed even more easily than the relatively low North Fork of the Flathead River on Monday morning, as the National Parks Conservation Association celebrated the North Fork Watershed Protection Act on rocks that form the river’s bed at higher water. U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., hailed the legislation as “an incredible bipartisan agreement” that “makes sure Flathead Lake will be Flathead Lake for generations to come.” Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., said it was “ultimately, a means to an end, to protect a way of life.” That Tester and Daines aren’t often found on