It was the Department of Justice attorneys that argued so effectively against the State of North Dakota.
Kevin Cramer
The Public Record
Kevin John Cramer is an American politician serving as the junior United States senator from North Dakota since January 3, 2019. A member of the Republican Party, Cramer previously represented North Dakota's at-large congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives from January 3, 2013, to January 3, 2019. Throughout his political career, he has focused on issues such as energy policy, agriculture, and veterans' affairs, often advocating for North Dakota's interests on a national level.
Mr. Speaker, we know that the economic and job creation benefits are key components of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, making the U.S. globally competitive again, giving much-needed tax cuts to American business, and much-needed wage increases…
Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for yielding. It is no secret that a reliable supply of electricity is important to us on many levels, from human health, and, of course, to commercial productivity. As a former public service…
Mr. Speaker, I rise to recognize Miss North Dakota Cara Mund, who was crowned Miss America last Sunday. A native of Bismarck, Cara made history in our State when she became the first North Dakotan to be crowned Miss America. Throughout the…
So my message this morning, on the heels of these disasters, is let's do more working together, everyone in the utility industry, the scientists we have out there, and take this on. This is a real call to action.
I worry about the early shutdown, the forced shutdown, frankly, of base load generation, especially with plants that have useful life left in them.
Mr. Speaker, I thank Mr. Davis and my colleague, Mr. Peterson, from across the Red River in Minnesota for their support for this renaming of the Red River Valley Agricultural Research Center. For all of the reasons that Representative…
The larger concern is just what seems to be a lack of communication discipline coming out of the White House. And I think some of that is driven by the desire to have an immediate response to everything.
I appreciate what Mr. McNerney said earlier about, you know, we will never solve this if one side imposes its will on the other.
I think Ms. Castor makes a relevant point admonishing us to see how the FPISC process works.





