Rep. Nico Rios said the resolution echoes the will of North Dakota’s founding fathers who, he said, argued for the state to acknowledge God as “the source of all authority.”
It’s been three years since a Chinese company’s plan to develop farmland near a North Dakota Air Force base was blocked over local security concerns, leading to a rush of legislation across the country.
Two nurses started North Dakota’s first Nurse Honor Guard in December, and since then, the group has grown to nearly 20 members. Janet Halvorson is the first nurse to be honored by North Dakota’s Nurse Honor Guard.
Gov. Kelly Armstrong and first lady Kjersti Armstrong reflect on their family’s transition, newfound normalcy and the responsibility of leading North Dakota.
The cost of a bill that would require violent offenders to spend more of their sentences in prison instead of transitional housing is inflated, North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley claimed.
Two North Dakota nonprofits have settled their lawsuit against a white nationalist hate group that alleged it intimidated immigrant
Ian Cramer, the son of Republican U.S. Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, pleaded guilty Tuesday to charges stemming from incidents at a Bismarck hospital.
A bill that would have required the Ten Commandments to be posted in all public schools in North Dakota was the subject of a lengthy House floor fight on Wednesday before eventually being voted down 53-38.
A study found that North Dakota’s agriculture industry generates $41.3 billion annually in gross business volume, supports 123,360 jobs and contributes $10 billion in labor income.
Minot, speaks about abortion on the House floor on Feb. 12, 2025. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor)BISMARCK, N.D. (North Dakota Monitor) — Four bills related to abortion and reproductive rights failed Wednesday in the North Dakota House.
More than 95 million people are facing gripping cold Tuesday as a polar vortex sends temperatures plunging to record levels, closing schools, bursting pipes and forcing communities to set up more temporary shelters for the homeless.
Parents of North Dakota high school athletes described how they had to let school administrators walk through the home they had just moved into, as well as the home they