When Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minn) came to Bismarck for a "tea party," NDPeople.org placed ads all day on two major Bismarck radio stations to highlight how anti-North Dakota values she really is. Bachmann's extremist views are anti-Social Security, anti-Medicare, anti-farm bill, anti-health care for middle class families, and anti-common sense bank regulation. She came to town at the invitation of the North Dakota Republican Party. read on...
North Dakotans are working hard. We're doing our part. Listen to NDPeople.org's radio ad calling for better leadership in our state legislature. read on...
State legislators took care of big insurance, and in return health care costs for North Dakota families and businesses continued to rise. It's time to put people first. Listen to NDPeople.org's radio ad. read on...
NDPeople.Org decided Grover Norquist’s visit to North Dakota was an opportunity to show the reality about his politics. Norquist, a well-known conservative political operative, is infamous for declaring he wants the government to be small enough to “drown in a bathtub." read on...
NDPeople.Org launched another round of advertisements on Fargo-area radio encouraging more responsibility and better leadership in our state government. House Majority Leader, Rick Berg (R-Fargo), led many people in the state legislature to vote against some of the surest ways to increase wages and income for North Dakotans. read on...
NDPeople.Org launched a second issue ad September 21 in response to Rick Berg's advertisement called us "ridiculous" for challenging his support of oil companies instead of us. read on...
On September 13, 2006, NDPeople.Org began running radio ads on stations in the Fargo-Moorhead area challenging North Dakota House of Representatives Majority Leader Rick Berg's support of oil companies instead of us. read on...
The following ad appeared in the High Plains Reader in September and October of 2006. read on...
The following ad appeared in the High Plains Reader and the North Dakota State University student newspaper, The Spectrum, in October of 2006. read on...