Montana House of Representatives Rosendale served one two-year term in the
Montana House of Representatives. Rosendale announced he would run for the Montana House of Representatives to represent House District 38, which covers
Wibaux and part of
Dawson County. Also seeking the Republican nomination were Edward Hilbert and
Alan Doane. Rosendale prevailed, receiving 48.4% of the vote to Doane's 41.3% and Hilbert's 10.4%. Rosendale defeated
Democratic incumbent State Representative Dennis Getz in the
general election, with 52.7% of the vote to Getz's 47.3%. During the 2011
legislative session, Rosendale served on several committees, including the Business and Labor Committee, the Transportation Committee, and the Local Government Committee.
Montana Senate Rosendale served one four-year term in the
Montana Senate Rosendale announced he would run for the Montana Senate to represent Senate District 19, a heavily Republican district in eastern Montana. After running unopposed in the Republican
primary, Rosendale defeated Democratic nominee Fred Lake in the general election, with 67.6% of the vote to Lake's 32.4%. During the 2013 legislative session, Rosendale served as vice chair of the Natural Resources and Transportation Committee. He also served on the Finance and Claims Committee, the Highways and Transportation Committee and the Natural Resources Committee. He also was the primary sponsor of a bill that became law to prevent
law enforcement from using drones for
surveillance purposes. Due to state redistricting in 2014, Rosendale represented Senate District 18 for the rest of his tenure, starting in 2015. At the beginning of the 2015 legislative session, Rosendale's colleagues in the State Senate elected him to serve as majority leader.
Montana State Auditor Elections Rosendale ran for
Montana State Auditor in
2016, when incumbent
Monica Lindeen was ineligible for reelection due to term limits. Rosendale ran unopposed in the Republican primary. In the
general election, he faced
Jesse Laslovich, who was Lindeen's chief legal counsel and widely considered one of Montana's rising political stars. Rosendale defeated Laslovich with 53.6% of the vote to Laslovich's 46.4%. At the time, this was the most expensive state auditor's race in Montana state history.
Tenure Rosendale served as Montana state auditor from 2017 to 2020. Medi-Share, a health care sharing ministry which asks members of a religious faith to pool money together to cover their health care costs, had previously been banned from operating in Montana after the company refused to cover a member's medical bills. In authorizing Medi-Share to operate in Montana, Rosendale determined that the company did not qualify as an insurer and had no obligation to pay subscribers' bills. Rosendale refused to accept a pay raise, taking an annual salary of $92,236. As state auditor, Rosendale was also one of five members of the Montana State Land Board, which oversees the 5.2 million acres in the
state trust land. As a member of the Montana State Land Board, Rosendale voted to expand access to over of
public land. In 2017, Rosendale proposed legislation that would create a
reinsurance program so that individuals with
preexisting conditions could access affordable
health coverage. This legislation passed both houses of the legislature before being vetoed by Governor Steve Bullock. Rosendale condemned Bullock's veto, saying, "the governor has sacrificed good, bipartisan policy in favor of bad, partisan politics." Rosendale then worked with a bipartisan group of Montana officials to create a reinsurance program and were granted a waiver to do so by the
federal government. The program is now operational. In 2019, Rosendale proposed legislation targeting
pharmacy benefits managers and a practice known as spread pricing. The legislation passed both houses of the legislature before being vetoed by Bullock, who wrote in his veto message that the bill would cause drug prices to increase. Rosendale again condemned Bullock, saying his veto "is a gift to the pharmaceutical and insurance industries and it's a slap in the face to consumers."
U.S. House of Representatives 2014 election In 2013, incumbent representative
Steve Daines announced that he would not seek reelection and would instead run for the
United States Senate. Rosendale then announced his candidacy to succeed Daines in the
U.S. House of Representatives. In addition to Rosendale, the Republican field included former state senators
Ryan Zinke and
Corey Stapleton, state representative
Elsie Arntzen, and
real estate investor Drew Turiano. Rosendale came in third place with 28.8% of the vote, behind Zinke's 33.3% and Stapleton's 29.3%. Arntzen and Turiano received 6.9% and 1.7%, respectively.
2020 election In June 2019, Representative
Greg Gianforte announced that he would not seek reelection and would instead run for governor to replace term-limited governor Steve Bullock. Days later, Rosendale announced he would run for the open seat. Rosendale received the early endorsement of President Donald Trump. He also received early endorsements from
elected officials around the country, including Senator
Ted Cruz, Senator
Rand Paul, House Republican Leader
Kevin McCarthy, House Republican Whip
Steve Scalise and Representative
Jim Jordan, as well as the endorsement of the
Crow Tribe of Montana. He won the six-way Republican primary with 48.3% of the vote, carrying every county. Rosendale defeated
Democratic nominee
Kathleen Williams in the
general election in November, with 56.4% of the vote to her 43.6%.
2022 election As a result of the
2020 census and
redistricting cycle, Montana regained a
congressional district having had a single at-large district since
1993. Rosendale ran for reelection in the reconstituted
second district, which covers the eastern two-thirds of the state and includes
Billings,
Great Falls, and
Helena. Rosendale again received Trump's endorsement and won the 2022 Republican primary in the second district. He won the general election with 56.6% of the vote to Independent Gary Buchanan's 22.0% and Democrat Penny Ronning's 20.1%.
Tenure Rosendale was sworn in as a member of the House of Representatives on January 3, 2021. Along with all other Senate and House Republicans, Rosendale voted against the
American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. In July 2021, Rosendale voted against the bipartisan ALLIES Act, which would increase by 8,000 the number of
special immigrant visas for Afghan allies of the U.S. military during
its invasion of Afghanistan, while also reducing some application requirements that caused long application backlogs; the bill passed in the House 407–16. Rosendale supported a ban on members of Congress trading stocks. In June 2021, Rosendale was one of 49 House Republicans to vote to repeal the
AUMF against Iraq. Rosendale issued a statement opposing intervention in
Ukraine during the
prelude to the Russian invasion. Later, he sponsored the Secure America's Border First Act, which would prohibit the expenditure or obligation of military and security assistance to Kyiv over the U.S. border with Mexico. On March 2, 2022, Rosendale was one of only three House members to vote against a resolution supporting the sovereignty of Ukraine in the face of the Russian invasion. In 2022, Rosendale voted against a bill that would provide approximately $14 billion to the government of Ukraine. In July 2022, Rosendale was one of 18 Republicans to vote against ratifying Sweden's and Finland's applications for NATO membership. In March 2023, Rosendale was among 47 Republicans to vote in favor of H.Con.Res. 21 which directed President
Joe Biden to remove U.S. troops from
Syria within 180 days. On March 1, 2023, Rosendale posed for a photo in front of the
United States Capitol with a former member of a white supremacist gang and a Nazi sympathizer. Rosendale later affirmed his opposition to hate groups and stated that he did not know the two individuals or their affiliations when he was photographed with them. On October 3, 2023, Florida Republican Representative
Matt Gaetz filed a motion to vacate the House speakership of California Republican
Kevin McCarthy. The measure prevailed as 216 were in favor and 210 opposed. It was the first time ever the House of Representatives had removed its speaker from office. All voting House Democrats plus Rosendale and seven other Republicans cast votes for his removal. On March 19, 2024, Rosendale voted nay on House Resolution 149, which condemned the illegal abduction and forcible transfer of children from Ukraine to the Russian Federation. He was one of nine Republicans to do so.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Veterans Affairs •
Subcommittee on Health •
Subcommittee on Technology Modernization (Ranking Member) •
Committee on Natural Resources In a competitive four-way primary, Rosendale faced district judge
Russell Fagg, state senator
Al Olszewski, and
combat veteran Troy Downing. After the primary, Rosendale was endorsed by President
Donald Trump and Vice President
Mike Pence. Trump visited the state to campaign for Rosendale four times, while Pence visited three times. During his 2018 campaign, Rosendale faced criticism for repeatedly presenting himself as a "rancher" in interviews and campaign materials despite owning no cattle or a cattle brand according to public records. Critics labelled Rosendale "all hat, no cattle". Rosendale, who bought a $2 million ranch near Glendive when he moved to Montana in 2002, said he leased his land and helps run cattle on it. Rosendale later removed the "rancher" label from bios on his website and social media accounts. Polls showed the race in a statistical tie going into
Election Day, in what was the most expensive election in Montana history, with more than $70 million spent between the two sides. Tester's campaign had a huge cash advantage, raising and spending $21 million to Rosendale's $6 million. In the general election, Tester won 50.3% of the vote to Rosendale's 46.8%, with
Libertarian candidate Rick Breckenridge taking 2.9%.
2024 election In August 2023,
Politico reported that Rosendale was "moving closer" to running for U.S. Senate in 2024. He officially entered the race on February 9, 2024; Trump endorsed a different candidate hours later, and Rosendale dropped out a week later. Shortly after Rosendale dropped out of the race,
Heidi Heitkamp, a former Democratic senator from North Dakota, alleged on an episode of the
"Talking Feds" podcast that Rosendale may have impregnated a 20-year-old staffer, and would likely resign from the House as a result. Heitkamp did not present evidence for these claims. Ron Kovach, a Rosendale spokesman, rejected the accusation as false and defamatory, and stated that Heitkamp would be the target of legal action. On March 8, 2024, Rosendale announced that he would also not run for reelection to his House seat, saying that "defamatory rumors" and alleged death threats had impeded his ability to serve. ==Personal life==