In January 2022, Howe declared his candidacy for
North Dakota secretary of state in that years
midterm elections as the incumbent secretary,
Alvin Jaeger, opted to retire after seven terms in office. Howe defeated rancher Marvin Lepp in the republican primary and went on to beat
university administrator and
Democratic-NPL nominee Jeffrey Powell and
independent candidate Charles Tuttle in the general election with over 60% of the vote. Howe's office has launched numerous efforts to get easier access for elections to
new U.S. citizens. In September 2023, Howe defended a ban on
ballot measures led by individuals and groups from outside of North Dakota, which was primarily for a measure that would've set
term limits for
congressional members in the state. In November 2023, Howe and
North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley appealed a ruling by district judge
Peter Welte that forced the state to redraw its
legislative districts ahead of the
2024 elections that forced the state to give the
Spirit Lake Tribe and
Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation their own specific district. The appeal was heard by the
8th Circuit Court of Appeals, and the court ruled in favor of the state the next year, which under the ruling would mean only the
United States Department of Justice could bring
Voting Rights Act lawsuits, which would negate the lawsuit by the
NAACP that forced the new districts in North Dakota. However, the
United States Supreme Court paused the ruling in 2025 and as of July is pending review by the court. In May 2024, Howe was critical of a bill in congress that would have tightened ID checking for voting to protect against
illegal immigrants and noncitizens from voting, stating that the bill would force North Dakota into doing
voter registration and that the state already has protections against it. == Personal life ==