Secretary of the Department of the Interior is a crucial position for Trump’s plan to change American energy policy.
President-elect Donald Trump has selected his onetime rival in the presidential campaign, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, to lead the Department of the Interior, a crucial position for his plan to change American energy policy.
“Hi Doug,” Trump said from the stage at Mar-a-Lago on the evening of Nov. 14, after telling the crowd the official announcement will be made Friday.
“This is a pretty big announcement right now,” the president-elect said.
“We’re going to do things with energy and with land, interior, that is going to be incredible,” he said.
It also includes the Bureau of Land Management and the Bureau of Ocean Management, both critical to energy policy for an administration whose incoming head vowed while campaigning to “drill, baby, drill.”
Currently led by Deb Haaland, the department was headed by David Bernhardt under the first Trump administration, who was seen as a contender for the role again.
Before Bernhardt served as interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, now a Montana congressman, held the position.
Burgum’s appointment to a Cabinet-level position was seen as all-but-inevitable after he lost out to Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) in the competition to become Trump’s running mate.
Burgum said Trump referred to him as “Mr. Secretary” on the phone call discussing that decision.
The speculation around Burgum, governor of an oil- and natural gas-rich Midwestern state, had centered on both the Department of the Interior and the Department of Energy.
Burgum’s net worth is thought to exceed $1 billion. Prior to serving in government, the North Dakotan stewarded the growth of an accounting software firm, Great Plains Software. It was eventually sold to Microsoft, which Burgum then joined.
Born in Arthur, North Dakota, Burgum attended North Dakota State University, where he earned his undergraduate degree. He went on to earn an MBA from Stanford University.
“As a governor, I have a front-row seat,” he said, going on to list initiatives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Land Management. Both entities sit under the interior secretary.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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