Former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum is set to appear before the Senate on Thursday morning to be confirmed as secretary for the Department of Interior.
The former North Dakota governor told senators at his confirmation hearing that he saw limits on energy production as a national security threat.
According to the agreement, Burgum agreed to divest his interests in Microsoft, Apple, Google’s parent company Alphabet, ONEOK, and Xcel Energy, among others.
Former President Donald Trump has chosen North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum to head the Interior Department. Some things to know about the two-term Republican governor of a sparsely populated state: Burgum, 68, grew up in tiny Arthur, North Dakota. Arthur's population is 328.
Doug Burgum to lead the agency that manages the nation’s natural ... Burgum went on to become a venture capitalist, real estate investor and Microsoft executive before pivoting to politics in 2016. That year, Burgum not only bested the GOP-endorsed ...
Former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum is before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Thursday, seeking confirmation as the secretary of the interior.
Former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, nominated for secretary of the Interior, questioned during Senate hearing
Doug Burgum, Donald Trump's pick for Interior secretary, promised to boost domestic energy through oil and gas leasing on federal land.
Doug Burgum, President-elect Donald Trump's nominee ... He previously served as the senior vice president at Microsoft, founder of real estate company Kilbourne Group and co-founder of regional ...
If confirmed as secretary of the interior, Doug Burgum would become a key player in implementing ... In 2001, he sold his company, Great Plains Software, to Microsoft for $1.1 billion. As governor, he presided over record oil production in North Dakota ...
Former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum's nomination to lead a presidential Cabinet agency was advanced by a U.S. Senate committee on Thursday.
Doug Burgum, the nominee for the job of Secretary of the Interior said “When energy production is restricted in America, it doesn’t reduce demand, it just shifts production to countries like Russia, Venezuela,