North Dakota
North Dakota Republican Gov. Doug Burgum to announce 2024 run for president
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum is formally launching his dark-horse bid for the White House on Wednesday, the same day as former Vice President Mike Pence.
His decision to move forward with a campaign came after the North Dakota legislative session ended in May.
“We need new leadership to unleash our potential,” Burgum wrote in an editorial in The Wall Street Journal.
In a meeting with the editorial board of a North Dakota newspaper, the Republican governor, who easily won reelection in 2020, acknowledged that a presidential run has been on his mind.
“There’s a value to being underestimated all the time,” Burgum told The Forum in recent weeks, referencing the steep uphill climb he faced in his first gubernatorial race, according to the newspaper. “That’s a competitive advantage.”
Burgum, a former software company CEO, first ran for governor in 2016 as a political neophyte with no party endorsements and only 10% support in local polls. Though he faced a tough primary opponent in former North Dakota Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem at the time, who had been backed by the Republican establishment, Burgum ended up winning by 20 points, in part because of his outsider status in an election cycle that saw Donald Trump win the presidency, and his ability to self-fund his gubernatorial campaign — elements that may also help him with his White House run.
Burgum grew his small business, Great Plains Software, into a $1 billion software company that was eventually acquired by Microsoft. According to his advisors, the North Dakotan stayed on as senior vice president after the corporation retained his company’s workers in North Dakota. As was true of his gubernatorial campaigns, Burgum intends to lean on his extensive personal wealth and financial network to fund his presidential campaign, according to Republican sources. Financially, he’d sit at the top of the emerging Republican field, along with Trump and former biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy as the wealthiest Republican contenders.
Burgum has also brandished his conservative record as governor of North Dakota, hewing to the model of another potential presidential candidate, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Earlier this year, Burgum signed into law one of the strictest anti-abortion laws in the country, an abortion ban that allows limited exceptions up to six weeks’ gestation, and only for medical emergencies at any other point in the pregnancy. After signing the bill, he said the legislation “reaffirms North Dakota as a pro-life state.”
Like DeSantis, Burgum has also signed legislation to restrict transgender rights, including a transgender athlete ban, and a measure that would make it a crime to give gender-affirming care to minors.
But his advisers say he’s likely to center his campaign on energy and the economy. Burgum, who was chairman of the bipartisan Western Governors Association, could also appeal to fiscal hawks. As governor, he balanced the state budget without raising taxes in North Dakota and cut state spending by $1.7 billion. He also enacted the largest tax cut in North Dakota history.
Despite his conservative record, Burgum would begin a presidential bid likely at the back of the GOP pack. Burgum’s name is not one that immediately registers with many Republicans.
In his meeting with The Forum editorial board, Burgum said he believes 60% of American voters are an exhausted “silent majority” who have been offered only options on the fringes of the political spectrum.
“All the engagement right now is occurring on the edge,” he said. “There’s definitely a yearning for some alternatives right now.”
North Dakota
North Dakota State Capitol displays ‘2025′ for new year
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – The North Dakota State Capitol lit up windows on the building to display “2025″ for the new year.
The number 2025 was displayed on all sides of the Capitol.
According to the Office of Management and Budget, the Capitol has been doing light displays since Dec. 19, 1934.
Happy New Year from Your News Leader!
Copyright 2024 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
Brock Osweiler to Join ESPN Broadcast Team for FCS Championship Game Between Montana State, North Dakota State – Flathead Beacon
Flathead High School alum, former Kalispell resident and retired NFL quarterback Brock Osweiler will be part of the ESPN broadcast team for the upcoming Jan. 6 FCS National Championship game in Frisco, Texas, between Montana State University and North Dakota State University.
Osweiler, who was hired by ESPN in 2022 as an analyst for college football, has been busy of late as college football’s bowl season reaches its peak, with nearly 30 bowl games, plus additional college football playoff games having already taken place between Dec. 14 and Dec. 30. News of Osweiler’s involvement in calling the FCS National Championship began circulating Monday.
This will be the second Bobcats game Osweiler has been in the booth for since Dec. 21, when he and play-by-play broadcaster Dave Fleming and sideline reporter Stormy Buonantony covered the FCS semifinal between MSU and University of South Dakota on ABC. That game, a 31-17 win for MSU, featured a dominant performance by Butte High grad and Bobcats’ starting quarterback Tommy Mellott, who threw for 134 yards and a touchdown while also rushing for 125 yards and two touchdowns. Montana State was the top-seeded team in the FCS playoffs and is undefeated on the season. They will face a South Dakota State Bison team that is 13-2 and entered the playoffs as the No. 2 seed. The two losses on the season for the Bison have come at the hands of University of Colorado and University of South Dakota.
Last week, Osweiler reportedly became the first person in the TV broadcast booth for the Las Vegas Bowl between USC and Texas A&M who had previously played in the Las Vegas Bowl. That was back in 2011 when the Arizona State Sun Devils faced Boise State in a 56-24 loss during which Osweiler went 30 of 47 passing for 395 yards and two touchdowns.
A resident of Scottsdale, Ariz., Osweiler is also part of the TV broadcast team as an analyst for the Dec. 31 ReliaQuest Bowl between No. 11 Alabama and Michigan on ESPN.
Osweiler won’t be the only former pro quarterback from Montana covering the FCS championship game. Ryan Leaf, who grew up in Great Falls, and went on to play for Washington State before spending four seasons in the NFL, will be helping to call the game for the radio broadcasting company Westwood One Sports.
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North Dakota
Will North Dakota keep standing pat on minimum wage?
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When the calendar flips to January, a number of states will increase their minimum wage levels – but just like recent years, North Dakota won’t be among them. Those pushing for changes plan to try again.
North Dakota’s minimum wage hasn’t gone up in 15 years, standing firm at $7.25 an hour – also the federal level.
Meanwhile, many other states in this part of the country have gradually boosted theirs above $10.
State Representative LaurieBeth Hager – D-Fargo – said she made this a big priority while serving in North Dakota’s Legislature.
She echoed what some in the research community have noted, about giving low-income populations the power to lift themselves out of poverty.
“If people are making more, and have more buying potential, more earning potential,” said Hager, “their whole life and their whole dreams can be entirely different.”
And while researchers say these moves might not lead to big job losses, there are lingering concerns about employers turning to automation.
Hager said she doesn’t have a firm number for a forthcoming bill this session, but she said she plans to keep it around $9 to make it easier for small businesses to absorb.
Republicans still control both chambers, and Hager said she plans to seek approval in placing the issue before voters – as opposed to a simple Legislative vote like last session.
Citizen-led ballot questions also are options and have worked in other conservative-led states – but Hager said that can be a thorny issue in North Dakota, even if voters say yes.
Meanwhile, Landis Larson – president of the North Dakota AFL-CIO – said skeptics might argue about costs being passed along to consumers or other drawbacks.
But he added that not making adjustments for low-wage earners can be felt in other ways.
“You know, if you look at it another way,” said Larson, “most of those people are on some kind of government programs that actually everyone pays for in the long run.”
A 2021 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that millions of American adults earning low wages rely on federal programs, like Medicaid, to meet basic needs.
Nationwide, more than 20 states and nearly 40 cities will increase their minimum wage rates when the new year begins.
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