Herald-Tribune

GOP hopeful Burgum is used to long odds

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EXETER, N.H. — Doug Burgum is among the least known of the many long-shot candidates vying to be the Republican nominee in the 2024 presidenti­al race. The North Dakota governor is stuck in the primary’s basement, where he typically polls at 1%.

But Burgum’s campaign maintains that he has a window once actual voters, not TV viewers, plug into the race.

Like other Republican hopefuls, the North Dakota governor is joining a series of town halls in Exeter, New Hampshire, hosted by Seacoaston­line and the USA TODAY Network to speak directly with those Americans at 10 a.m. Friday. Here are five things to know about Doug Burgum ahead of the event.

Doug Burgum has been a major underdog before

Polling shows that most Americans don’t know who Burgum is, and those who do hold a slightly more unfavorabl­e view of him.

But when Burgum, 66, first entered politics as a gubernator­ial contender in 2016, he was a long shot whom most people hadn’t heard of before.

But when it came time for the voters to decide, he won that election by 20%, largely running as an outsider in the year that Trump first captured the Republican nomination for president. in 1997. Most of Burgum’s fundraisin­g comes from his own pocket. He has loaned his campaign more than $10 million.

Energy, carbon neutrality is his favorite subject

One of the reasons Burgum hasn’t broken away from the pack is how little oxygen is given to this favorite subject: energy. In a sober delivery style that stays away from culture war or social issues, he has tried to shake the public consciousn­ess about energy’s role in America’s domestic and foreign policy. The U.S. should be committed to alternativ­e fuels, he said, such as ethanol and carbon pipelines.

Burgum warns of Cold War with China

Besides energy, foreign policy is a space where Burgum has a wider vision, and he’s criticized President Joe Biden’s approach to countering America’s competitio­n around the world, particular­ly China. China being America’s chief rival in the 21st century is one of his biggest concerns. He has been stark in saying the U.S. is engaged in a cold war with Beijing that must be won economical­ly and through democratic values rather than military might.

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