Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Aide: ND governor planning 2024 GOP presidenti­al bid

- John Hanna and Thomas Beaumont

Two-term North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, a former computer software entreprene­ur, is expected to run for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, a political aide familiar with the plans told The Associated Press on Friday, putting him in an already crowded field dominated by ex-President Donald Trump.

The aide said Burgum plans to launch his campaign with a June 7 event in Fargo, the largest city in North Dakota. The aide was speaking on the condition of anonymity because the event had not been publicized yet.

The 66-year-old Burgum is jumping into a field that includes fellow Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, seen by some Republican­s as the strongest alternativ­e to Trump. Other candidates include former U.N. Ambassador Nikki

Haley, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and biotech entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy. Former Vice President Mike Pence is also considered a likely presidenti­al candidate but has not yet announced a bid.

The eventual GOP nominee is expected to face Democratic President Joe Biden in November 2024.

While Burgum has joined other Republican governors in signing legislatio­n rolling back transgende­r rights, he’s expected to emphasize his business background, small-town roots and a large state tax cut this year. Burgum, first elected in 2016, was reelected in 2020 and is eligible to run for governor again in 2024.

In Iowa, where caucuses are expected to be the first-in-the-nation GOP contest, Republican Bruce Rastetter, a wealthy agricultur­al and energy businessma­n who met Burgum three years ago, described the North Dakota governor as “a successful guy” and “really smart.” But Rastetter, who has been an influential donor and adviser to presidenti­al campaigns in Iowa, said Burgum’s strength also comes from presenting as “a regular guy.”

“He’s stayed a regular guy, but really understand­s issues on ag, energy and foreign policy,” said Rastetter, who is helping Burgum make introducti­ons in Iowa, but is so far neutral in the developing 2024 Iowa caucus campaign.

The company Burgum started in 1983, Great Plains Software, was acquired by Microsoft in 2011, and Burgum stayed on as a Microsoft vice president until 2007. He also founded real estate developmen­t and venture capital firms.

He grew up in Arthur, an eastern North Dakota town of about 300 people, 25 miles northwest of Fargo.

Burgum this year signed legislatio­n that reduced state income taxes and provided local property tax relief, with the savings estimated at $515 million. His office touted the income tax cut as the largest in state history.

But with DeSantis building a national profile for anti-LGBTQ+ measures and describing his state of Florida as where “woke goes to die,” culture war issues dominated legislatin­g this year in North Dakota and other states controlled by Republican­s.

The measures signed this year by Burgum prohibit public schools and government entities from requiring teachers and employees to refer to transgende­r people by the pronouns they use; bar transgende­r girls and women from joining female sports teams, from K-12 through college; and criminaliz­e health care providers who give gender-affirming care to minors. A new law also limits transgende­r children and adults in accessing the bathrooms, locker rooms and showers of their choice, from schools to state-run colleges and correction­al facilities.

North Dakota also has one of the strictest anti-abortion laws in the nation after Burgum last month signed a ban on abortion throughout pregnancy with slim exceptions up to six weeks’ gestation.

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