USA TODAY US Edition

Onetime underdog will speak out in the Senate

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Heidi Heitkamp was seen as an underdog when she entered the race for North Dakota’s open U.S. Senate seat against Rep. Rick Berg. During the campaign, Heitkamp, a Democrat, did not hide her disappoint­ment with the Obama administra­tion while campaignin­g in the red state. She described herself to USA TODAY as “an independen­t voice” for the people of North Dakota.

Heitkamp, 56, will serve her first term in the Senate after 12 years away from public office. She will be taking the seat held by Sen. Kent Conrad, a Democrat who announced his retirement last year.

Heitkamp spent the past decade as a director of the Dakota Gasificati­on Co., which operates a plant producing natural gas from coal. Heitkamp has criticized the administra­tion for not doing enough to support coal as an energy source. For North Dakota, a state with a booming oil industry and only 3% unemployme­nt, energy rather than jobs became a focal point for Heitkamp’s campaign.

Before her work with Dakota Gasificati­on, Heitkamp served as the North Dakota attorney general, pushing for harsher laws for sex offenders and leading a campaign for a successful ballot initiative to use tobacco settlement money for antismokin­g programs.

All together, Heitkamp has campaigned in six statewide races, with her last race for public office a 2000 bid for governor. She lost the race to Republican John Hoeven. She also was the North Dakota tax commission­er from 1986 to 1992 after losing a race for state auditor in 1984.

The University of North Dakota graduate and her husband, Darwin Lange, have two children.

— Kaitlyn Ridel

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AP

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