The Senate voted to confirm former North Dakota Gov Doug Burgum as the Secretary of the Interior in a 79-18 vote late Thursday, adding him to President Donald Trump’s cabinet.
Burgum joins an administration committed to expanding oil and gas production and curtailing wind generation on federal lands, though Burgum increased production of all three during his time as governor and said during his confirmation hearing that he supports an “all of the above” approach to generation.
He added, however, that he thinks more generation overall is needed, “and the thing we’re short of right now is baseload [generation].”
Trump said in a November Truth Social post that Burgum will also serve as chairman of a new National Energy Council, and through that role will also have a seat on the National Security Council.
“This Council will oversee the path to U.S. ENERGY DOMINANCE by cutting red tape, enhancing private sector investments across all sectors of the Economy, and by focusing on INNOVATION over longstanding, but totally unnecessary, regulation,” Trump said.
Burgum will also conduct a comprehensive review of offshore wind during a six-month pause on federal issuances of permits and leases. The review will examine “the ecological, economic, and environmental necessity of terminating or amending any existing wind energy leases, identifying any legal bases for such removal,” according to the White House, and will conclude with Burgum submitting a report to Trump.
National Rural Electric Cooperative Association CEO Jim Matheson praised Burgum’s confirmation in a Thursday statement, saying that he “has long been a steadfast advocate for safeguarding the reliability of our electric grid, effectively stewarding our nation’s public lands and natural resources, reducing wildfire risk and helping rural communities across America thrive.”
The American Clean Power Association’s CEO Jason Grumet also issued a supportive statement Thursday, congratulating Burgum and saying that ACP is “eager to support the administration’s efforts to make American energy dominance a reality.”
“This whole-of-government approach will be crucial to aligning agencies to advance an ‘all-of-the-above’ energy strategy which is essential to achieving these goals,” Grumet said.
Evergreen Action criticized the appointment Thursday, with executive director Lena Moffitt saying the Senate had “handed President Trump another loyalist to serve Big Oil.”
“Trump’s unconstitutional power grabs make clear just how dangerous his extreme Project 2025 agenda is. It’s frustrating that some Senate Democrats are backing the very people who will carry it out,” Moffitt said. “Americans voted for lower costs and economic stability — not a blank check for Big Oil to exploit public resources and rig the system in their favor. But with Burgum, that’s exactly what they’re getting.”
Burgum’s confirmation received a yes from all 53 Republican senators and 25 Democrats.