After Burgum's Senate confirmation, the Center for Western Priorities released the following statement from Executive Director Jennifer Rokala:
“Doug Burgum has a choice to make on day one: will he follow the law or follow President Trump’s illegal orders? The Interior secretary has no authority to freeze payments to Tribes, farmers, or water districts across the West — but Trump’s clumsy and chaotic executive orders try to do just that. As a former governor, Doug Burgum knows that thousands of jobs and millions of people depend on funding from the Interior department to keep our water clean, protect communities from wildfires, and help endangered wildlife. The minute Doug Burgum walks in the door at Interior, he needs to make it clear to Westerners that he will keep those funds moving, even if the White House tries to cut them off again.
Burgum was nominated on December 15, 2025, by then-President-elect Donald Trump. He was reportedly chosen due to North Dakota's oil-rich resources. He is expected to fulfill Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” goal, as the Interior Department oversees energy production on public lands and in federal waters.
The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) employs around 70,000 people who work in over 2,400 locations across the United States, Puerto Rico, and U.S. territories.
Burgum took office as the 33rd governor of North Dakota on December 15, 2016. Prior to that, he was the CEO of Great Plains. In 2006, he founded Kilbourne Group, a real estate development firm committed to creating smart, healthy cities through vibrant downtowns.
In 2008, he co-founded Arthur Ventures, a venture capital firm that invests in ambitious, mission-driven software companies. In 2009, then-Gov. John Hoeven awarded Burgum the Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Award—North Dakota’s highest civilian honor—for his business leadership and numerous philanthropic efforts, including the Doug Burgum Family Fund, which focuses its charitable giving on youth and education.
Burgum graduated with a bachelor’s degree in university studies from North Dakota State University in 1978 and later earned a Master of Business Administration from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business in 1980.
As North Dakota’s governor, Burgum developed relationships with the state’s five tribes. Though tensions arose over his handling of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, he established regular dialogue with tribal leaders, including the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe.
During his confirmation hearing, he pledged to support tribal consultation.
“We'd look forward to those discussions with you and, I think, again, as you've described, the key to this is the local consultation,” Burgum said during the hearing. “My experience as governor and working with the tribes and working with local communities in North Dakota, whether it's grazing associations, county commissioners, mayors, rural residents, I think the consultation is key.”
Burgum succeeds Deb Haaland (Laguna Pueblo), the first Native American to ever serve in a secretarial role in a presidential administration.