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Republican Greg Gianforte elected Montana’s next governor

Iris Samuels | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years AGO
by Iris SamuelsMatthew Brown
| November 3, 2020 10:03 PM

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Republican Greg Gianforte has won the race to become Montana’s next governor, defeating Lt. Gov. Mike Cooney and expanding the GOP’s hold on the state following one of the most competitive gubernatorial races of the 2020 election.

Republican Greg Gianforte has won the race to become Montana’s next governor, defeating Lt. Gov. Mike Cooney and expanding the GOP’s hold on the state following one of the most competitive gubernatorial races of the 2020 election.

The seat was up for grabs as Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock was termed out and ran for the U.S. Senate.

Gianforte, 59, who serves as Montana’s lone member of the U.S. House, was endorsed by President Donald Trump and known for body-slamming a reporter in 2017. He will be Montana’s first Republican governor in 16 years, with Great Falls attorney Kristen Juras as his lieutenant governor.

“I'm honored to be able to serve as the next governor of the state of Montana," he told The Associated Press. “I've been pretty clear: I'm running to create more good paying jobs. Kristen Juras and I look forward to rolling up our sleeves tomorrow morning and getting to work."

Soon after the race was called Cooney campaign manager Brad Elkins said the Democrat was not ready to concede.

“There are literally Montanans still in line voting and major counties including Butte-Silver Bow, Cascade, Hill and all of Indian Country have yet to be counted,” Elkins said. “This race isn’t over."

One of the wealthiest members of Congress, Gianforte touted his business experience, which includes founding a start-up technology company in his hometown of Bozeman that was eventually sold for almost $2 billion.

Mike Cleveland, of Worden, said he voted for Gianforte because he considers Cooney a “career politician.” He said Gianforte was “kind of like Trump” because he has real-world business experience, which he said he liked in candidates.

“Get rid of the Democrats,” said Cleveland, 57, after casting his ballot Tuesday. "People are pretty much sick of the government overstepping its bounds.”

This is the second run at the governorship for both candidates. Gianforte lost his run against incumbent Gov. Steve Bullock in 2016. Cooney ran unsuccessfully for the seat in 2000.

Gianforte, known for assaulting a reporter on the eve of a special election to the U.S. House in 2017, won that election and was reelected to the seat in 2018. The assault incident drew praise from President Trump, who endorsed Gianforte in 2020.

The candidates exchanged barbs throughout the campaign, with Cooney calling Gianforte a “New Jersey millionaire” and Gianforte calling Cooney a “career politician.” But both candidates embraced their identities, as Gianforte promised his business experience would position him to improve the state’s economy, and Cooney said his experience holding public office meant he could hit the ground running.

Gianforte’s career in the tech industry began in New Jersey, before he moved to Bozeman in 1995 and founded RightNow technologies, a company that was eventually sold to Oracle for nearly $2 billion.

Gianforte, a devout Christian who subscribes to creationist views, has donated millions of dollars through the Gianforte Family Foundation to various organizations, including some that oppose abortion and same-sex marriage, and some that promote school choice.

He pledged Tuesday night to bring changes to Montana under a plan unveiled during the campaign that includes streamlined permitting for natural resource extraction, encouraging high tech growth, recruiting manufacturing companies and overhauling the state tax code.

“It outlines exactly what we’re going to do,” Gianforte said of his Montana Comeback Plan. “It was a positive vision that will help Montana realize the potential we’ve not been able to achieve under the prior administrations.”

Cooney, the grandson of Montana’s ninth governor, was first elected to the Montana state house at the age of 21. He later served three terms as Montana’s secretary of state and two years as president of the state senate. He was named lieutenant governor in 2015.

The race was one of the few competitive gubernatorial races in the country, drawing in record contributions to both candidates. Gianforte also spent $7.5 million of his own fortune on his campaign. Both candidates were found in violation of the state’s campaign finance laws over the course of the campaign.

The campaign trail was shaped by the coronavirus pandemic, as Gianforte faces criticism for failing to consistently wear a face mask in the weeks leading up the election, even as COVID-19 cases in the state continued to rise. Cooney campaigned on the promise that he would protect health care access and enforce restrictions to limit the spread of the virus if elected.

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Find AP’s full election coverage at APNews.com/Election2020.

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