INDIANAPOLIS — U.S. Senator Mike Braun has formally announced he's running for governor of Indiana in 2024.
On Monday, he made the announcement at Prime 47 in downtown Indy.
"I’m a Main Street businessman, not a politician, and I want every Hoosier to have a chance at the American dream that I built here in Indiana," Braun said. "I’m running for Governor of Indiana to make our state a beacon of freedom and opportunity for America."
He filed paperwork to run for Indiana governor in 2024 back in November.
During his campaign kick off speech held at Prime 47 steak house in downtown Indianapolis, he didn't take questions from journalists. However he did say education, agriculture, health care, work force development and public safety will be key issues he focuses on.
"Education is 52 percent of our budget out of 17 billion a year," Braun said. Post secondary is another 15 percent and we got to do better at that. That's a lot of resources. "
Braun became the third person to officially launch a campaign on Monday, following Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch and Fort Wayne business man Eric Doden who announced his bid earlier this year.
There have yet to be any Democratic nominees for Governor to officially announce their bid for the office. Governor Holcomb isn't able to run again due to Indiana's two term limit.
-
Indy Airport lands three new flights to Atlanta, Tampa and Portland
Starting in Spring of 2025, Allegiant will provide a new nonstop flight to Portland and Frontier Airlines will launch flights to Atlanta and Tampa.Mozel Sanders Foundation will serve free Thanksgiving meals at these locations
For over 50 years, the Mozel Sanders Foundations has upheld its tradition of serving Thanksgiving Day meals to those in need, and they won't be stopping anytime soon.Trump's mass deportation plan targets specific groups of immigrants
President-elect Donald Trump's mass deportation plan targets specific groups of immigrants. Here's what to know.More than 12 arrests made during drug raids across Central Indiana
A series of raids led by the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) led to the arrest of more than 12 people Wednesday morning.