Four victories, common purpose, one great year ahead

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By SEN. DAN SULLIVAN

As Alaskans, there’s no doubt that we face significant challenges, including high crime rates, especially domestic violence and sexual assault, thousands of Alaskans struggling with addiction, and a continuing recession that has left too many without jobs. These are issues that I’ll continue to focus on in the coming year.

But when I look out at 2018, I am struck by one overriding feeling for our state: optimism. There are numerous reasons for this.

First, the cornerstone of Alaska’s economy — responsible resource development — is making a dramatic comeback. Congress’ recent action to open the 1002 area of the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge is a key part of this. For decades, thousands of Alaskans — Democrats, Republicans and Alaska Natives — have advocated for opening ANWR.

And despite millions of dollars spent by opponents of this Alaska dream, reinforced by the stale and truth-challenged talking points of their allies like Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., and a national media that was consistently hostile to opening ANWR, we did it.

This is an important victory for all Alaskans. But our comeback is not just about ANWR. Several new discoveries and developments on the North Slope, including a significant expansion of the Point Thomson field, all point to the potential for billions of dollars of new investment, significant increases in trans-Alaska oil pipeline throughput and state revenues, and hundreds if not thousands of good-paying Alaska jobs.

At long last, we also now have a federal government that once again wants to be a partner in opportunity for Alaska, not an obstacle. For all of these reasons, our state has the potential to again become one of the hottest energy plays in the world.

But it’s not just oil and gas that make Alaska’s natural resources the envy of the world. Alaska has the most sustainable and abundant fisheries in the world, supporting tens of thousands of jobs in our state. As chair of the Senate Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries and Coast Guard, I am working to make sure that Alaska remains the superpower of seafood by increasing market opportunities for our world-class products and streamlining federal regulations that often encumber family-owned vessels.

 

Second, due to the historic tax reform bill that was just signed into law, middle-class Alaskans will see bigger paychecks which will help our families who are seeking to offset Permanent Fund dividend cuts.

For example, according to a Washington Post tax calculation, under the new law an average family of four, making about $75,000 a year, will get about $200 more a month in take-home pay, or about $2,400 a year, and a single parent making $41,000 a year will get a $1,400 tax cut. Our Main Street businesses will also see relief and will be given the incentive to reinvest here in Alaska, and help get us out of a recession.

Third, we are accelerating ways to add much-needed diversification to our economy. Tourism businesses are increasing, as are other small businesses like micro-breweries and distilleries. Recent technological investments across our state — particularly in our telecommunications industry — have the potential to turn Alaska into a global tech corridor. Young Alaskans, with their energy and entrepreneurial spirit, will be key to creating the next generation of businesses and industry. The best way to unleash their energy and spur diversification is through policies of less government, and more economic freedom. That’s what this tax bill and current efforts at regulatory relief are doing.

Fourth, we are reversing federal policies that slashed defense spending and attempted to significantly reduce military forces in Alaska. In the face of rising global national security threats, we successfully fought to stave off these misguided cuts, which would have hurt economies in Anchorage and Fairbanks. Further, we’ve made the case to our colleagues in Congress and the executive branch that because of Alaska’s strategic location, we should be a destination for more troops, including those serving in the Coast Guard, and more military investments. In the last three years, we’ve been able to authorize more than $1 billion for military construction in our state.

Nowhere is this more important than in our missile defense system, where a bill that I authored — the Advancing America’s Missile Defense Act — recently became law as part of the broader National Defense Authorization Act. This included an additional $200 million that has just been appropriated to build a much-needed missile field at Fort Greely. Enhanced missile defense is important for America’s national security in the face of threats from North Korea and Iran, but will also provide hundreds of good-paying jobs for Alaskans.

TEAMWORK IS KEY

Finally, we’ve relentlessly advocated for getting outstanding Alaskans into the highest levels of the Trump administration to implement these policies and to protect Alaska’s interests. Former DNR Commissioner Joe Balash is now the assistant secretary of the Interior, in charge of all oil, gas and mining activities on federal lands. Chris Oliver is the first Alaskan to permanently head up all federal fisheries for NOAA. Former Alaska state Senate President Drew Pearce is a senior official at the U.S. Department of Transportation. Chris Hladick, Alaska’s former commissioner of commerce, is now the Region 10 EPA Administrator. And Tara Sweeney was recently appointed by President Trump to be the U.S. assistant secretary of Interior for Indian affairs — the first Alaskan to hold this important position.

All the pieces are in place for Alaskans to work together toward a common purpose — creating a more prosperous, vibrant state, where all people and all cultures are respected, where we are safe in our homes and in our neighborhoods, where our great entrepreneurial spirit can be set free and where our families and children view Alaska as a place of unlimited opportunity and promise for generations to come. In the upcoming year, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Congressman Don Young and I will work as hard as we can with you to make sure those pieces come together.

Happy new year, Alaska. It’s an honor of a lifetime to serve you.

Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2014.

8 COMMENTS

  1. I feel that allowing Pebble Mine to operate is a huge mistake we are about to let happen. I think that most Alaskans will agree. I’m also thinking that it is not our choice anymore.

    • I guess I must have missed where the Senator said anything about Pebble. I think Pebble is now just entering the permitting process that the Obama administration illegally denied them the opportunity to do.

  2. This column reads as nothing more than a poorly plagiarized statement put out for all GOP to parrot. I see Dan Sullivan’s accomplishments amounting to noting more than, first, towing the party line and avoiding bi-partisanship politics that improve life for all Americans.
    Second, he succeeded in giving most all Alaskans, the big middle finger in respects to ensuring proper health care coverage.
    Third, he gave most Alaskans the other middle finger by supporting the current changes to the tax code. Sullivan clearly caters to outside corporations before serving his Alaskan constituents. And then, he gave simultaneous middle finger salutes to Alaskans by pushing for the removal of environmental protections of Alaska’s resources.
    Fourth, Sullivan has continuously shown that he totally lacks fiscal conservatism that supports reduced government sending and minimal government debt. He pushes for massive government expenditures that force repayment onto the backs of the working middle-class.
    Dan Sullivan is the poster child for ‘wannabe career politicians’. And another perfect example of why we need term limits.

  3. I could not possibly disagree more with Mr. Sobchak’s comments. The Alaska delegation accomplished more for Alaska in 2017 than perhaps what any other state can claim for their own delegations to Congress, delegations far larger and with many more years of aggregate seniority of course. It proves that elections matter very much and that electing Dan Sullivan in 2014 was great for Alaska and key to these outcomes- not only for Alaska but for the nation. From the first I agreed very much with Senator Sullivan’s belief that the current rate of economic growth coming out of the Obama recession needed a tax cut for stimulus, and to bring offshore earnings into the economy. Eliminating the Obamacare mandate restores more than a little of the confidence we lost during the Obama years. The tax cut will easily more than pay for itself. Labor will benefit right along with capital. There was probably a time when I didn’t realize that Make America Great Again is more than another campaign slogan, but I can now see that it is a strategy rather than a slogan. That strategy is under way and the Alaska delegation made sure Alaska has a cardinal role.

    • You did nothing to dispute my claims for disliking Dan Sullivan as well as the rest of the ‘lets just sit on our hands’ delegation. Your points regarding the former Obama administration are nothing more than a distraction from the conversation at hand. Here, let me toss you another cracker, Polly.

      • Walter, you sound so much as if you have no clue – our Team has been doing a great job. Ignorance is bad, but your WILLFUL ignorance is insanity. In answer to your points: 1. You are being very partisan to the left – “bi-partisanship” to the d’rats always means do what we want and you compromise, not us – I’m all for talking, but WE WON, MAGA, get over it. It’s time for the alt-left to move right. 2. PPACA has driven prices so high that I can’t afford any insurance, yet have to pay for someone else to get what I can’t get for myself. PPACA is just a rip-off, and I have severe doubts about how many Alaskans actually benefited – or how nany will “lose” benefits if we return to a free market where we each carry our own load. Socialism only appears to work – and then you run out of other peoples’ money to spend. 3. Tax cuts + removal of PPACA mandate puts $400/month into my take-home pay. Healthy economic stimulus benefits all Alaskans. Only those enviro-extremists who want to move all the people out of Alaska are objecting to the very reasonable changes to regulation. 4. Short-term debt increase (less than Obama) pays for itself in ten years without tax increase… IF we can restrain the growth of bureaucracy. This is done through balance of trade, reduction in regulation and bureaucracy, and resource development. D’rat non-economics has forced the U.S. to put up our national forests and some mineral rights as collateral to the Chinese to secure debt – if WE don’t develop our economy… they will. Eight years of liberal policies have severely reduced the Alaska economy – any set of policies that does not include the activities of and benefits to people is fallacious before it ever gets started – and I’m talking about freedom and opportunity, not handouts (which are killing our peoples). Dan Sullivan is doing a great job.

  4. Senator Sullivan you are doing a excellent job for Alaska and the United States. Thank You for your
    Honorable Commitment to our Military and Veterans and Defense of our Country.

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