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If it wasn’t Mayor Berkowitz, who was Alaska politician who likes kiddie porn?

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For a moment last weekend, it seemed possible that Mayor Ethan Berkowitz had been trafficking in child porn of some sort.

At least that was the bizarre claim being made by television news anchor Maria Athens, in a Facebook promotion on Friday that never materialized to anything other than a separate scandal: The mayor of Anchorage admitted he had had a torrid sexual “messaging” relationship with Athens and resigned from office. Athens posted a naked photo of the mayor on Facebook; she also was arrested for assault of her fiancé, and spent last weekend in jail.

But the original allegations of kiddie porn sat there to be sorted out by reporters, who interviewed witnesses and determined that a young lady, who has worked as an escort, had mentioned something to her mother about a “short” politician involved with a kiddie porn website. By now, we know the young lady never said it was Berkowitz. She emphatically says it is not.

But it was, apparently, another short politico in Anchorage. A state worker? A lobbyist? An elected official? We don’t know and the media has left that trail unexplored whilst trying to find ways to slut-shame the anchor and make her entire existence not credible.

Athens sticks by her story, but has had the equivalent of a nervous breakdown and is now sequestered in Interior Alaska in a safe place. The mother of the young escort says she misunderstood her daughter when she relayed that information to Athens. It was all a big mistake.

If the young escort is to be believed, Alaskans should expect that the FBI is following up with her, interviewing her about who this guy is, this short politico who likes to engaged in kiddie porn. It’s evident, considering her age, that she may have been trafficked herself as a teen, and that would be of great interest to the FBI.

Must Read Alaska has, in fact, learned that the FBI has not dropped the case and is pursuing leads. Anchorage Police, which quickly closed the case publicly and said there was no crime evident by the soon-to-be-ex-mayor, is working with the feds to determine who this political pervert actually is who is dabbling in felony behavior.

Alaska has some of the worst levels of child sexual abuse in the country. More than 9% of Alaska high school students have experienced sexual violence, according to the State of Alaska Child Abuse Investigation Units in the Department of Public Safety.

According to the National Human Trafficking Hotline, Alaska has had 15 known cases of human trafficking this year and 51 contacts with the hotline.

Merrill Sanford: Senator Sullivan is a leader and is getting my vote

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By MERRILL SANFORD

After growing up in Juneau and having the honor of serving as mayor, I’ve had an opportunity to work with many elected officials and community leaders. 

As a former Marine, I know leadership when I see it. And when someone isn’t a leader, it’s obvious.  

The current campaign for Alaska’s U.S. Senate seat is a good example.  

Dan Sullivan won this seat six years ago when he beat the, incumbent Mark Begich. He is now running for reelection. 

During his first term in office, he was responsible for getting bi-partisan legislation passed that is important to Alaskans.  

His opponent, Alan Gross, has never run for office and has no record of leadership or service in our local community. According to Gross, he earned as much as $2.5 million a year as an orthopedic surgeon in Juneau but, seven years after he quit his practice, he says he wants to reform the system that allowed him to do that.

Gross is heavily funded by Outside groups that want to elect candidates who are in favor of socializing our health care and ramming through the Green New Deal. He has aired endless false attack adds against Senator Sullivan.  

Alan Gross’s negative campaign reflects poorly on him and sounds desperate.  

Sen. Sullivan has an outstanding record of military and national security service. He is currently an infantry officer and colonel in the United States Marine Corp Reserves. Over the past 25 years, Colonel Sullivan has served in many command and staff positions on active duty and in the reserves.  He is the only member of the U. S. Senate still serving in the military.  

Sullivan has taken the lead on rebuilding our county’s military, promoting responsible resource development in Alaska, opening up markets for Alaskan fishermen, cleaning up our oceans, expanding benefits for our veterans, and taking action to protect survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence.  

It was Sen. Sullivan’s leadership that lead to the passage of two bills he sponsored that addressed two issues that should concern all Alaskans – the Power Act, which provides legal help for survivors of sexual assault, as well as the Save Our Seas Act, which addresses our oceans debris and plastics crisis.   

Alan Gross says we need to send a doctor to Washington to fix what he thinks are our country’s failures.  

No we don’t.  What we need is someone who has fought for all Alaska and will continue to fight for us in the future.  

What we need is a Marine. What we need is to continue the leadership of Sen. Dan Sullivan.

Semper Fi!

Merrill Sanford is the former mayor of Juneau.

Campbell: Good luck, Acting Mayor Quinn-Davidson

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By CRAIG CAMPBELL

The speed at which politics has been spinning these past eight months is enough to make one dizzy to the point of vomiting.

Now, I don’t want to beat the dead horse that Ethan Berkowitz lied to us when he denied any involvement with Maria Athens, or that his leadership of our city these past five years has crippled our economy, denied us liberties under the law, caused crime to increase, and let vagrancy run rampant and more than double in population. 

Nope, that’s not what this column is about.  I’m just glad Berkowitz will finally be gone.

The problem is, the problem hasn’t been fixed.  In fact, it just got worse.  Last Friday the Assembly cabal did a bait-and-switch and replaced Felix Rivera with Austin Quinn-Davison as chair.  

By law, that means on Oct. 23 at 6 pm, Quinn-Davidson will become Anchorage’s acting mayor.  That’s just what we need — another California-educated liberal lawyer as mayor.

Quinn-Davidson has been a staunch supporter of the Assembly’s leftist agenda since joining the cabal just two years ago. She fit in nicely with the other seven liberals who were pushing the transformation of Anchorage into a Leftist autocracy.  So why would the cabal elect her chair after Berkowitz resigned in disgrace?   

Let me explain. Felix Rivera was elected to fill the Seat G position in Midtown in 2017.  Early on, Felix proved to be a liberal extremist.  He sponsored or supported numerous progressive ordinances and resolutions. He made political allies of the other cabal lefties and was elected chair last year.  

However, Felix is not a good leader.  

Under his chairmanship, the Assembly meetings became a circus.  There has been no control of the public process. Who can forget his allowing clowns to lie down in front of the dais and do push-ups, sip drinks, and generally disrupt public testimony?  This was an unbelievable lack of control by a totally unqualified chair.

How about his posting on the Young Democrats Facebook, job offers for Assembly work and specifically posting “please don’t share this publicly.”  That’s not a person who supports government transparency.

His fear of the public resulted in unilaterally closing Assembly meetings to the public under the guise of the “Berkowitz Emergency Order,” in direct violation of the Alaska Open Meetings Act.  

So Felix didn’t want to be acting mayor.  His inability to lead is an embarrassment he wanted to avoid.  But as vice chair, he is now back as cabal chair.  That was not a bad move for an incompetent politician.

Then why not appoint Forrest Dunbar as cabal chair?  He previously served as chair for eight months in 2018.  He is currently running for the Anchorage mayor’s seat and by appointing him chair, he would have become our acting mayor. Why not Forrest?

That’s an easy one to figure out.  Forrest is a wacko liberal with a terrible track record.  So to protect Forrest from having the spotlight shine on what will be his leadership priorities as mayor, they want to mask his record.  Protect him from being judged on his actions while serving as acting mayor, to make sure the voters do not see the real lefty he will be if elected mayor in April.  

Forrest Dunbar would be a disaster as acting mayor, basically killing his chances of getting elected to that position next April.

He supported improperly using CARES Act funds to acquire property for the homeless, regardless that the public voiced fierce opposition.  

He tried to enact legislation to mandate hiring practices on the private sector hotel industry. 

He publically threated to move homeless shelters to Eagle River in a personal rant against Eagle River Assembly member Jamie Allard. 

He supports political activism to micromanage local law enforcement. 

He supports extreme COVID restrictive mandates responsible for crippling our local economy. 

But his biggest problem, and the shining example of his being a political whore (sorry if I’m offending any prostitutes) is when he swore under oath, to “support and defend” the United States Constitution, a document the he now publicly claims is fundamentally racist to its core.

Here’s his quote: “What becomes inescapable when you read it (the Constitution) is how shot through every portion of our constitutional law is with race when it comes to the three-fifths compromise, the way the Senate was apportioned in Congress, the Electoral College.”  He concludes by stating “All of it. All of it was tied to race.”  

As a former Alaska National Guard Adjutant General, I’ve got real problems with an actively serving Alaska Guardsman, who is one fo the staff judge advocates who wrote the state Uniform Code of Military Justice, failing to grasp the basic precepts of the United States Constitution by claiming it’s all about race.  

Really?  What race-baiting. If he believes that, then he is directly complicit with enforcing a racists government’s actions under oaths he took as a member of the military, while trying to have us believe he is against racism.  What a hypocritical, two-faced, dishonest lefty.

For the record, the United States Constitution was not written from a racist’s perspective.  Rather it provided the foundation that allowed our nation to grow and change to free blacks from slavery and provide equality to everyone regardless of gender, color, religious believes, or wealth.  

It is the finest government document every written that establishes the foundation for a true democratic republic.  But that’s what freaks out socialists like Forrest Dunbar.

So to protect Forrest from being unmasked as the despot he really is and protect the left’s plan to win the mayor’s seat next April, he was not an option.  He can’t let the voters see who he really is. He hopes he’ll become mayor if we only believe his campaign propaganda.  

That’s why they elected Austin Quinn-Davison as chair to become the puppet mayor to the cabal and protect their liberal alliance. With little experience, she would play the perfect part. 

Good luck. Acting Mayor Quinn-Davison. But you will need more than luck to fix the crippled Anchorage economy, stop the rampant growth of unsheltered vagrants, reopen closed businesses, defend the public’s right to assemble, reduce the rising crime of the past five years, rebuild trust between local government and the public, and honestly represent all the residents of Anchorage.  

These are problems all created or exacerbated by your predecessor, Ethan Berkowitz.    

Craig E. Campbell served on the Anchorage Assembly between 1986 and 1995 and later as Alaska’s Tenth Lieutenant Governor.  He was the previous Chief Executive Officer and President for Alaska Aerospace Corporation.  He retired from the Alaska National Guard as Lieutenant General (AKNG) and holds the concurrent retired Federal rank of Major General (USAF).

Early voting starts Monday

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The early voting period in Alaska begins Monday, Oct. 19, and ends at the close of business Nov. 2 (times vary depending on location). Although Monday is Alaska Day and a State worker holiday, election offices will be open for absentee and early voters.

Find an early voting location at this link.

You will need to show ID to vote. That can be voter ID card; driver’s license; state ID card; military ID card; passport; hunting or fishing license; or other current or valid photo ID. You may also use a current utility bill, bank statement, paycheck, government check or other government-issued document as proof. If you do not have ID, you may vote a “questioned ballot.”

You may also vote a mail-in ballot. Fill out an online application to request your mail-in ballot. You can also request a ballot online or by email.

Fill out the application completely. You should request your ballot as far in advance of the election as possible. The deadline to request a ballot by mail is (must be received by) Saturday, Oct. 24.

Your mail-in ballot must be postmarked by Tuesday, Nov. 3 and received no later than Friday, Nov. 13. You can find ballot tracking information here.

Alaska has an option to transmit absentee ballot applications electronically in 2020. You can request an absentee ballot application by electronic transmission until Monday, Nov. 2. For more information, see http://www.elections.alaska.gov/Core/votingbyonline.php

Alan Gross skips out on debate on resource jobs, economy

DON YOUNG AND ALYSE GALVIN SHOW UP, SPAR

Al Gross, the candidate trying to bump off Sen. Dan Sullivan, couldn’t make the economy-jobs debate on Thursday. He was busy.

Scheduled a month in advance, the debate was sponsored by the major private job creators of the Alaska economy: Alaska Forest Association, Alaska Chamber, Alaska Miners Association, Alaska Oil & Gas Association, Alaska Support Industry Alliance, Alaska Trucking Association, Associated General Contractors of Alaska, At-Sea Processors Association, Council of Alaska Producers, Cruise Lines International Association Alaska, Pacific Seafood Processors Association and the Resource Development Council for Alaska.

While it was surprising that such a large group of job creators would get the cold shoulder from Gross, he is one of the signatories to the Ballot Measure 1 tax hike on oil flowing through the Trans Alaska Pipeline. It was not going to be a receptive audience. The debate was broadcast on the internet via Zoom.

The debate circuit has been hard for Gross so far. Last week at the Kodiak “fish debate,” the gentleman fisherman stumbled badly when he criticized the United Fishermen of Alaska, calling them a group that represents Outside interests.

That prompted the UFA to send out an immediate notice correcting the record, batting down Gross for bad-mouthing the group that represents 39 separate commercial fishing groups, only 7 of which are based in Seattle.

“UFA is not a corporate Seattle-based interest group. We are Alaskan fishermen supporting Senator Dan Sullivan for US Senate,” the group wrote on Facebook in response to Gross’ comments. Gross has done commercial fishing in the past, but UFA supports his opponent.

Because Gross didn’t show up at the debate, the resource and jobs groups gave Sullivan 10 minutes to talk about his record of support for Alaska jobs, economy, including the opening of ANWR. After that, the debate became a congressional debate between Congressman Don Young and Alyse Galvin.

The next debate between Sullivan and Gross will be on KSRM, Soldotna radio on Oct. 21, from noon to 1. On Friday, Oct. 23, the two will be at the KTUU/APRN debate.

Check out the debate between Young and Galvin:

The fix was in for incoming Anchorage acting mayor Austin Quinn-Davidson

Was there a pre-meeting before Anchorage’s Assembly meeting on Friday night to determine who would be the acting mayor of Anchorage?

It appears that way. At least there were conversations between those dominating the liberal Assembly. They were conversations that were evident to many in the audience during the meeting that was to swap out Quinn-Davidson for Assembly Chairman Felix Rivera. Both are far-left radicals on the Anchorage Assembly.

Rivera was placed in the second slot — vice chair — and when Mayor Ethan Berkowitz’ resignation takes place on Oct. 23 at 6 pm, Quinn-Davidson will become mayor and Rivera will once again take the gavel in the Assembly as chair. A win-win for the Left.

The chamber was empty at 4:30 pm, but soon filled up with supporters of Austin Quinn-Davidson. Regular attendees found it hard to get into the meeting with all the newcomers who mysteriously arrived. Rep. Zack Fields showed up and sat right next to the microphone, so he could be first to testify. AFL-CIO boss Vince Beltrami showed up. The room was full of people unknown to these meetings.

There was no public testimony at the beginning of the meeting, but this was a “special meeting” called by Rivera, and he didn’t go by the usual agenda. It soon became apparent that the fix was in, and that John Weddleton, the moderate on the Assembly, would not have the votes. Quinn-Davidson had them before the meeting even started.

As soon as public testimony began, Rep. Fields was ready, and was first to the mic. He whipped out his phone to read from its screen his pre-prepared congratulatory speech to the new soon-to-be-acting mayor Quinn-Davidson. Boss Beltrami did the same — reading his already prepared remarks to praise the choice of Quinn-Davidson. They both knew before the meeting where the votes were.

The vote had taken place in secret, out of the eye of the public.

Activist Bernadette Wilson was having none of that, and when it finally came to her time at the mic, called the Assembly members “cowards” for voting in secret. She also noted that Rep. Fields’ had his comments already prepared.

“Ladies and gentleman, THAT’S Astro-Turf,” she said, referring to a remark Mayor Ethan Berkowitz had made recently calling protesters of his policies “Astro-Turf,” which means fake grassroots activity. Fields is heavily involved with union activities in his day job, when not working as a legislator.

Thus, the Anchorage Assembly’s far left continues to rule over Anchorage. Quinn-Davidson will become the first openly gay mayor of Anchorage on Oct. 23, but will be able to return to her Assembly seat after a new mayor is seated.

During the meeting, activist Dustin Darden sat with a box over his head. Some yelled. Quinn-Davidson warned they would be thrown out, and one man was. She had to take a break to restore order.

Many in the audience who testified after the vote were angry, and others who were not allowed into the chambers but remained outside also expressed anger.

Alaskans can send principled policy champions to Juneau

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Alaskans have an unbreakable spirit. A global pandemic may have changed our daily lives, but it has not, and cannot break Alaskans’ indomitable spirit. We’ve faced challenges before. We’ll face more in the future.  

To help us weather these challenges, we need leaders in Juneau who will fight for policies that will put our economy on track, ensure quality and affordable health care for everyone, and get Alaskans safely back to work. We need to elect leaders who will stand on principle — even when those principles are politically inconvenient — and make it possible for us to get back on our feet. 

That’s why Americans for Prosperity Action Alaska is endorsing Lance Pruitt, Sarah Vance, James Kaufman, and Kevin McKinley this election. These individuals earned the support of AFP Action Alaska for their principled dedication to tackling Alaska’s toughest challenge. They have demonstrated their dedication to supporting a constitutional spending cap that will get government spending under control and get our economy on track.

These candidates have shown they’ll fight to make sure Alaskans have every opportunity to live their American dream in The Last Frontier. 

Lance Pruitt, District 27

Lance Pruitt understands that if hardworking Alaskans have to live within their means, so should the government. He supports a meaningful spending cap that would get Alaska’s economy back on track.

Sarah Vance, District 31

Sarah Vance is a champion for fiscal restraint and will work to make sure the legislature passes a meaningful constitutional spending cap. Additionally, she has a track record of working to make sure every child in Alaska has access to the education that fits their unique needs.

James Kaufman, District 28

James Kaufman supports a meaningful spending cap to ensure Alaska has a strong fiscal future. He is a champion for regulatory reforms that will spur economic growth and enable more Alaskans to find fulfilling work. 

Kevin McKinley, District 5 

As a business owner, Kevin McKinley understands our government must exercise fiscal restraint to ensure a bright fiscal future for our state. He will fight for regulatory reforms that will help more Alaskans find fulfilling work, enable our businesses to thrive, and bring back our jobs.

This is a pivotal election for our nation – but especially for Alaska. The COVID-19 pandemic and economic shut down has radically changed our daily lives and brought into sharp focus the need for principled leaders who are fixing the issues that matter most.

We encourage Alaskans to vote for these principled policy champions. A vote for these candidates is a vote for a prosperous Alaska where everyone has the opportunity to thrive. 

Paid for by Americans for Prosperity Action – Alaska, 431 W 7th Ave., Anchorage, AK 99501. Ryan McKee, Chair, approves this message. The top contributors are AFP Action, Arlington, Virginia, Trina Johnson of Anchorage, AK and Dan Kennedy of Wasilla, AK. This NOTICE TO VOTERS is required by Alaska law. I certify that this communication is not authorized, paid for, or approved by the candidate. AS 15.13.135.

Judge rules governor has no authority to veto Alaska Court System’s budget

COURT IS SUPREME IN APPROPRIATIONS, SUPREME IN VETOES

In a decision that critics say guts democracy, Anchorage Superior Court Judge Jennifer Henderson ruled Friday that a veto by Gov. Mike Dunleavy of a small part of the court system’s budget was unconstitutional.

Dunleavy had vetoed $334,700 from the court system in 2019 and again in 2020. He said in his veto explanation that it was equal to the amount that the courts have forced the State of Alaska to pay in Medicaid abortions.

In her decision, the judge noted that after the veto, the Legislature convened in special session but failed to override the veto. Her decision effectively, if it stands, overrides both the governor and the Legislature on money coming to her department.

The American Civil Liberties Union filed the lawsuit on behalf of Bonnie Jack, a political activist from Anchorage.

Henderson, who is up for retention this Nov. 3, addressed the separation of powers issue, but oddly quoted the late Justice Antonin Scalia when he wrote that the separations issue is a “structural safeguard rather than a remedy.” Scalia had been writing on a completely unrelated matter involving past court decisions and whether they should be reopened.

Henderson said the court “that the undisputed facts demonstrate that the governor’s exercise of his veto power to reduce the appellate courts’ budget in fiscal years 2020 and 2021 expressly undermines the Alaska Constitution’s commission of judicial powers to the judiciary, as well as the structural independence of the judiciary, and thus violates the doctrine of separation of powers embodied in the Alaska Constitution.”

Henderson’s interpretation of the law is that the governor can only veto the court system’s budget if Henderson approves of the reason.

There is no limitation on the constitutional authority of the governor’s vetoes in the Alaska Constitution, Article II, Section 15: “The governor may veto bills passed by the Legislature. He may, by veto, strike or reduce items in appropriation bills. He shall return any vetoed bill with a statement of his objection to the house of origin.”

Additionally, Article II Section 16, Action Upon Veto states “Bills to raise revenue and appropriation bills or items, although vetoed, become law via affirmative vote of three fourths of the membership of the Legislature.”

The Alaska constitution specifically discusses how the executive handles vetoes and how the legislature handles vetoes, and the Constitution makes no mention of judicial review or authority over appropriation bills or vetoed items.

Henderson on Friday opened the door for the judiciary to set its own budget and approve its own budget because appropriation power of the Legislature is no more protected than the veto power of the governor.

By her logic, failure to adopt the exact budget request of the Alaska Court System, or even increase taxes to pay for the desires of the Judiciary’s budget, would constitute an unconstitutional effort to influence the Judiciary.

Earlier this year, Henderson interfered in the elections by ordering the Division of Elections to stop printing ballots because candidate Alyse Galvin wanted to be identified in her own way on the ballot, rather than as the Democratic Party’s nominee for U.S. House of Representatives.

Henderson was appointed by Gov. Bill Walker in 2017 and faces her first retention vote.

Murkowski hasn’t decided on Amy Coney Barrett for court

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In spite of some media reports, Sen. Lisa Murkowski has not decided for or against the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett for the U.S. Supreme Court.

At least one news organization in Massachusetts has said otherwise, but a spokesperson for Murkowski said Alaska’s senior senator has not even had a chance to meet with Barrett.

She has said she will meet her soon, and out of respect will not be commenting until at least after that meeting. The date for the meeting has not been confirmed, the MRAK source said.

Today was the final day of the Senate Judiciary interview of Barrett, and a vote is expected on the floor of the Senate later this month.