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Dave Bronson is opposite of Mayor Ethan Berkowitz

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By DAN FAGAN

The latest guy to run for mayor in Anchorage is a conservative’s conservative. Dave Bronson is a former U.S. Air Force pilot and recently retired commercial airline captain. He’s a small government, staunchly pro-life, family values advocate. He’s a devout man of faith and a long-time member of the Anchorage Baptist Temple. Bronson is the type of candidate who the legacy media despises. 

How conservative is Bronson? Bronson is the complete opposite, politically, from the current leftist mayor, Ethan Berkowitz. 

Think Ted Cruz conservative.

Several Republicans have tried to convince me that Bronson is too conservative to run for mayor of a city that has turned decidedly blue in recent elections. The current assembly Bronson would have to deal with, if elected in early 2021, is dominated by hard-core leftists.

Think Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Bernie Sanders type radicals.

Bronson’s detractors say while he would motivate the conservative base to show up and vote and possibly end up in a runoff with a leftist opponent, he’d stand little chance of beating such a candidate heads up. 

“I believe we are still a center-right city,” claims Bronson. “I think that there’s a sleeping giant out there. We call it the silent majority. I think they are going to turn out to vote in November and I think they will turn out to vote, I hope, that first Tuesday in April.”  

There’s no denying conservatives running for mayor in Anchorage have had a tough go of it lately. In 2018, Berkowitz defeated conservative challenger Rebecca Logan soundly with 55.4% of the vote allowing him to avoid a runoff. 

Berkowitz easily won his first term in 2015 when he trounced Bronson-like conservative Amy Demboski. In a runoff, Berkowitz captured a convincing 60.7% of the vote.

But just three years prior to Berkowitz first winning, the city had as mayor one of the most conservative politicians in state history, Dan Sullivan. Sullivan soundly beat two leftist opponents, Paul Honeman, in 2012, and Eric Croft in 2009. 

In the past 11-and-a-half-years, Anchorage has gone from a consistent, solid, reliable conservative as mayor to one of the most left-leaning politicians to ever hold office in the state. 

And Berkowitz has been able to push through whatever he wants regardless of how crazy, radical, costly, or extreme. The current mayor has enjoyed the pleasure of ruling with an iron fist thanks to a left-leaning dominated Assembly that’s been nothing more than a rubber stamp for him.  

Berkowitz is not Anchorage’s first Democrat mayor. Mark Begich and Tony Knowles also held the job. But Begich and Knowles are not wacky crazy socialist revolutionaries like Berkowitz. In five and a half short years under Berkowitz, the city has become barely recognizable. That same drastic decay, increased lawlessness, and deterioration didn’t happen under Knowles or Begich. 

Anchorage voters have gone and elected themselves their very own Bill De Blasio. Which one of the two mayors has been a bigger failure? Hard to say. 

Berkowitz’s dismal record as mayor is the main reason my Republican friends trying to convince me Bronson can’t win because he’s too conservative are wrong. 

We saw what happened Tuesday when voters rejected many Republican-in-name-only incumbent legislators. Some argue this was retaliation since these legislators refused to cut the budget and instead raided the Permanent Fund Earnings Reserve Account, causing shrinkage of the dividend check. Maybe. 

But there’s another dynamic at play. Conservatives are now awake. Berkowitz and this radical Assembly taught us how quickly Anchorage can become as lawless and dysfunctional as Portland, Seattle, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. All it takes is a couple of terms. 

This will play well for Bronson. But he must be clear, direct, bold, and merciless in exposing the damage leftist leaders have done to Anchorage in such a short period. If a conservative candidate is to retake City Hall, he or she will have to follow the lead of President Donald Trump. This is no time for being delicate or niceties.

Based on how Bronson described the current Assembly on my show Wednesday, that won’t be a problem. 

“These people are a bunch of crazies. There’s no other way to put it,” said Bronson. “This city has gone stark raving mad.”  

Another big advantage for Bronson is the endorsement he received from conservative superhero and Eagle River Assemblymember Jamie Allard. Allard got emotional and choked up when she introduced Bronson as he announced in front of Assembly chambers on Tuesday his candidacy.  

Bronson is an unapologetic conservative and a bold one at that. If he does make it into a runoff with a leftist candidate, the Anchorage Daily News won’t give him a fair shake. In the newspaper’s view, he’s the worst of all types of candidates: Pro-life and pro-free market. 

The legacy media played a huge role in helping Berkowitz defeat his two conservative challengers in the past two mayoral campaigns. But the media landscape has changed since then. The ADN resembles a restaurant takeout menu more than a newspaper and their subscribers are likely made up of like-minded leftists. The paper’s long tradition and power to swing elections for liberals is not what it used to be. 

Berkowitz messed up Anchorage so badly, he may have singlehandedly turned the city from blue, back to red. Berkowitz has set the table nicely for a genuine conservative like Bronson to come in and save the day. 

Dan Fagan hosts a radio show weekday mornings between 5:30 and 8 am on Newsradio 650 KENI.  

Our only solution: Decentralize Anchorage

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By MICHAEL TAVOLIERO

“The era of big government is over. But we cannot go back to the time when our citizens were left to fend for themselves. Instead, we must go forward as one America, one nation working together to meet the challenges we face together. Self-reliance and teamwork are not opposing virtues; we must have both.”  President William Jefferson Clinton, January 23, 1996 State of the Union Address.

In reading these sentences I’m captured by their irony and contradiction.  Almost a quarter of a century later, do you see as I do these virtues of self-reliance and teamwork replaced by the failings of entitlement and division?

Right now, one look at our current local political circus can provide an answer to this question.

Our Alaska Constitution established all political power is inherent in the people, not the ever-increasing size of the political state and the immeasurable costs to our citizens.

Eaglexit seeks to renew these virtues by establishing the Alaska constitutional vision of local government decentralization.

Our 1955 Alaska Constitutional Convention stated that “states have the constitutional responsibility for the future development of local government. This responsibility has two important aspects. One is to create local units of government that are efficient units for providing governmental services. The second is to maintain a system of local government that achieves the traditional American goal of extensive citizen participation in the affairs of government.”

What does that mean?  

As one of our local Assembly members pointed out, our communities would be a better sister city to Anchorage than being under dominion to it.  

Local government decentralization is a long phrase which means a large local government cut into more bite size manageable pieces for its community members.  

It doesn’t mean higher taxes, more regulations, incompetent education systems, ineffective and non-responsive representation, and petty bureaucracies. It also doesn’t more costly, and intrusive local government.  

Too often, the apprehension of far-reaching implications of decentralization focus on ideas which may be irrelevant to the outcome.  

The Eaglexit outcome is “the traditional American goal of extensive citizen participation in the affairs of government” or more commonly known as “Liberty”.

Local government decentralization is our state’s and our nation’s last defense against postmodern neo-Marxism and its excesses in social justice, virtue signaling, and identity politics. This is actively depriving our progeny, our children, our future, of the single benefit of our traditional American goal, individual lifestyle.  

When public policy in jurisdictions of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of citizens are regulated through the actions of a small collective hegemony, local policy makers, a city or county or borough assembly, which is controlled by politically non-regulated public sector unions, education and healthcare organizations, the results are obvious, ambient and ubiquitously anti-American.

Control and power are centralized, and prosperity and wealth are redistributed.

The question is do you want to return to the traditional American goal?  

Or are you constantly finding yourself insulted because of your beliefs, ridiculed for your actions in support of your beliefs, then as an effort to take action, organize and community activate for a single issue effort only to be denied or patronized by these policy makers and other authorities?

Even worse, if push comes to shove and you end up in court having spent tens of thousands of dollars only to find your issue lost to judicial activism. This is new case law. The consequence of this effectively makes your issue illegal as a matter of law.

We’ve seen it time and time again in Alaska.  Some of us are at the point where we’ve hit our heads so repetitiously against the wall, we’ve stopped because the pain has been too much.

The problem with the “Golden Rule” is they, who have the gold, rule.  As long as these institutions have control over public policy, public money and public property, our efforts to fight effectively will be scoffed and defeated.

Local government decentralization is an exercise in timing, method, and opportunity. Local government decentralization aims to give citizens and their elected representatives more power in public decision making.  

UAA Professor Forrest Nabors stated in his article in Must Read Alaska, “Our American system rests upon the cornerstone of self-government and the belief that if you give people authority and responsibility, they will do a better job of governing themselves.”  

He rightly observes when given decentralized authority, greater independence and self-government, people will do a better job of governing themselves than distant bureaucrats.

Professor Nabors goes on, “When delegates to our federal and state conventions drafted their constitutions, they confronted a practical problem. They knew that many communities might not be ready for self-government at that moment. But they foresaw that those communities would grow and mature, and that they ought to be able to cast off outside rule.” 

Assembly District 2 is ready “to cast off outside rule” and incorporate its own self-government.

Eaglexit will:

  • Provide improved local involvement and control of land-use. 
  • Maintain and operate a smaller and more accountable school district.
  • Allow for a locally controlled public safety sector.
  • Protect community tax base through a smaller taxing district and greater local community involvement in tax decisions.
  • Limit government to local constituency enabling home-grown representation of the people and creating collaboration between citizens and elected officials.
  • Mitigate over-zoning, excessive fees, high density housing, parking, traffic, and unnecessary services.
  • Simplify the permitting process.
  • Produce an effective and responsive small municipal government.

Visit the website at www.eaglexit.com.  

Hockey community mobilizes to protest Berkowitz takeover of rinks

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(Editor’s note: The location of this protest has been changed to the Loussac Library)

The hockey community in Anchorage is planning a protest at City Hall the Loussac Library on Wednesday from 4-7 pm to express its displeasure with the apparent permanent takeover by Mayor Ethan Berkowitz of the Ben Boeke Ice Arena to house homeless.

The Ben Boeke Arena is not actually being used to house homeless, as it has been vacated since midsummer after being designated as a homeless shelter by Mayor Ethan Berkowitz back in March. It’s vacated because it was apparently not needed.

But the city is not turning it over and the ice has not been replaced, which it normally is by Aug. 1. It’s just empty.

The hockey community has received threats from Anchorage Assembly members that if it doesn’t actively support the mayor’s plan for purchasing “homeless hotels” then the ice rinks won’t be returned to recreational purposes.

Figure skaters and tryouts usually take place in early August. The users pay $350 an hour to use the facility, per team. The teams and figure skaters are now over at Dempsey Anderson, where the ice is booked solid.

The youth participation in ice sports in Anchorage is in the thousands, and “losing two more sheets of ice for an entire year will have a severe impact on participation that we feel the effects of for several years,” wrote Kirk Kullberg of USA Hockey, State of Alaska, which has over 750 youth participants, plus adult leagues.

For some families the only constant leadership in their lives is their coach, Kullberg said. The athletes in the programs are growing in citizenship as well as in hockey. With students shut out of schools and other activities, access to recreation facilities is especially important, he said.

“I have lost faith in the support from our elected officials to make any decision that supports the hockey and figure skating communities,” he wrote. “I cannot say enough about how the players positively affect the community while they are student athletes and after they have graduated. We need to show our support for maintaining the program that gives our young athletes something to aspire to.  I would ask that you all show your support and join us in protesting the use of our rinks for anything other than hockey or other ice skating activities and to maintain the UAA Hockey Program.”

Hundreds gather to protest Anchorage Assembly

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By SCOTT LEVESQUE

Hundreds gathered outside the Loussac Library on Tuesday afternoon to protest two proposed ordinances: AO 2020-65, prohibiting “conversion therapy” for youth in Anchorage; and AO 2020-80, an attempt to limit police use of force.

Protesters began to converge on the library around 4 pm, armed with clipboards, signs, and recording equipment. A staging area near the flag poles, in front of the library, was assembled as Bruce Springsteen’s Born in the USA filled the air.

As rain continued to fall, some protesters gathered under a tent to sign a petition requesting public access to the Assembly Chambers, which have been locked to the public all month.

Assembly member Jamie Allard made a point to attend tonight’s rally before the Assembly meeting.

Chants of “Jamie! Jamie! Jamie!” echoed as Allard made her way toward the crowd. Allard engaged the group, greeted those in attendance, and listened intently as many voiced concerns over the night’s Assembly agenda.

Allard had another reason for her appearance tonight: Introducing Dave Bronson, who declared his candidacy for mayor of Anchorage in front of the rain-soaked crowd.

The announcement received thunderous applause as many group members revealed signs promoting Bronson’s campaign.

In his address, Bronson promised, if elected mayor, to keep the Assembly Chambers, businesses, and churches open. While cheers echoed through the crowd, some could hear jeers coming from behind the group.

Black Lives Matter had arrived to counter-protest. Men and women dressed in black, wearing masks and waving red flags, began congregating around the William H. Seward statue. Many held handwritten signs stating, “Defund the Police” and “Abolish the Police.”

With tensions running high, both sides remained relatively civil and peaceful. Both groups engaged in heated discussions, various side conversations, and bouts of chanting throughout the evening.

As public testimony continues for AO 2020-65, it’s unclear whether the Assembly will listen to their constituents or decide their political agenda supersedes the people’s will. 

Protests against the Assembly have taken place routinely over recent weeks, as the Assembly meets behind closed doors and is making major policy decisions regarding expenditures of COVID-19 relief funds, and now the prohibition on some forms of counseling inside the city limits.

The Assembly meeting went late into the night and was scheduled to continue on Wednesday evening.

Trump fundraiser in Fairbanks brings in $50,000 for president’s campaign

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A fundraiser for the reelection of President Donald J. Trump brought in more than $50,000 for the cause at a private home along the Chena River in Fairbanks on Tuesday. It was one of the biggest political fundraisers in Alaska this year.

About 32 people gathered after hours at the home of Cynthia and Ken Henry. The keynote speaker was Gov. Mike Dunleavy. Kelly Tshibaka, who is the commissioner of Administration, also spoke, as did Mitch Ferrari, the state director for Alaska for the ‎Republican National Committee.

Donald Trump Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle appeared in a 10-minute video message focused on Alaska issues.

Dave Bronson announces candidacy for mayor of Anchorage to ‘turn this city around’

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Longtime Anchorage resident Dave Bronson declared his candidacy for mayor of Anchorage today. He made the announcement in the rain outside the Assembly Chambers at the Loussac Library in Midtown, where a crowd had gathered to protest illegal meetings of the Assembly and to support police officers.

Bronson was introduced to the crowd by Assembly member Jamie Allard, who endorsed him and called him a “true leader.”

“He will be vocal, fierce and strong; we the people will be his backbone and in turn he will defend the voice of the people, support the people and fight for the people. He will make decisions to better help the people and turn this city around,” Allard said.

“I have a lot of pride in this guy and I’m so glad he stepped up,” Allard said. “As an assembly woman I can tell you that there is no one that will be a stronger ally for us in the Mayor’s office than Dave Bronson.”

Bronson said he has been attending numerous rallies and assembly meetings, and has testified at on several occasions. He has seen firsthand people’s frustration and desire to take the city in a new direction. 

“As your Mayor, I will never lock the doors to your assembly. I will never lock the doors to your business. And I will never lock the doors to your church. When federal relief money is given for COVID, that money should be used for COVID relief,” he said.

“As hard as this Mayor has worked to buy these buildings in Midtown, I would twice as hard to sell them,” Bronson said.

Bronson was joined by key supporters who have also given their endorsement, including former Lt. Govs. Craig Campbell and and Loren Leman.

‘Anchorage is facing an economic crisis caused by failed leadership. I am endorsing Dave Bronson to be our next Mayor. He has the vision to return Anchorage back to a vibrant, economically strong community by handling the homeless issue, streamlining government, and supporting law enforcement to ensure we have a safe and prosperous city,” said Campbell, who is the senior campaign adviser.

Born June 26, 1958 in Superior, Wisconsin, Dave earned his Bachelor of Science Degree in Agricultural Economics from the University of Wisconsin.

After graduation, he was an Active Duty Air Force Pilot from 1981 to 1990, USAF Reserves Plans Officer from 1992 to 1993, and an Alaska Air National Guard maintenance officer and pilot from 1993 to 2005, and has had a commercial airline pilot career since 1990.

While flying military aircraft, he met and married Debra. They have been married for 35 years and have raised two children, Katie and Zach.

Knopp had unacceptable vision, was denied medical clearance for piloting

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Rep. Gary Knopp, who died in a midair collision on July 31 some 2.5 miles from the Soldotna Airport, had been denied medical certification eight years earlier in June 2012 by the Alaska Regional Flight Surgeon due to unacceptable vision issues. The denial was appealed and sustained in July 2012. 

Why the late lawmaker’s vision was not corrected with glasses is not known, but certainly will be a line of investigation for the National Transportation Safety Board, which is trying to piece together the events that led to the crash.

Not having a medical certification could have something or nothing to do with the accident, but it’s like driving a car without a valid license.

The midair collision led to the death of seven people, including Knopp, who was piloting his own Piper PA-12, which struck a de Havilland DHC-2 (Beaver) airplane, with six souls aboard.

The DHC-2 was operated as an on-demand charter flight. The PA-12 was operated as personal aircraft.

According to the NTSB report, the float-equipped DHC-2, operated by High Adventure Charter, departed Longmere Lake in Soldotna, bound for a remote lake on the west side of Cook Inlet. The purpose of the flight was to transport the passengers to a remote fishing location.

Knopp’s plane departed Soldotna Airport, bound for Fairbanks. Knopp was flying in an “experimental airplane,” as rated by the FAA and was not subject to stringent FAA standards.

Knopp’s plane’s N number was not valid, however. The word “EXPIEREMENTAL” was applied to the inside of the lower clam shell door, an FAA requirement so passengers on such planes know that they are experimental.

A search of the FAA registration database revealed that the registration number had been reserved by Knopp but was not a valid registration. His registration number on the aircraft was for twin engine aircraft, but the PA-12 he was flying was a single engine.

The entire report is at this link.

Lawsuit over locked meetings? Allard plans to sue Anchorage Assembly

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By DAN FAGAN

Assembly member Jamie Allard is showing us how it’s done when it comes to battling extreme, crazy, tyrannically bent leftists. Never in the history of Anchorage has the city been run by such hard-core radicals. 

The agenda they’ve been and will continue to push is rapidly causing Alaska’s largest city to resemble Portland, Seattle, and San Francisco. Out of control vagrants, lawlessness, wasteful government spending, huge tax increases, and an all-out war on the city’s business owners.  

Now is not the time for go along to get along. Allard gets that and even though she’s greatly outnumbered within the bowels of city government, she’s putting up a heroic fight. 

The Assembly and mayor have become so arrogant and emboldened, they’ve locked the public out of chambers to testify. If a Republican-controlled government did that, the heads of each and every journalist at The Anchorage Daily News and KTUU would literally explode. Literally, not figuratively. 

Allard says her colleagues on the Assembly and the mayor are violating open meeting laws by refusing to let citizens into chambers to testify in person. 

Before Tuesday’s meeting, Allard will have forms available outside Assembly chambers for constituents to sign demanding access to the meeting.

Once they’re denied, Allard will take their names and on Wednesday file a lawsuit on their behalf demanding the Assembly stop breaking open meeting laws. 

“It’s not okay for Americans not to be able to face their government and to testify on a personal agenda that individuals are trying to pass,” said Allard.  

How this must infuriate the tyrant mayor and his enablers on the Assembly. 

But there’s more. Allard also plans on introducing an ordinance that reads in part: “Recognizing honoring and thanking the Anchorage Police Department for their dedicated and selfless service to the residents of the municipality of Anchorage.”

The ordinance also goes on to read: “The Anchorage Police Department has taken the high road in protection of human rights in the face of a variety of protests, some against the Department itself.  Officers have at times been subject to disrespectful words and actions in public from some people, yet stood calm, professional and often compassionate in response.” 

This is the type of ordinance that must drive the anti-cop leftists on the Assembly crazy. Some of them have already pushed for a change in the law making it more difficult for cops to do their jobs.  

We know Berkowitz abandoned his stringent social distancing rules he imposes on businesses to join and praise anti-cop protesters this summer. Allard knows how to hit the wacky left where it hurts the most. 

The Left often employs unconventional methods in promoting or disguising their agenda which is typically not politically palatable for most. Allard gets that and isn’t afraid to strike back at their deception and tyranny by taking dead aim at the heart of what motivates them. It’s a beautiful thing to watch.  

Dan Fagan hosts a radio show weekday mornings on Newsradio 650  KENI. 

Breaking: Attorney General resigns

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Updated with governor’s comments: Attorney General Kevin Clarkson has resigned. His letter to the governor was submitted this morning.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy issued a statement:

“This administration has and always will expect the highest level of professional conduct in the workplace. There is nothing more important than the protection of our state employees, and that includes feeling safe when an employee is at work.

“Kevin Clarkson has admitted to conduct in the workplace that did not live up to our high expectations, and this is deeply disappointing. This morning he took responsibility for the unintentional consequences of his actions and tendered his resignation to me. I have accepted it.

“State law provides guidelines and protections for all state employees including confidentiality on personnel matters. The Governor’s office is bound by and conforms to those laws. My administration will continue to insist upon professional conduct from all our employees, regardless of their position in state government.”

In its entirety, the resignation letter of Kevin Clarkson:

Dear Governor Dunleavy:

It has been my great honor to serve the State of Alaska, you, and this Administration as Attorney General. I was and remain deeply moved by the confidence you placed in me by appointing me to this position.

I regret that my actions and errors in judgment in interacting with a state employee have become a distraction to the good work and good people working in the state’s and your service.
As you now know, I engaged in a conversation by way of a series of text messages with a state employee over approximately one month. This person was not in the department of law, and is not someone I supervised. The topics of these texts ranged from food, to movies, to books, to family, to my wife’s and my lengthy ordeal trying to obtain a Visa for her young son, and all were conversational and positive, were reciprocal, and were, I believed, mutual. We exchanged pictures of children and grandchildren and I sent her pictures of food that I cooked from time to time. These texts included invitations for this person and her children to come to my home to share a meal, which she politely declined. All of these texts were “G” rated. There is nothing remotely salacious about the texts. In our texts we exchanged innocent mutual endearments between us in words and emojis. On several occasions, this person initiated a friendly hug when I came to her work place, and I reflexively gave her a tiny peck of a kiss on top of her head.

In short, I believed we had a positive friendship borne of mutual respect and interests. What I failed to recognize is the impact that these interactions had on this person, due to the disparity in our workplace rank. Of course, I should have recognized this from the start, and should have maintained a more distanced and professional relationship. I am deeply sorry for the discomfort I caused this person, and only wish her well.

When this person eventually expressed her discomfort to me, I immediately respected her wishes and ceased communicating with her by text. Two months passed uneventfully. But thereafter, after a representative of political opposition had learned of the texts and contacted your office, she appropriately reported this situation to her supervisor. I immediately and fully cooperated in the ensuing process, and have accepted the finding by Human Resources that my actions, however unintentionally, created an uncomfortable workplace environment for this employee. As you know, I have accepted and am completing a period of unpaid leave as a consequence for my error in judgment, which I recognize was wholly and only mine.

The affected employee has not taken the matter further, and has not sought to publicize or exploit it. Unfortunately, however, someone familiar with this situation broke her confidence and has made it known to certain political operatives and a member of the press. These actors are now threatening to publicize and sensationalize it for their own purposes, while at the same time also threatening to twist and distort some of my personal divorce-related matters from 25-35 years ago.

I wish to create no unnecessary distractions for you or your administration. I respect and admire you and regard you as a friend. I sincerely apologize to you for my lapse of judgment. I am carefully considering my next steps. I hereby tender my resignation to you in order to alleviate this situation and allow you to continue your good work for the state undistracted.
It has been my privilege to serve the people of Alaska and you.”