Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Murkowski’s husband hosts D.C. fundraiser for Treadwell

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(This story has been updated to reflect it was not Sen. Lisa Murkowski, but her husband Verne Martell who hosted the fundraiser at Murkowski’s DC home; she will not be endorsing in this race.)

Alaska’s senior senator’s husband held a fundraiser for gubernatorial candidate Mead Treadwell at her D.C. home on Monday night. Sources tell Must Read Alaska that at least $20,000 was raised for the Republican candidate for governor.

Murkowski, her husband Vern Martell, and Treadwell are close personal friends. In 2016, Murkowski promoted his name for Secretary of the Interior in the new Trump Administration.

“I think right now there’s still a lot of people in the mix. We’ve got some Alaskans. I’m pretty keen on Mead Treadwell, I think he would do a good job at the Department of Interior, and I have said so,” she told reporters that year.

Treadwell, who served as lieutenant governor for four years in the Parnell Administration, filed for governor on June 1, 2018, the final day for filing disclosures with the Alaska Public Offices Commission and the Division of Elections. With only 70 days until the primary election on Aug. 21, he has a short period of time to raise money, get his message out, and seal the deal with voters.

“It’s going to be an exciting Republican primary,” said Tuckerman Babcock, chairman of the Alaska Republican Party. “This will generate a lot of interest, and there’s a clear contrast — and that’s what primaries are all about.”

A poll released on Monday confirmed that Mike Dunleavy has a substantial lead. 46 percent of Republican primary voters who took part in the poll would choose Dunleavy, who has been running for governor since last fall, 19 percent support Treadwell and 7 percent would pick Scott Hawkins, if the election was held last week.

Must Read Alaska has reached out to Murkowski to ask if this is an endorsement of Treadwell and will update this story when she responds.

Jerry Hood, campaign manager for Alaskans for Don Young, said that Young doesn’t get involved in contested primaries. A spokesman for Lisa Murkowski said late today that she is not endorsing anyone in the gubernatorial primary.

“Sen. Sullivan has not weighed in on the governor’s race at this time, but he has met with each of the three candidate for the Republican nomination at the request of those candidates,” said a Sullivan spokesman.

Masterpiece Cakeshop decision: Not as narrow as you might think

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By JIM MINNERY
ALASKA FAMILY COUNCIL

Regardless of your view on marriage, and yes, there are still huge segments of society who firmly believe the original design was right, you should celebrate a recent ruling at the U.S. Supreme Court that upheld our country’s longstanding foundation of tolerance, respect and pluralism.

The case – Masterpiece Cakeshop v Colorado Civil Rights Commission –involved a cake baker, Jack Phillips, who, because of his faith, could not design a custom wedding cake for two men. Like most creative professionals, he simply couldn’t express messages or celebrate events that violated his beliefs.

In the 7-2 decisive ruling, the Supreme Court made it clear that the government must respect Jack’s belief that marriage is a union of one woman and one man and that people like Jack cannot be driven out of public life.

Predictably, as soon as the decision came out, the spin machine started up – calling the decision “narrow.”

In one sense, this is absurd. The decision was 7-2, with liberal Justices Elena Kagan and Stephen Breyer joining with the conservatives and Justice Anthony Kennedy to protect Jack’s religious freedom.

Yet in another sense, it is understandable. The Court was very specific in discussing Jack’s case, and they went out of their way in the decision to say that it doesn’t give all retail shops the right to not provide goods or services for gay weddings.

However, there are three key reasons it would be wrong to say that Jack’s victory is irrelevant and that it won’t have a larger impact on the religious freedom debate for years to come.

1. This is how the Court works.

In 2013, the Court was asked whether the Federal Defense of Marriage Act was constitutional in the Windsor case. This law defined marriage for the federal government as only the union of one man and one woman.

In this case, the Court (wrongly) found that the Federal DOMA was unconstitutional because it put the federal government in conflict with some state’s definition of marriage.

In many ways, this was a narrow decision. The Court had the ability to find that all efforts to define marriage as only the union of one man and one woman were unconstitutional. But they didn’t. They ruled on the specific issue of the conflict between federal and state law.

Now we know how this story ends – when the Obergefell case eventually got to the Court that sought to overturn a state’s definition of marriage as the union of one man and one woman, the Court then took on that specific question, and tragically ruled incorrectly again.

But this is informative for the situation we find ourselves in today. The Court likes to avoid writing sweeping decisions with broad implications. Rather, they try to find the specific question to answer. Often you can get signs of where they are leaning on these issues. When you read the Masterpiece Cakeshop decision, you see they understand the vast free speech and religious freedom issues on the line in these cases.

2. The Court set an important principle.

Maybe the greatest lie of the political left in these cases is that when anyone enters the marketplace, they automatically surrender their First Amendment free speech and religious freedom rights.

The marketplace is “secular” they argue. You can have whatever religious beliefs you want, but you must act secular, is what they say.

The Court rejected this idea, and sent a clear message that the marketplace is neither secular nor religious – it’s neutral. It’s wrong and potentially dangerous for the government to be elevating secular ideals over religious ones. Furthermore, the government should NOT be in the business of deciding what are and are not valid religious beliefs.

3. Hostility is central to the Left’s playbook

What everyone can agree upon in this decision is that the Court found that the Colorado’s Civil Rights Commission’s hostility toward Jack was unconstitutional.

They compared Jack – a Christian businessman and father – to Nazis and white supremacists.

So yes, it’s true, this case was specific to the facts of Jack’s case. But virtually every other case like Jack’s involves astonishing hostility from the Left.

This kind of hostility is the rule, not the exception from the left. If you don’t support gay marriage, you’re a bigot in their eyes and don’t have a place in polite society.

That’s why the Southern Poverty Law Center calls groups like Alliance Defending Freedom and Family Research Council “hate groups” – even though ADF and FRC merely believe in marriage between a man and a woman. It’s why they did a cover story on me for leading Alaska Family Action and standing up with others for the original design of marriage and human sexuality.

Will this historic ruling put an end to the Left’s relentless effort to bully and banish people from the public square for peacefully living out their beliefs?  Likely not. Will it stop the government from trying to treat people who hold Jack’s belief as second-class citizens? Doubtful.

But the decision, especially with Kagan and Breyer joining, is a remarkably refreshing sign that our Court isn’t as thoroughly politicized as many of us suspected. It also reaffirms that tolerance and respect for differences of opinion are essential in a pluralistic society like ours and enable us to peacefully coexist with each another.

Jim Minnery is president of Alaska Family Council.

Shane Muse, Crystal Tui, Moataa Ifopo back behind bars

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WHILE WAITING FOR THEIR COURT DATES, PLAYING WITH STOLEN GUNS

Shane Muse and Crystal Tui are back in the slammer after being released while waiting for court dates for previous felony charges.

Muse is the classic catch-and-release criminal who can’t keep his fingers off of others’ property.

Tui just can’t seem to stay away from Muse, and she has her own property-respect issues. On Saturday, Muse was arrested  on the 5400 block of East 26th Ave., Anchorage, for threatening his pretrial enforcement officers. He had a stolen gun on him. This was Muse’s fourth felony in Alaska, but he has a list of priors in Hawaii.

The gun that Muse had? He said Tui had given it to him. Neither of them are allowed to be in possession of guns.

[Read: Catch-and-release criminal back on the street]

Here’s how police described the scenario: On June 9, pretrial officers found Muse, who was believed to have violated his conditions of release. They began to cuff him and Muse began to fight. Officers noticed that Muse kept reaching into his pocket. Officers found a gun in that pocket. During the struggle with Muse, one of the officers was cut on the leg.

Muse was arrested and jailed on charges of assault III, theft II, assault IV, violating conditions of release, and misconduct involving a weapon III (felon in possession).

25-year-old Crystal A. Tui was with Muse at the time of the incident.  According to conditions of her probation, Tui is not to have contact with Muse. Tui admitted she had provided Muse with the stolen gun. Tui was booked on charges of misconduct involving a weapon III, theft II, and probation violation.

The handgun Muse had on him at the time of his June 9 arrest was reported as stolen on May 21 from an unlocked vehicle in the 10100 block of Hillcrest Lane in Eagle River.

In March, officers came upon  Muse and Tui in a stolen SUV. Tui, who was the driver, and Muse were taken into custody and a stolen handgun was found in the vehicle under the seat where Muse was sitting. Shots were fired as police tried to take Muse into custody.

Muse’s bail hearing is set for June 13. Tui’s pre-indictment hearing is June 12.

A third catch-and-release street thug, Moataa Ifopo, was also rounded up in the process — he just happened to be nearby on a stolen motorcycle; he, too, is waiting for a court date for prior car-theft mayhem.

Just prior to busting Muse, pretrial officers saw Muse walking up to a man on a motorcycle. That man was 21-year-old Ifopo, who was wanted for violating conditions of release.  Police discovered the motorcycle had been reported as stolen on Sept. 10, 2017 from a home on Birch Knoll Loop.  Ifopo was taken into custody and was jailed on charges of vehicle theft I and violations of conditions of release.

Ifopo has a long rap sheet for a 21-year-old, but he was out on the streets awaiting trial for a May 2 incident where he wrecked three cars and damaged a fourth one, and injured other drivers as he tried to evade police.

Ifopo was driving a stolen Chevy Tahoe when police tried to stop him. As Ifopo sped off,  he crashed into three vehicles, and damaged a fourth one with flying debris from the other three on Mountain View Drive near the Bragaw intersection. Eventually, Ifopo and his passenger fled the vehicle and ran off, but police set up a perimeter and brought in a K9 officer. The two were arrested hiding in a snow bank.

When apprehended on May 2, Ifopo had an outstanding warrant for failure-to-appear on another charge of vehicle theft.

Last weekend, when he was apprehended, he also had another failure-to-appear warrant for his arrest.

Homer mayor wants everyone to fly rainbow flags

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MEETING SUDDENLY CANCELLED; NO ‘PRIDE’ PROCLAMATION AFTER ALL

The mayor of Homer was to sign an official proclamation today encouraging every business and home to fly a rainbow flag in honor of gay pride month. He was declaring June to be the month where LGBT is celebrated in Homer with flying colors.

That’s LGBTQ as in Lesbian-Gay-Bisexual-Transgender.

But the city council meeting has suddenly been cancelled this afternoon for lack of a quorum.

There will no official Pride Month in Homer this year, as a result of the cancelled meeting. Nearly a hundred comments were submitted to the city, many of them opposed to making a formal declaration encouraging businesses to fly a rainbow flag.

Telling businesses to support LGBTQ values with a specific flag over their establishment can be experienced by conservative Christians as a form of economic bullying, because the city also has the power to hold up or deny permits, perform special surprise inspections, and pass regulations that harm your economic future if you don’t go along with the social engineering agenda.

Homer is the kind of community where if you don’t fly the rainbow flag as requested, bad things may happen to you; at the very least, you will be confronted by customers or would-be customers who will ask you why your rainbow flag isn’t flying.

The June 23 Pride Parade in Homer will take place on June 23, as scheduled, but the city council will not be meeting until July, which means the resolution dies.

Should cities get involved in encouraging the flying of LGBTQ flags over homes and businesses? Leave your comment below.

Fish forum gets chippy with Treadwell, Begich

CANDIDATES WERE ASKED IF THEY’D EVER POOPED IN A BUCKET

At the Bristol Bay Fish Expo in Naknek, gubernatorial candidate Mead Treadwell, a new entrant, took off the gloves and gave front runner Mike Dunleavy a taste of what Treadwell may have planned for him in weeks ahead.

The question during Saturday’s forum came from moderator Rhonda McBride: How do you grade the Legislature? Scott Hawkins answered that the Legislature did finally come up with a fiscal solution for using Permanent Fund Earnings (POMV), and although the Permanent Fund dividend is not as high as he thinks it ought to be, he still gave the Legislature a “B.”

Treadwell’s responded by saying: “So what Scott Hawkins is saying is the grade went up after Mike Dunleavy left.” The pro-Mark Begich audience laughed at the jab.

Begich, however, gave the House a B+ because of “bipartisanship,” and he gave the Senate a D-, calling it stubborn. The House is under Democrat control, and the Senate is firmly in Republican control.

It was the first gubernatorial debate of the season that brought all the candidates on stage, including Republican Hawkins, Democrat Begich and petition candidate Bill Walker.

QUOTING TED

When asked his opinion of the Pebble Mine, Begich quoted the late Sen. Ted Stevens, saying, “Wrong mine. Wrong place.”

Begich was the man who savaged Stevens while running against him in 2008, but on Saturday he was proudly quoting him in front of an anti-Pebble crowd.

Then Begich sniped at Walker, saying, “I think there are steps that could be done as governor that have not been done … When people say they are against it, they should be against it all the way. I think one of the first things I would do as governor of the state of Alaska, as I’m opposed to Pebble Mine, I would make sure the Army Corps of Engineers knows that state land, or state access, or state right of way would not be part of any of their plans. Therefore the State would not participate in that effort.”

Begich also took a swipe at Treadwell by saying the “Parnell/Treadwell Administration” had taken away coastal zone management program. Treadwell, as lieutenant governor under Parnell, had nothing to do with that, but this is politics.

But while all other candidates stated their grave concerns about the Stand for Salmon Initiative, Begich was the only one on stage who would not answer the question on whether it was a good ballot initiative. He used the art of redirection to talk about how the only reason initiatives like this are on the ballot is because the political system is broken, and he’s going to fix it.

BUCKET BRIGADE

Running for governor can be particularly humbling, and was especially so when the moderator Rhonda McBride asked each candidate if they had ever used a honey bucket. This is asking candidates if they’ve ever taken a dump in a bucket, which is still a common commode in rural Alaska and on some fishing boats.

The answers were: Begich, Dunleavy, Treadwell, Walker – yes. Hawkins – no.

The Republican candidate forum in Kenai the night before had been a lot more cordial. But it was with the Republican candidates only, and included lieutenant governor candidates.

In the lightning round questions in Kenai, candidates were asked to recall some wild thing they did in high school, and none of them could come up with anything remotely interesting. Only Kevin Meyer, candidate for lieutenant governor, went for a laugh line, saying, “I think streaking was popular back then…”

Ah yes, the spectator sports. Good times.

Watch the whole Bristol Bay Fish Expo debate here.

Alyse for Congress puts wreck in ‘wreckreational’

CRASHES INTO PALMER SENIOR CENTER

There was a great crash and splintering of wood when the “Alyse for Alaska” vehicle, seen above, crashed into the Palmer Veterans and Pioneer Home at the end of the Colony Days parade in Palmer on Saturday. The air conditioning unit on the RV was just too high and was ripped open in the crash, which startled occupants, as well as bystanders.

The motor home was Galvin’s carbon footprint in the annual parade, and it was just too tall for the building’s breezeway. Entries like that are supposed to go around, not through.

“She’d also be a train wreck in Congress,” quipped one bystander.

We’ll be watching FEC reports to see how the repairs are handled on that one. And about those carbon credits … Will Greenpeace be sending a bill?

Poll results: Dunleavy, Treadwell, Hawkins

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GOVERNOR’S RACE PRIMARY

A major poll was in the field last week from Dittman Research, calling Alaskans who are likely voters in the Republican Primary, and testing the strength of gubernatorial candidates Mike Dunleavy, Mead Treadwell, and Scott Hawkins among those voters.

We’ve got the results: Among about 400 poll respondents, (margin of error of 4.9) it’s Dunleavy-46 percent, Treadwell-19 percent, and Hawkins-7 percent, with 3 percent Other, and 25 percent undecided. The poll was in the field June 5-7, and was conducted statewide.

Check this space later today for further details. Disclaimer: Dittman did the poll for the Dunleavy for Alaska political action committee …  In 50 years, the company has never been wrong in predicting a gubernatorial winner.

Rauscher wins his party’s endorsement

REPUBLICAN PARTY REAFFIRMS SANCTIONS AGAINST ‘POSER’ JIM COLVER

The State Central Committee of the Alaska Republican Party endorsed Rep. George Rauscher on Saturday, supporting the decision of District 9 Republicans to pick just one person as its favorite to take on Jim Colver.

District 9 stretches from Palmer to Glennallen, Tok, Valdez and across Prince William Sound to Whittier. It is a conservative part of the state, with a few liberal enclaves.

The pre-primary endorsement allows the party, including its powerhouse fundraising Republican women’s clubs, to spend on behalf of Rauscher’s re-election. That could be worth thousands of dollars in aid to a candidate. Tuckerman Babcock, chairman of the Alaska Republican Party, indicated he’ll be very active in defending Rauscher against Colver.

Rauscher is the incumbent for District 9, having stepped up in 2016 to fight a tough battle against Colver, a former legislator who served just one term. Colver had lost the support of not only his district grassroots activists but the entire party after his actions as a legislator. During the election season, he had the support of powerful unions and also support from his Musk Ox Coalition, a band of Republicans and Democrats who staged a coup beginning in 2015, and by 2016 had flipped control of the House to Democrats.

By then, however, Colver’s district voters were onto him and removed him from office, while his fellow Republican Musk Ox, Reps. Gabrielle LeDoux, Paul Seaton, and Louise Stutes, went on to be awarded powerful seats: LeDoux became Rules chair, Seaton became cochair of Finance, and Stutes, who had only served one term in office, became majority whip.

For the first time in 20 years, the House was in Democrat control. Other members of the Musk Ox Coalition included Democrats Bryce Edgmon, who became Speaker and Neal Foster, who was awarded co-chair of Finance.

THE MUSK OX LEADER RETURNS

In 2015, the Musk Ox Coalition had written a letter to Rep. Mike Chenault, expressing their dissent against a plan to fund the budget gap. It was the first sign that a revolt was underway: “On behalf of our constituents, we feel compelled to express to you our serious misgivings regarding a plan to transfer funds from the Permanent Fund Earnings Reserve as part of a mechanism to fund the Fiscal Year 2016 operating budget,” the legislators wrote.

A year later, just before he lost to Rauscher, Colver wrote in the Alaska Dispatch News, that the Musk Ox Coalition had no intention of flipping House control to Democrats:

“It is time for the public to know what is behind the smokescreen put out by shadow groups like The Accountability Project (TAP). These groups are trying to influence the election with tens of thousands of dollars of outside corporate cash.  TAP alleged in a recent article that I was a threat to flip and organize with the House Minority.  This is totally false and misleading and a cover-up for their actual mischief.

“The truth is that they, other shadow groups and the Republican Party are part of a larger coordinated effort to assert top-down control of the House Republican majority by installing obedient soldiers.

“Why am I and another majority member in their cross hairs?  We are members of the Musk Ox Coalition and they are musk ox hunting.  They are sending a message that independence and doing what’s best for our constituents and doing what is best for Alaska will not be tolerated in the majority caucus. They will decide what is best for you. They want legislators they can control and tell what to do. I won’t submit. I will stand up for what is right, and that is why I am now under attack.

“In May 2015 I was part of a brave group of six House majority members (the Musk Ox Coalition) who refused to give in to immense pressure and go along with a backroom deal to raid $5 billion from the Permanent Fund Earnings account to avoid negotiating a bipartisan budget solution to access the budget reserve.”

COLVER THE DEMOCRAT

During Saturday’s State Central Committee meeting, Fred Agree, a voting member of the committee, stood to tell the group that Colver had told him “of course he was a Democrat,” but realized he could only win as a Republican in the district.

The party on Saturday voted not only to endorse Rauscher but unanimously voted to continue the sanctions against Colver, who is viewed as a poser.

Another member of the Musk Ox Coalition, Paul Seaton of District 31 Homer, has chosen to run as a nonpartisan in the Democrats primary during this election cycle.

Seaton, Stutes, and LeDoux, the remaining members of the Musk Ox, have all been sanctioned by their District Republicans and  the state party, which will offer them no support during their reelection campaign.

Stutes and LeDoux are continuing to run in the Republican primary. Stutes, District 32 Kodiak, faces a tough primary battle against Republican Richard Walker of Kodiak. LeDoux, District 15 Anchorage, faces Aaron Weaver in the primary.

Sordid: A date with Rep. Zach Fansler

NOT BATTERY, BUT A CASE OF HARASSMENT … AND A BROKEN EARDRUM

The relevant sections of the Department of Law’s complaint against former Rep. Zach Fansler from the Jan. 13 sex-and-slapping date in Juneau that led to his resignation are transcribed here:

THE OFFICE OF SPECIAL PROSECUTIONS CHARGES: That in the First Judicial District, State of Alaska, on or about January 13, 2018, at or near Juneau, ZACHARY JOSEPH FANSLER with intent to harass or annoy another person, subjected another person to offensive physical contact. All of which is a Misdemeanor class B offense being contrary to and in violation of 11.6l.120(a)(5) and against the peace and dignity of the State of Alaska.

COUNT 1 – HARASSMENT IN THE SECOND DEGREE

The undersigned swears under oath this Information is based upon a review of police report #1801 19-010 submitted to date.

The defendant, Zachary Fansler, was a state legislator staying in Juneau in January 2018.

On the evening of January 13, 2018, C.T., a woman with whom Fansler had a prior social history, and Fansler had texted one another and agreed to meet at the Triangle Club Bar; Fansler arrived prior to C.T. Fansler and C.T. had previously been on one date together.

Fansler and C.T., along with a group of other people, socialized at the Triangle for about an hour, and then C.T. left the Triangle to go meet with another group of friends at another location.

Fansler did not leave the Triangle with C.T. Later in the evening, C.T. and Fansler reconnected in the bar area of the hotel where Fansler was staying, the Alaska Hotel. Again, there were others in the group besides Fansler and C.T. They only socialized in the bar area for a short period of time and then Fansler and C.T. decided to go up to Fansler’s room together shortly after midnight.

Both C.T. and Fansler had been drinking alcohol throughout the night, but Fansler was intoxicated by the time the two of them went to his room. When in the room, Fansler and C.T. began to engage in consensual sexual activity. Throughout the course of the evening, there had been no discussions about the nature of the type of sexual activity Fansler liked, and Fansler had not requested any permission to engage in any sort of aggressive sexual activity.

Then, while in the room and engaging in otherwise consensual activity, Fansler, without warning or permission, slapped C.T. in the head area with both his right and left hands. C.T. indicated that it seemed as though he had struck her as hard as he could and that her face burned and ears were ringing after the blows from Fansler.

C.T. further indicated that she immediately protested Fansler’s actions, but Fansler seemed to be too intoxicated to appropriately respond to her objections. Based on Fansler’s actions and his lack of response to her concerns, C.T. ended the encounter and left the room.

Following the incident, C.T. and Fansler had a couple brief text message exchanges where she confronted him about his actions in the room, and Fansler repeatedly apologized for his actions and acknowledged he needed to get his drinking under control.

On Monday, January 15, 2018, after continuing to have issues with one of her ears due to the blow by Fansler, C.T. decided to seek medical attention. C.T. learned that her eardrum had been ruptured. The injury required some follow up medical attention,
but it ultimately healed over time.

Rep. Zach Fansler marching in the Jan. 20 “MeToo” women’s march in Juneau, seven days after he had struck a woman so hard her eardrum burst.

WHAT, NO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE CHARGE?

Fansler has no prior criminal convictions or arrests. His attorney, Wallace Tetlow, told KYUK in January that the accusations were false. “If charges are filed, we’ll deal with those successfully in court,” Tetlow said.

Evidently he has dealt with them successfully; Tetlow has won Fansler a lesser charge than a class C felony. It’s now just a harassment charge.

Is Fansler getting off easy? Are lawyers in the Department of Law protecting one of their own?

Fansler will be arraigned on the Class B misdemeanor charge on June 21 in Juneau.

Class B misdemeanors are punishable by 90 days in jail and up to $2,000 in fines. Prostitution is an example of a Class B misdemeanor, as is theft in the fourth degree – stealing something valued under $50. Senate Bill 91 SB 91 made all thefts under $250 into class B misdemeanors regardless of the number of prior convictions.