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Hearing voices: Breitbart, people moving up, moving on

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Rep. Ben Nageak
Rep. Ben Nageak

Barrow’s Rep. Ben Nageak is behind challenger Dean Westlake, with just five votes separating them. Westlake has 765 votes to Nageak’s 760.

We’re not ready to call this race, but if there was ever an example of how every vote counts, this is it.

Our understanding from the field is there are three villages that have not been counted and there is a looming question about many questioned ballots. Reports have come in to Must Read Alaska that in District 40, election workers made voters who requested a Democratic ballot vote a questioned ballot if they were registered as Republicans; the questioned ballots could make a difference for Rep. Nageak.

Stephan Bannon of Breitbart / YouTube
Stephen Bannon / YouTube

TRUMP CAMPAIGN PICKS A STREET FIGHTER FOR CEO

Stephen Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News, is the new CEO for the Donald Trump campaign, while Kellyanne Conway, a senior adviser and pollster for Trump, is the campaign manager.

Bannon wrote and directed a documentary on Sarah Palin called The Undefeated. Conway  is president and CEO of The Polling Company / WomanTrend, and is a commentator on CNNFox NewsFox Business, Good Morning America, and Meet the Press.

OIL PATCH SHUFFLE

ASRC Energy Services CEO Jeff Kinneeveauk has resigned effective this Thursday. Doug Smith will become the new president and CEO. Smith is president and CEO of Little Red Services and ASRC Construction Holding Co. Kinneeveauk, born in Point Hope, became CEO in 2011.

 SHIP OF FOOLS?

The Celebrity Serenity left Seward and is motoring west and north with 1,000 passengers and 600 crew members to cross over the Northwest Passage. The trip cost passengers between $21,000 and $120,000, depending on your stateroom and amenities, and is billed as the adventure of a lifetime as the itinerary stops in 14 places before reaching New York City….

…Or as Slate magazine puts it: “It is also an abomination—a massive, diesel-burning, waste-dumping, ice-destroying, golf-ball-smacking middle finger to what remains of the planet, courtesy of precisely 1,089 of its richest and most destructive inhabitants. And it’s all made possible by runaway climate change, the existential global crisis that these same people and their ilk have disproportionately helped to create.”

Kill joy.

The Celebrity Serenity will arrive in Nome on Aug. 21, and will be the largest ship of its kind to ever stop there, and just in time for the Nome Berry Festival.

MARGARET STOCK GOES UNION

There was a big fundraiser at the IBEW building tonight and it was for self-described nonpartisan candidate Margaret Stock, running for U.S. Senate. We missed getting the invite, but it looked like a union made in heaven.

RACE FOR SITKA MAYOR

Then there were three: Former Sitka city administrator Gary Paxton, has withdrawn from the race for mayor of Sitka, which leaves Deputy Mayor Matthew Hunter, Assembly member Ben Miyasato, and local civic leader Mary Magnuson vying for the job.

Magnuson is ready for the heat of politics because last year she got into politically incorrect trouble as she defended the honor of the Alaska Day charity “slave” auction, whereby you can bid on two hours of household chores from willing volunteers.

The 30-year-old traditional event ran into the buzzsaw of  the Anchorage chapter of NAACP, which called it “inflammatory and insensitive” and ordered a name change. Politically thin-skinned Sitkans (can we still say that?) complied.

In an interview with the Alaska Dispatch last year, Magnuson said the slave auction had raised $3,000 for the local fire department, and those who wanted the name changed were just blowing it up. “There were no shackles, no oppression, just raising money for the first responders we all love. I’m offended that this political correctness is trying to be pushed on us and making us look like jerks.”

This year and forever more it will be known as the “Alaska Day Auction,” but locals will probably cluck at being bullied by Anchorage pc police. What is the world coming to? They already had to ditch the wet T-shirt contest.

The Municipal Election will be held on Oct 4. No big controversies are planned.

Alaska Day in Sitka is October 10-18, with the Alaska Day Ball on Oct. 17. The people of Sitka will endeavor to not offend non-Sitkans by having any non-politically correct fun.

Takeaway: Even more conservative in Alaska

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Democratic minority leader Chris Tuck and House Democrat Matt Claman during Tuesday night's election returns. / Twitter photo by Travis Khachatoorian of KTUU news. Follow @ReporterTravisK
Democratic minority leader Chris Tuck and House Democrat Matt Claman during Tuesday night’s election returns at IBEW Hall in Anchorage. / Twitter photo by Travis Khachatoorian of KTUU news. Follow @ReporterTravisK

NO COMFORT FOR THE AFFLICTED BIG LABOR BOSSES

The Aug. 16 election was a bellweather event for Alaska conservatives.

Would the state drift toward the Musk-Ox Model of a Democratically controlled bipartisan House leadership, or would conservatives stand strong?

The prognosticators had their money on Governor Walker’s blue ponies. They were wrong. The mainstream media says this was an anti-incumbent result. They are also wrong.

The 3-B Team (Bill Walker, Big Labor, and Mark Begich), spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to unseat key Republicans in an attempt to turn the state blue. That did not happen. What they got were even more conservatives.

But with all the money Big Labor political action committees threw at this campaign, it was the one thing Big Labor has actually done to help the private economy this year.

GOVERNOR WALKER AND BIG LABOR = BIG FAIL

By and large, the 3-B Team effort was unsuccessful, and Big Labor is having one heck of a hangover today. Let’s take a look at which way voters went, when given a choice between liberal and conservative:

George Rauscher
George Rauscher

District 9: In the much-watched race between left-leaning Rep. Jim Colver and conservative George Rauscher, voters in District 9 chose the conservative Rauscher over the “Repo-Democrat” incumbent in sheep’s clothing, Colver. The Big Labor money spent — and it was tens of thousands of dollars on this particular race — was great for the economy of District 9, but might have hurt Colver, who ended up looking bought and paid for.

David and Jennifer Eastma
David and Jennifer Eastman / from his website.

District 10: Both incumbent Rep. Wes Keller and his challenger David Eastman are well-matched conservatives. But Eastman comes out of more of a tea party tradition, thus this district is leaning even more conservative with a clear Eastman win. This would not be a win that brings comfort to Democrats, as Eastman is a keen strategist, a hard worker, studies and learns, and sticks to his guns.

District 11: DeLena Johnson and Richard Best were both solid conservatives for this valley district, and Johnson’s win continues the winning streak for Republicans. She is an experienced local politician who understands her district well and will not want to burn her popularity by aligning with the shrinking moderate outliers known as “musk oxen.”

District 14: Eagle River/Chugiak were given a choice between a very conservative incumbent and a more moderate Republican, and they chose their existing champion, Lora Reinbold, over challenger Crystal Kennedy. Again, a lean to the right, rather than tacking toward the middle.

Chris and Pam Birch
Chris and Pam Birch / from Chris’ website

District 26: Bob Lynn, the Republican incumbent, had leaned toward Big Labor support for years, and the more conservative name on the ballot, Chris Birch, was heavily favored by voters.

District 28: Jennifer Johnston, the fiscal conservative, and Ross Beiling, the social and fiscal conservative, were untouched by Big Labor in this race for the seat vacated by Rep. Mike Hawker. In this case, a better known Johnston ran on her record, and Beiling could not make the case to voters that he could do better. But both of them are probably more conservative than Hawker.

District 31: Incumbent Paul Seaton, a well-liked moderate Republican, was actually beat by the combined votes for his two more conservative challengers, Mary Beth Wythe and John Cox. Had their been just one challenger in the race, Seaton would have been in a real race, as Wythe and Cox took 51 percent of the vote.

District 38  and 40: In the governor’s attempt to unseat District 40’s Rep. Ben Nageak of Barrow, the race is too close to call, although they did chalked up a win in rural Alaska by taking out District 38’s Rep. Bob Herron. Governor Walker and the Democrats will have a more malleable Zach Fansler to work with there. But those in the know in the Bethel region say that Fansler has a lot of problems and this could prove troublesome for them.

David Wilson
David Wilson / from his website

Senate Seat D: Lynn Gattis is a conservative legislator, but David Wilson has equally conservative views. Neither was the incumbent and the 3-B Team left this race alone. Could it be that Wilson, who is backed by the even more conservative Republican Assembly, is getting even more conservative.

Natasha von Imhof / from her website
Natasha von Imhof / from her website

 

 

Senate District F: Voters had three solid conservative to choose from and they stuck with Shelley Hughes in the seat being vacated by Republican Bill Stoltze. Big Labor stayed out of this race.

Senate District L: The 3-B Team went after Rep. Craig Johnson in a big way, as he threw his name in on the last day possible for the Senate seat vacated by Lesil McGuire.

Johnson looked strong, but in the final days of the campaign, the 3-B Team was demanding that voters cast their ballot for anyone but conservative warhorse. Their literature savaged him as one of the big spenders.

That worked to an extent, but the Democrats and Big Labor backed Jeff Landfield — and ended up hurting him more than helping him in that district, which went for the more conservative choice, Natasha von Imhof. Landfield landed third, beat out by two more conservative choices.

OVERALL, SOLID VICTORY FOR REPUBLICANS

Across the state, conservative Republicans swept to victory: Reps. Mark Neuman, Lance Pruitt, Liz Vazquez, Tammy Wilson, Dan Saddler, and Lora Reinbold. All incumbents with strong credentials; all easily won against challengers.

At the top of the ticket, there was no “throw the bums out” mood — Rep. Don Young and Sen. Lisa Murkowski blew past their challengers.

Although this isn’t what is being reported by the main media venues, one final piece of good news for Republicans is the number of voters who chose the Republican ballot over the other one — it was nearly two times better for the Republicans this election, again proving that Alaska is a red state, and that the Walker effort to unseat the Republican majority failed in this round.

 

The Colver files: Did he steer contracts to his company?

WHEN JIM COLVER GOT IN TROUBLE, IT TOOK THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHAIRMAN TO BAIL HIM OUT

Back when Jim Colver was sitting on the Mat-Su Borough Assembly, he ran into some trouble, caused possibly by his own misdeeds.

Allegations were made that Colver had used confidential information available to Assembly members to steer public money to his own surveying firm. A criminal investigation was launched. Kelly Turney, the Palmer police detective at the time, sent the report to the State Office of Special Prosecutions and Appeals, which is where it eventually died.

During the investigation, Colver said it was all politically motivated and he hired a lawyer. That lawyer was none other than Big Lake Democrat Attorney Scott Sterling, who was also the immediate past chair of the district’s Democratic Party.

Colver wouldn’t talk to the detective and he wouldn’t talk to the Frontiersman reporter. He clammed up.

He was asked to resign his Assembly seat by resident Tammy Miller, who told the Assembly: “It only takes one bad apple to spoil the barrel, and with the two of you on the assembly things are rotten. Colver is worse … because he intimidates people and is a bully. He uses his position to garner business for himself.”

Colver went on to win a seat on the school board after deciding that he wasn’t going to win his race for mayor.  But not before these headlines dominated his life:

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For the record, the tips on these news stories did not come from The Frontiersman reporter himself, who is no longer with the newspaper, but were sent to us by a former television reporter, who could not fathom why today’s reporters had not dug into Colver’s past.

Must Read performed a cursory search but didn’t uncover the scandal, and no other reporter has brought them to light during the highly contested race between Colver and his challenger, George Rauscher.

Jim Colver
Jim Colver

Greg Waisanen, owner of Collins Construction in Wasilla, claimed at the time that he felt Colver pressured him to award Colver Surveying a subcontract, and that Colver used his assembly position to access design information that wasn’t  available to other bidders regarding a school project.

The investigation focused on two misdemeanor offenses: Official misconduct and misuse of confidential information.

The police detective at the time said there were many unanswered questions in the case. But without Colver talking to the investigator, he turned it all over to the state.

None of these news stories is easy to find in the archives, and the scandal has been scrubbed from Colver’s Wikipedia entry. It took a former television news reporter to bring it to light and ask why the news media was not doing its job in at letting voters know about the question of character.

 Earlier this month, Colver lashed out at his fellow lawmakers, accusing them of being part of “another VECO-like scandal with a bought-and-paid-for legislature.” His piece was published in the Alaska Dispatch News.

Donna Walker’s heavy hand on bloggers

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Donna Walker
Donna Walker

IS THE LETTER IN QUESTION A FAKE? FIRST LADY SAYS ‘TAKE IT DOWN’

Last month, two staunchly conservative Alaska political websites posted a 2014 letter attributed to then-candidate Bill Walker, in which he stated he’d cut spending by 16 percent, not touch Permanent Fund dividends, and other claims.

These were claims heard from Walker during his campaign and are not a surprise to those who follow politics, although the grammar in the letter leaves something to be desired. The posting of the letter was, evidently, to hold the governor accountable for his actions now that he has the power of the veto pen.

Walker, we know, has primarily made cuts in the capital budget, and he has cut Alaskans’ Permanent Fund dividends in order to preserve state programs, such as the Department of Health and Social Services, where the actual workforce has been cut by just one percent.

What was a surprise is that Donna Walker has contacted both of the blogs and has asked or strongly suggested that the letter be taken down. The letter is not from the governor, she says.

“I was just really surprised,” said David Boyle, who writes at the Alaska Policy Forum. First Lady Donna Walker showed up at the office unannounced, accompanied by her daughter, Lindsay Walker Hobson, who was the spokesperson for Walker’s campaign for governor. Both Walker and Hobson are attorneys and both were part of the Walker, Richards LLC law firm, which has since been sold to Robin Brena.

According to Boyle, Mrs. Walker said the letter is a fake and strongly suggested to him that it be removed from the website.

Boyle has reviewed the letter and says it contains the exact ideas that Walker espoused in a private meeting with United For Liberty in 2014, at the home of Dave Cuddy.

Over at the Restoring Liberty web site, Michael Chambers writes about receiving the Walker article back in 2014, and the process he used to post it:

The first week of September 2014, candidate Walker was solicited by United For Liberty to submit an article for our October 2014 newsletter. The deadline was September 22 for final submission. A member of UFL accepted the editor’s task to put together the final product. This same member was also working with the Walker team to assist in assembling a narrative to be put in the newsletter. He worked diligently and put the entire newsletter together and submitted to me the entire PFD file to publish on United For Liberty’s website. Following is a letter I sent candidate Walker on October 9th thanking him for the submitted article and asking him to consider submitting one more for a possible additional newsletter before the election (he submitted an additional article on October 15, 2014, but I did not publish it as I did not have one from incumbent Governor Parnell and I wanted to give each candidate fair coverage):

That web site, too, was contacted by Donna Walker, who said the letter is a fake. Here’s what Joe Miller’s website has to say about being contacted by Alaska’s First Lady:

“Over the past week, the governor’s wife has sent me a series of emails claiming that the article submitted to UFL in the October newsletter was not authorized by the candidate. These communications were apparently prompted because recent excerpts of Bill Walker’s quotes from this article in our newsletter have appeared in various publications online, including Joe Miller’s Restoring Liberty article: Governor Walker Steals $666 Million From Alaska’s Families, Time to Recall the Liar. She calls the article ‘bogus,’ specifically complaining about the ‘mass distribution of the bogus article that has wrongly been attributed to Bill…”‘

Was the article authorized by candidate Walker or was it authorized by his campaign?

Screen Shot 2016-08-15 at 11.36.45 AMWe don’t know, but when the First Lady of Alaska shows up unannounced to attempt to have material removed from a website, she is treading on the First Amendment, which states government “shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

The First Lady of Alaska may not be an official arm of the Governor’s Office, but she has her own page on the State of Alaska website, she has her own State of Alaska email address, and she has her State staff and protection detail. She is also very much a part of the Governor’s policy team.

First Lady Donna cannot separate herself, at this point, from being part of the government, nor can she separate herself from being part of the Bill Walker re-election effort, which is clearly underway.

 

Alaska’s George Soros: Robin Brena

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robin brena
Robin Brena / YouTube screen grab

IT TAKES A PILLAGE

It takes money to elect people, and the Democrats know that. They’ve been jumping into Republican races with union and “independent expenditure” funds.

There may be no greater single donor to Alaska campaigns than Anchorage Attorney Robin Brena, who purchased Governor Walker’s law firm for an undisclosed amount in a transparency failure last year. Ever since, he has been part of the pay-to-play crony capitalist gang.

Brena has been the governor’s surrogate in recent election cycles, making sure that Democrats are competitive and, if he has his way, delivering the governor the legislature he wants and needs in order to tax Alaskans and rejigger the Permanent Fund in such a way that he can finance his gasline.

Last year, the Alaska Public Offices Commission launched an investigation into a group that Brena funded called Your Alaska Future, because it was “sanitizing” the source of the funds it was funneling into Gov. Bill Walker’s campaign. Deputy Chief of Staff for Walker, Marcia Davis, was the fall guy on that one, but her ultimate monetary punishment was bargained down to a slap on the wrist.

Read the recent history of The Brena Effect at the Alaska Energy Dudes and Divas website, where excellent research shows how Brena has donated $223,000 to Alaska Democrats in recent months. Here’s the list for his 2016 pre-primary donations, which total $48,000 to Big Labor-Vince Beltrami favorites, including the shadow government group Together for Alaska:

  • 01/27/16 $ 500.00 Shirley Ann Cote’
  • 10/22/15 $ 500.00 Eric Croft
  • 10/13/15 $ 500.00 Matt Claman
  • 06/29/1c $ 500.00 Jason Grenn
  • 07/15/16 $ 500.00 Paul Seaton
  • 07/12/16 $ 500.00 Jim Colver
  • 06/27/16 $ 500.00 Harry T. Crawford Jr.
  • 07/01/16 $500.00 Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins
  • 06/27/16 $ 500.00 Daniel (Dan) H Ortiz
  • 06/25/16 $ 5,000.00 House Democratic Campaign Committee
  • 06/24/16 $ 500.00 Matt Claman
  • 06/29/16 $ 500.00 Les Gara
  • 06/27/16 $ 500.00 Zach Fansler
  • 07/10/16 $ 500.00 Adam Wool
  • 06/27/16 $ 500.00 Ivy A Spohnholz
  • 06/12/16 $ 500.00 Luke Hopkins
  • 06/27/16 $ 500.00 Dean Westlake
  • 08/03/16 $35,000.00 Together for Alaska
  • 08/13/16 $ 500.00 Louise B. Stutes

Poll average: Alaska is solid for Murkowski win

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 SENATE RACES – SOLID R FOR ALASKA

First the good news: The US Senate will remain Republican-led after the November general election, according to a respected computer scientist, with Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski in the safe column. Murkowski is on the primary ballot for Aug. 16, facing lesser-known Republicans Paul Kendall, Thomas Lamb, and Bob Lochner. Democrats on the Aug. 16 ballot are Edgar Blatchford, Richard Grayson and Ray Metcalfe. Cean Stevens is the Libertarian.

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ALASKA’S THREE ELECTORAL VOTES ARE RED-PUBLICAN

Recent polling also makes it clear that, barring a major incident, Alaska’s three electoral college votes will be awarded to Donald Trump this November 8. But those three electoral college votes will not be enough.

Screen Shot 2016-08-15 at 6.33.22 AM

An analysis of major polling results (PPP, Rasmussen, ARG, university, Mason Dixon) puts  Hillary Clinton ahead with a more than two-to-one lead in the electoral vote hunt.

The site electoral-vote.com is the product of Andrew Tanenbaum, Ph.D., the author of MINIX, a Unix-like operating system that is used primarily in education. He is a U.S. citizen who teaches computer science at the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam.

And although Tanenbaum revealed a few years ago that he votes Democrat, his analysis examines with uncanny accuracy the recent data by drilling down to  the state level, which simulates the process by which electoral college votes are awarded. Plus, there are great charts at his site that track polling results after major news stories. For anyone who doesn’t think that news media coverage steers public opinion, take a look at what happened after the Khan controversy during the Democratic National Convention.

Trump’s state director is Jerry Ward, a former state senator who lives in Willow.

Smash-mouth election week III: Pirates, mudflats, and NRA grades for all

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AARGH, THE PIRATES THEME HITS

The primary election on Aug. 16 is a snoozer for some voters, but not if you’re in District L Senate race, in which the unions have decided to get involved in a big money way.

Unconventional social-media candidate Jeff Landfield had a rough week, being hit by both Natasha Von Imhof and Craig Johnson, and then getting a really unhelpful endorsement or two.

Natasha finally joined the fray by putting out a pirate-themed literature drop that dissed her two opponents humorously:

pirates

And then came the endorsement that no one wants from a web site that no one visits, but which is possibly still owned by the Senate Democratic Minority Press Secretary, Jeanne Devon, who lists herself as the site founder (retired, but not really).

Mudflats

The Shannyn Moore and Christopher Constant endorsements were merely icing on the cake:

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The fluffy puppies came out for Jeff in a video that also featured Andrew Halcro…can kittens be far behind?

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Over in the Craig Johnson for Senate camp, this flyer threw down the gauntlet on Second Amendment:

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MEANWHILE, IN THE DISTRICT 9 RACE,  SOCIAL MEDIA FAIL

A reader sent in this combination that appeared on his phone news feed today. The story is from a Jim Colver scandal from 2006 when he was on the Assembly, while the ad is for this race cycle. The social media ad just happened to pop up at the wrong time. Oops.

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‘LITTLE TRUMP’ AFTERGLOW

Reporter Nat Herz caught a clever Colver quote that…well, just read it:

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SENATE DISTRICT J CANDIDATE ED WESLEY FEELS THE BERN

Over in West Anchorage, Tom Begich is the establishment Democrat while Ed Wesley is carrying the torch for Bernie voters. We don’t have the heart to tell them they’re probably not voting in the primary:

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Tom Begich has The Boss Vince Beltrami in his corner, so we’re not sure Bernie’s going to be enough for Ed, what with all the union funds:

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EAGLE RIVER’S LAST-MINUTE AMBUSH

Rep. Lora Reinbold was pushed into a corner by Crystal Kennedy on an 2014 per-diem violation, and issued this press release:

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Bright and shiny objects: This Old House edition

 

Crew of This Old House stopped in Wasilla this month.
Crew of Ask This Old House stopped in Wasilla this month.

THIS LAST FRONTIER FIXER-UPPER

Season 15 of Ask This Old House on PBS will feature a homeowner in Wasilla, and is the first Alaska project for TOH, which has been on the air for 37 years.

The house belongs to the Kays family, and the project involves hardwiring a generator to the house electrical panel, in order to be able to power appliances, such as his well pump, in the event of a power outage. The crew was in Alaska last week to film the segment.

Ask This Old House involves smaller projects than the main TOH series. No word yet on when the series will air.

YIKES! FORMER REPORTER REMEMBERS COLVER — NOT FONDLY

Must Read Alaska obtained a letter from a former television news reporter. Here it is with some unflattering history of Jim Colver, who is in the battle of his political life for his legislative seat in District 9:

“I did an investigative story about Jim Colver and it aired on the old Channel 11 in 2006. It’s not on Channel 11’s page after the new ownership and the last 10 years, but the Frontiersman has the story in their archives. They wrote about it, too.

http://www.frontiersman.com/…/article_ff83c270-59b5-52a0-84…

http://www.frontiersman.com/…/article_35c08b59-31df-5e25-8b…

http://www.frontiersman.com/…/article_f3293599-dc2d-53d2-b0…

It’s my opinion, from doing my homework and listening to my sources, but I believe Colver wasn’t prosecuted because he and his lawyer just refused to answer the Palmer Police detective’s questions. My sources at the time told me how he bullied his way with borough staff to get access to the bids, something that would have disqualified a General Contractor. The assembly held an executive session over it. Then, Colver said he was going to withdraw from the project, costing the General Contractor, I believe, about $40K. You can go the Palmer Police to get a copy of the report. I’m not a reporter anymore. I thought you guys should know and pass it on before people vote on Tuesday.”

Consider it passed along.

GOVERNOR KEEPS HIRING, AND HIRING, AND HIRING

Jonathon Taylor
Jonathon Taylor

In addition to hiring several new special assistants, Governor Bill Walker has brought on a new deputy press secretary, who is a well-known member of the Alaska Republican Party.

Jonathon Taylor resigned from his District 23 chairmanship last month so he could take a job with the governor. He will eventually be based in Juneau.

Taylor was involved with College Republicans and was the commencement speaker for UAA this summer, where he graduated.

The governor has been on a spending spree lately, ignoring his own hiring freeze. He brought aboard former Apache oil company executive John Hendrix as an adviser to him on oil and gas. He also hired his own former law partner and attorney general Craig Richards, as an oil and gas consultant, a few weeks after Richards resigned.

Walker has also hired two new key advisers: The state’s former chief economist, John Tichotsky, who is one of the authors of Walker’s fiscal plan to restructure the Permanent Fund; and Ed King, a former analyst with the Department of Natural Resources.

The Governor already had seven other policy and budget specialists in his office, with Tichotsky and King bringing the count to nine.

Hendrix makes $180,000, while Tichotsky and King earn $128,000 and $104,000 respectively. The contract for Richards is elastic because it starts at $50,000 but can be amended indefinitely. Taylor, the newest hire, is likely in the $70,000 range.

MOST RIGHTEOUS T-SHIRT AWARD

Screen Shot 2016-08-13 at 5.39.58 PMT-shirt weather is still with us, and here’s one that dresses up nicely and has the most outstanding cause associated with it.

Governor Bill Walker visited King Cove this past week but almost did not get in due to low fog. He and First Lady Donna got a sample of what it’s like to try to get to King Cove when they were stuck in Cold Bay for two hours.

In spite of his special friendship with Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, Walker has not been able to convince the Obama Administration to build the life-saving road to Cold Bay.

The people of King Cove have worked for more than 30 years to build road  between their community to the all-weather Cold Bay Airport, some 25 miles away. The 11-mile road required would allow safe evacuation of seriously ill or injured residents when the King Cove area weather is too harsh for boat or plane — a frequent occurrence. But it goes through a bird refuge and so the Interior Department is saying no.

Walker met with Jewell and Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx in January, but his charm offense was all for naught: No road, even in 2016.

Since Secretary Jewell denied the road two in 2013, the town has had 46 medevacs. Of those, 17 involved the Coast Guard; 29 were non Coast Guard.

Candidate Walker was more brazen than Governor Walker. He claimed he’d get the road built if he had to ride a bulldozer and do it himself.

TOM BEGICH ADS HERE?

Readers in West Anchorage report numerous Tom Begich For Senate ads appearing on Must Read Alaska. They are social media buys placed by the candidate and targeted to voters in that district, where Democrats Begich and Ed Wesley are running to replace Sen. Johnny Ellis. Must Read apologizes for the inconvenience.

WHERE WE’LL BE ELECTION NIGHT

We’ll be hanging out at the Lakefront Hotel on Tuesday evening, starting at 5:30 pm where we’ll join you for bites and beverages and a fundraiser, and then we’ll stick around and watch the returns come in:

MAJORITY FUNDRAISER

election

 

 

 

Book Review: ‘Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS’

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Screen Shot 2016-08-04 at 6.32.50 PMISIS SPREAD WITH THE AID OF AMERICAN INTERVENTION 

Just yesterday we were discussing a new group of terrorists called al-Qaeda that had taken hold where Palestinian terrorists had left off.

We were debating Osama bin Laden origins, the pronunciation and spelling of al-Qaeda, and how widespread it might become. We were incorporating the word “jihadist” into our vocabulary, even as we were unsure of its meaning, other than “suicide bomber.”

Then, in 2015, a small and savage group called  ISIS – the Islamic State, in English – seemed to arise from the ashes of our war on terror.

How quickly ISIS, too, became an ordinary word in our vocabulary. President Obama called the group Daesh, almost defiantly, as though it was the right and respectful thing to do. Others in the media called it ISIL. But ISIS is the name that has stuck.

One minute Obama was calling ISIS a “junior varsity” group, and the next minute black flags were flying over Syria and Iraq.

ISIS has grown into a terror organization whose venom stretches across the world, with institutionalized rape, slavery, slaughter and bombings as its arsenal. Jets were blown apart in midair, and suicide bombings became commonplace. War on terror has seeped into our lives as a constant; children born in the year 2000 have never known a world without metal detectors, airport body patdowns, and terrorists.

Author Joby Warrick explores the rebuilding and rebranding of the Islamic state during the early 2000s. The author weaves the personal stories of the characters with the skill of a spy novelist, beginning with the hanging of a convicted female terrorist named Rashawi, who had failed to detonate her suicide bomb at a wedding in Jordan in 2005.

Warrick does a deep dive into the short and violent life of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the mastermind behind an Islamist movement, who became an avenging dark angel in search of power and destruction of the elite Middle East ruling class, building a terror network that has since spread across the world. Warrick follows the rise of this barely literate Bedouin tribesman from Jordan, who had the goal of establishing an Islamic caliphate unlike any other in history, and whose organization lives on, even after an U.S. airstrike killed him in June of 2006.

Black Flags is a riveting read. Warrick’s Washington Post beat is the Middle East and that’s given him access to CIA and Pentagon sources for many years. If you don’t get to it this summer, a television miniseries is in the works for HBO that you’ll not want to miss.