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Fairbanks leftist Savannah Fletcher has a huge conflict of interest she did not disclose

Running for Senate for Fairbanks is an “undeclared” candidate who is working to trick voters into thinking she is independent. Recent actions reveal her true allegiances and raise questions about who owns her.

Savannah Fletcher, known by critics as “Havana Fletcher” has already paid over $1,000 to the Alaska Democratic Party to use the party’s voter database as part of its shared-services program for Democrat candidates. As a member of the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly, she is a far-left Democrat running as “undeclared,” which is becoming a standard model for Democrat candidates in the era of open primaries and ranked-choice general elections in Alaska.

The seat that is open has been held by Republican Sen. Click Bishop, who announced his retirement from the Senate earlier this year. Republican Rep. Mike Cronk, Republican activist James Squyres, and Alaskan Independence Party Bert Williams are also running.

Fletcher was recently the official who notoriously presided over the farcical ethics hearing, in which she allowed an attack on a fellow Assembly member, conservative Barbara Haney to proceed, although an ethics committee had advised against it.

Haney had written a column in the Fairbanks Daily News Miner in February and failed to use the precise words “in my opinion as a private citizen.”

Activist Kristen Schupp filed a complaint and the borough ethics committee took up the charge. The committee decided no action should be taken, because numerous other instances of letters to the editor by sitting Assembly members have been documented, and no one has ever made such an accusation.

But when the matter came before the Assembly on July 25, Fletcher led the charge to suppress the constitutionally protected right to free speech that Assembly members have.

Fletcher failed to disclose that a donation made to her Senate campaign by Schupp was not some casual $50 donation at a meet-and-greet, but was $2,500, which makes Schupp the single largest donor to Fletcher’s political ambitions.

Schupp’s husband donated $1,500 to Fletcher’s Senate campaign, and is her second-largest individual donor. Another family member of Schupp donated $500. In total, $5,000 has been donated to Fletcher’s campaign by Schupp-world.

Who knew that massage therapy was so profitable? Who knew that Schupp’s husband’s job with the Department of Environmental Conservation could be so lucrative?

These are not trivial “attending a meet and greet” type of donations. These are donations made in exchange for access, influence, and power. Even the unions that support Fletcher only gave her $1,000 each. When one considers the size and timing of the donations from the Schupp circle, it leaves one to speculate if there is influence peddling going on.

The conflicts don’t stop there. Assemblywoman Mindy O’Neal herself also had a conflict. More than one letter to the editor written by Mindy O’Neal were part of the packet submitted by Assemblywoman Haney in her defense.  Mindy O’Neal has been a prolific writer in the Fairbanks Daily News Miner, and only recently began writing “as a private citizen,” after the ethics complaint had been filed against Haney.

Previous letters frequently touted her position on the assembly in editorials and that makes O’Neal eligible for multiple ethics violations on the same part of code. She should have also conflicted out of the judgment on Haney, and should have conflicted out on the question of whether Fletcher had a conflict that would prevent her from presiding over the kangaroo court. Assemblyman Scott Crass also had a conflict, as the stepfather to the Burgess-Schupp’s children. However, Fletcher, who clearly has her own conflict, ruled he did not have a conflict.  

Liz Reeves Ramos declared a conflict, because the column written by Haney included statements made by Reeves Ramos in debate. She also stated she only had a casual acquaintance with Schupp, something that is provably false since there are photos of Schupp and Reeve Ramos together crashing Republican events as a duo.

That would have left four members without obvious conflicts. According to the rules of the Assembly, five members are needed.

Procedurally, if those with conflicts had conflicted out, the gavel would have tone to Assemblyman Brett Rotermund, who has since resigned the Assembly out of disgust over the proceedings.

Or alternatively, if the members with conflicts had been conflicted out of the matter, the question would have remained in limbo indefinitely — or the actual recommendations of the ethics committee to do nothing would have been adhered to.  

Was it the $5,000 in donations to Savannah Fletcher’s Senate campaign what made it impossible for Fletcher to ignore Schupp’s complaint against Haney and proceed with the kangaroo court?

Fletcher has received $5,000 in campaign contributions from the Alaska Senate Democratic Campaign Committee, and $1,000 from NEA-Alaska’s political action wing. Far from being an independent, she has shown herself to be the hardest of hard partisans.

Other fake independents will be covered in this series leading up to the Aug. 20 primary election.

Joe Geldhof: It’s time for a change of leadership in Juneau

By JOE GELDHOF

The decision by President Joe Biden to remove himself from the current presidential election was momentous.

Biden’s decsion to withdraw from the current presidential race has an analog in Juneau.

Juneau also needs new leadership at the top of the ticket. 

For too long, Juneau has wobbled along politically, spending funds freely and not really taking are of obvious issues that need attention. 

Juneau needs new political leadership. The sooner the better.

 This October, voters in Juneau will decide who will be our mayor and elect two members to the Assembly. Juneau needs leaders committed to fiscal responsibility.  Whether Juneau gets leaders committed to spending public funds wisely is the big issue this election cycle. 

For far too long, Juneau has borrowed and spent public funds unsustainably. 

The local Assembly sometimes avoids spending on critical needs yet pursues activities outside the core functions of local government.

The current Assembly has failed, in various ways, to seriously increase housing. Juneau’s streets and public areas, both downtown and in the Mendenhall Valley, have increasing numbers of individuals with afflictions who routinely engage in belligerent and socially unacceptable conduct. Is Juneau better off than Anchorage in this regard.  Probably, but is that standard to apply?

The situation with the increasing numbers of unhoused individuals in Juneau who present a danger to themselves, and the public is obvious. Significantly, this concern has not been satisfactorily addressed by the Assembly. 

Juneau’s Assembly has also failed to address obvious issues related to large-scale cruise tourism. The result is an ill-conceived initiative that would harm Juneau’s economic well-being and likely result in litigation based on constitutional provisions. 

As someone who has drafted and worked on enactment of local and state-wide initiatives in the past, make no mistake about what drives citizens to go through the hard work that the initiative process requires.  At bottom of almost every initiative is a failure by elected officials to address legitimate concerns on the part of the electorate. 

Juneau’s population is flat, and our school enrollment is shrinking.

Juneau property assessments have been needlessly inflated based on dubious methodology that radically escalated taxation in a way that deviated from actual property values. 

All of which calls into question not only the local Assembly but the leadership of Juneau’s current mayor.

Beth Weldon has had six years as the Mayor of Juneau to demonstrate she is up to the job. She’s failed.

Under Weldon’s tenure, as Mayor she attempted to ram through a new City Hall that was twice rejected by the voters. 

Mayor Weldon is part of a process where some staff are selected based on connections instead of competence.

Weldon and the Assembly have not made meaningful progress addressing seemingly mundane but important issues like where Juneau will dump our trash in a landfill that will soon be full.

Instead of sticking to the basics Juneau residents need, Mayor Weldon and the Assembly adopted a new voting system that is expensive, takes longer to produce results and increases the possibility of voting abuse.  This  move to ditch the tried-and-true voting system that worked for decades in Juneau was enacted with little public notice or opportunity for the public to comment during the pandemic.

Discretionary spending in our community is increasing, even as some core services are cut or held below minimal standards. And now, Mayor Weldon is leading the charge to borrow funds (via issuance of bonds), to replace a portion of the infrastructure at the sewage treatment plant that should be paid using user fees. 

Borrowing for maintenance instead of using user fees is an odd form of transaction in this case,  an obvious indication of fiscal irresponsibility and reason enough to question the Mayor’s financial acumen.

Juneau needs a mayor committed to addressing actual problems and someone prepared to get essential tasks completed instead of fooling around with discretionary spending on activities that don’t always support the basic needs of citizens.

At present, and for several years, the CBJ has been sitting on millions of dollars of tax revenue that could be used to lower property taxes or dedicated to vital services. The mayor and her colleagues on the current Assembly have created a significant slush fund in excess of customary reserves necessary for efficient governmental operations.  

The mayor and her colleagues on the Assembly seem content to hold on to these funds for future spending on projects and programs that are not necessary to meet the actual needs of  Juneau residents. 

Juneau needs and deserves new leadership — the kind that is committed to meeting the essential needs of this community in a fiscally competent and responsible manner. 

The end to the fluff and silliness that is characteristic of some city hall spending will only come about if the voters wake up and provide genuine leadership. 

If Juneau is going to be an affordable, safe, and enjoyable place to live, we need a new mayor who will thoughtfully deliver what we need and can afford. 

Vote for change – real change – in October. 

Joe Geldhof has been a resident of Juneau since 1979.

Fairbanks’ airport robotic dog has a pronoun (she/her) and is a first for an American airport

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The jokes are going to write themselves. The Fairbanks International Airport has started using a robotic dog to scare off birds and other wildlife that can pose a threat to aviation. The robot’s name is “Aurora” and the Alaska Department of Transportation refers to it as a “her” in the press release:

“Aurora, named after Alaska’s famous northern lights, is a technologically advanced robot with the capability to navigate rugged terrains and endure harsh weather conditions prevalent in Interior Alaska,” DOT said. “Her deployment at FAI marks the first time an American airport is utilizing a robotic dog for active wildlife control, setting a precedent for innovation in airport safety and wildlife management.

“Aurora can operate for 90 minutes at time and takes 30 minutes to charge completely. Aurora’s handler controls her movements by utilizing a handheld remote which allows them to see what she sees and determine the method of approach. She comes equipped with the ability to crawl, crouch, walk and sit. The scope of her abilities includes data collection, species identification, wildlife mitigation, and notification,” the department said.

The Department of Transportation is beta-testing this robotic dog and will consider deploying models like it at other airports in the state. Aurora is equipped with advanced sensors and programmable capabilities to patrol the airport grounds actively, deterring wildlife from entering runways and aircraft operation areas.

Alaska Democratic Party raises funds to defend ranked choice voting

The Alaska Democratic Party realizes that ranked-choice voting was a big win for their candidates in 2022, and so it hopes that Democrat Presidential candidate Kamala Harris will win Alaska because of ranked-choice voting, if only Alaskans will donate money to the party.

The latest fundraising letter says that Harris will be the best choice for Alaska because she is not an extremist and will work on the “issues that Alaskans care about most.” The party said nothing about the coup that it just conducted on the sitting president.

“Ranked-choice voting helps ensure that our leaders represent the interests of ALL Alaskans by requiring candidates to receive support from a majority of voters, taking power out of the hands of dark-money special interest groups, and giving it back to the people!” the party wrote in its letter.

This will be the first time ranked-choice voting is used in a Presidential election. With Vice President Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket, Alaska Republicans are desperate to repeal ranked-choice and push through their extreme agenda!” said the party that represents 73,500 voters in Alaska.

“Make no mistake: the future of ranked-choice voting may be on the ballot this November, and we need your help to reach voters across the state to let them know what’s at stake this election,” the fundraising letter said, then asking for $10 to “build up our voter outreach, education and turnout efforts so we can defend ranked-choice voting.”

The presidential race does not appear on the Aug. 20 primary ballot because the parties still are allowed to choose their candidates for the November ballot. But when November comes, voters will get to rank their first, second, third, and fourth choices for president.

Now that the Democrats don’t have to worry about defending Joe Biden’s dementia, the tone of their fundraising letters are more upbeat than last month, when they wrote, “We are writing to ask if there’s anything we can say to convince you to make a contribution to the Democratic National Committee today.

This November, Alaskans will have the opportunity to undo the ranked-choice voting system. This year’s Ballot Measure 2 would would return Alaska to semi-partisan primaries. General elections would be decided by the usual form of voting, with whoever getting the most votes wins. It’s also known as plurality voting. The Democrats will be working to try to defeat this initiative.

Momentum: District 8 Republicans endorse Nick Begich for Congress

Republicans in House District 8, the Nikiski area of the Kenai Peninsula, have voted unanimously to endorse Nick Begich for Congress.

It’s the third Republican Party district group to do so in just a few weeks. Also endorsing Begich are six of the seven Republican women’s clubs in Alaska, which provide a lot of help to the candidates they support. Alaska Young Republicans, known as the YRs, also endorsed Begich. District 26 and 34 were the first two district subdivisions of the Alaska Republican Party, to announce their endorsements.

Altogether, that makes 10 districts and clubs that have endorsed Begich, who is the only Republican who is endorsed by any Republican group or district in Alaska.

Begich also has the endorsement from the U.S. House Freedom Caucus, Sen. Mike Lee, Rep. Scott Perry, and Rep. Byron Donalds, who is in Donald Trump’s inner circle. Trump, at the request of the National Republican Congressional Committee and Gov. Mike Dunleavy, endorsed Nancy Dahlstrom, creating a split in the party leadership, although the grassroots across the state seems to be “sticking with Nick.”

The Alaska primary is Aug. 20, with early voting starting Aug. 5. That includes absentee in-person, early vote, electronic transmission, and special needs voting. There are 12 candidates on the ballot, with Democrat Rep. Mary Peltola trying to keep her seat for a second term. Sample ballots for each Alaska House district can be found at this link.

They’re not budging: Another leading Republican women’s club endorses Nick Begich for Congress

Hunger games: France withholds high-quality protein from Olympic athletes, pushes plant-based foods

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The organizers of the Paris 2024 Olympics have not provided enough high-protein foods for the athletes attending, and the team from Great Britain has been forced to fly in its own cook, after shortages of chicken and eggs and even the serving of uncooked meat added to the problem of poor food quality.

Andy Anson, the British Olympic Association’s chief executive, told The Times of London that the food in the village “is not adequate” and “a dramatic” improvement is needed.

“British athletes have even taken to bringing back to the village packed lunches for their evening meal. In one of the gastronomic capitals of the world, catering organisers admitted to some supply issues and have promised to rectify the situation,” the Times wrote.

“There are not enough of certain foods: eggs, chicken, certain carbohydrates, and then there is the quality of the food, with raw meat being served to athletes,” Anson said. “They have got to improve it over the next couple of days dramatically.”

“They are saying the Games are more sustainable and there is way more plant-based food but sometimes if you go at peak times it’s challenging to even get a piece of chicken,” said one athlete, who asked to be kept anonymous.

The news of the lack of high-quality food comes as the United Nations and the Paris Climate Agreement has reworked the expectations of the host country to make this year’s Olympics the first-ever “carbon neutral games.”  

Read the story at The Times of London.

Mixed messages: FBI now says it was a bullet that struck Trump’s ear

After Federal Bureau of Investigations Director Christopher Wray told the House Judiciary Committee earlier this week that he wasn’t sure it was actually a bullet that struck Donald Trump on June 27 during a rally in Butler, Penn., the F.B.I. has pivoted.

Now, the agency says it was a bullet.

“What struck former President Trump in the ear was a bullet, whether whole or fragmented into smaller pieces, fired from the deceased subject’s rifle,” the F.B.I. statement said.

What Wray told Congress was, ““As I said, I think with respect to former President Trump, there’s some question about whether or not it’s bullet or shrapnel that hit his ear,” leaving the question open as to whether it was a bullet or some undefined object.

Dr. Ronny Jackson, the former physician to the president and now a member of Congress representing Texas, released a statement on Friday, in his role as a medical consultant to Trump, responding to the F.Bl.I.’s mixed messages. It follows:

Update on the health of President Donald J. Trump


“As the former Physician to the President for President Donald J. Trump, I have continued to monitor his health and well-being, along with his primary care physician, since the assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania on the evening of July 13″‘. The would-be assassin fired multiple rounds from a relatively close distance using a high-powered rifle, with one bullet striking the former President, and now the Republican Nominee for President, in his right ear.

“I have reviewed President Trump’s medical records from Butler Memorial Hospital, where he was initially evaluated and treated for a ‘Gunshot Wound to the Right Ear.’ Having served as an Emergency Medicine physician for over 20 years in the United States Navy, including as a combat physician on the battlefield in Iraq, I have treated many gunshot wounds in my career. Based on my direct observations of the injury, my relevant clinical background, and my significant experience evaluating and treating patients with similar wounds, I completely concur with the initial assessment and treatment provided by the doctors and nurses at Butler Memorial Hospital on the day of the shooting.

“During the Congressional Hearing two days ago, FBI Director Christopher Wray suggested that it could be a bullet, shrapnel, or glass. There is absolutely no evidence that it was anything other than a bullet. Congress should correct the record as confirmed by both the hospital and myself. Director Wray is wrong and inappropriate to suggest anything else.
As a former White House Physician for 14 years, who served during three presidential administrations, and served as the appointed physician for both President Obama and President Trump, I fully understand the global significance of this attempt on the life of the former President and the current Republican Nominee for President. As such, I want to reassure the American people and the rest of the world, that President Trump is doing extremely well. He is rapidly recovering from the gunshot wound to his right ear. I will continue to be available to assist President Trump and his personal physician in any way they see fit and will provide updates as necessary and with the permission of President Trump.”

Breaking: Fairbanks assemblyman resigns after Assembly majority censures another member’s free speech

Brett Rotermund, serving on the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly, has resigned his seat in protest of the Assembly censuring Assemblywoman Barbara Haney, a fellow conservative, over having expressed her opinion.

Haney wrote an opinion column in the Fairbanks New Miner, and the editors added to the end of it that she serves on the Assembly. The reference had not been included by Haney, but a radical in the Fairbanks community lodged an ethics complaint about the reference, and during Thursday’s meeting, the Assembly majority censured Haney and fined her $1.

Rotermund resigned because he believes the Assembly has violated the Constitution. The leftists on the Assembly were saying that Assembly members have no right to any public communication without a disclaimer — email, campaign literature, op-eds included, but not, apparently, verbal communication, only written. Borough code they cited her under says “all communication,” which implies op-eds have to have a “paid for” disclaimer on them.

The presiding officer of the Assembly, Savannah Fletcher, is running for state Senate. She is a specialist in using law fare to get her way and suppress the rights of others and is associated with the Northern Justice Project. As an attorney, she has gone after Rep. David Eastman, Rep. Kevin McCabe, Sen. Lora Reinbold, the Mat-Su School District, and others.

Video: France insults Christianity with drag rendition of the Last Supper at Olympics opening ceremony

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One of the featured acts for the opening ceremonies of the Olympic Games in Paris on Friday was a drag performance that recreated the Last Supper, the final time that Jesus broke bread with his disciples before he was arrested and hung on a cross.

The burlesque act that mocked one of Christianity’s most sacred moments shocked Christians around the world. The Last Supper marks the first-ever sacrament of Holy Communion, through which Christians are symbolically united with Christ and receive His grace and forgiveness.

The Last Supper living diorama was not the only drag event starting the Olympics. The Friday night show featured men in drag grotesquely parading, gyrating, and preening for the thousands of people from around the world who are attending the opening ceremony, which is scheduled to last three hours.

“Queens everywhere! We couldn’t be happier about this huge moment for drag performers breaking through the mainstream and showing their talents to the entire world,” wrote Out magazine, a publication for LGBTQ. Some 320,000 are expected to be in Paris for the international athletics competition.

The show this year is a far cry from the opening ceremony in 2008, when 2,008 drummers performed at the Beijing Olympics.