Friday, August 15, 2025
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Trump calls for special prosecutor to probe 2020 election fraud

President Donald Trump on Friday called for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the 2020 presidential election, alleging his oft-repeated claim that the race was fraught with fraud.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump wrote, “Biden was grossly incompetent, and the 2020 election was a total FRAUD!” He added that there is “MASSIVE and OVERWHELMING” evidence of fraud and called for a special prosecutor to ensure such an outcome “cannot be allowed to happen again.”

Trump’s renewed demand revisits a claim many have made since Trump’s 2020 loss to President Joe Biden, when, campaigning from his basement, Biden managed to lose all but one bellwether county in the entire nation, and yet still win the election with 81,283,501 votes. His unbelievable vote count set an all-time record and exceeded President Barack Obama’s previous record of 61,000,000 votes by 17%.

Several failed court challenges and investigations found no evidence of widespread fraud. But that came before a declassified FBI document, made public by FBI Director Kash Patel on June 16 and dated Sept. 25, 2020, from the FBI’s Albany, New York field office, showed that the Chinese Communist Party planned to produce and ship fake US driver’s licenses to facilitate fraudulent mail-in ballots in favor of Joe Biden. The document may prove that the CCP aimed to exploit mail-in voting by creating voter identities for Chinese residents in the US to cast these ballots. Customs and Border Protection data supports concerns about fraudulent documents, noting 1,513 seizures of fake documents, including 19,888 counterfeit US driver’s licenses, at Chicago O’Hare International Airport in the first half of 2020, mostly from China and Hong Kong.

The social media post comes amid a broader push by Trump to point out Biden’s cognitive decline and use of auto-pen to sign many important documents, including over 8,000 pardons and commutations. During his final weeks in office, Biden’s signature was done by auto-pen on all pardons except that of his son, Hunter Biden, whose pardon was signed by hand.

Trump’s call also follows a major legal win for his defense team last year, when a federal judge he appointed ruled that the appointment of Special Counsel Jack Smith was invalid. Smith had been tasked with investigating Trump’s actions surrounding the 2020 election and his retention of classified materials. The judge found that Smith’s appointment by then-Attorney General Merrick Garland lacked Senate confirmation, leading to the dismissal of the case.

As of June 20, no new special prosecutor has been appointed to investigate the 2020 election, and it remains unclear whether such a move would be legally or politically viable, especially considering Trump’s own legal precedent challenging special counsel appointments of Biden.

Tim Barto: A peaceful, prayerful gathering for life

By TIM BARTO   

Seeing the “mostly peaceful” but inevitably violent protests over the past week put many of us in the mood to turn the channel every time the angry, misguided miscreants appeared on the screen.

Burning American flags while proudly waving those of the countries they abandoned, throwing pre-staged bricks at motorists and law enforcement officers, as well as the obligatory and ubiquitous burning and looting that goes along with pretty much any gathering of left wing rent-a-mobs, has reached a saturation point. Reactions from patriots and common sense citizens has gone from disbelief and vitriolic anger to exasperated rolling of the eyes and shaking of heads.

So, with public demonstrations being anything but intriguing, a gathering at the corner of 5th and L on Tuesday afternoon was the last place this disillusioned author expected to find himself; however, Mary Kemper –- she of the ever present smile and eternal optimism –- planned a pro-life prayer vigil. And, except for the cold winds blowing off the inlet, it was a nice gathering, largely uneventful save the occasional middle finger thrust in our general direction by those who find moral clarity in getting angry at people who value pre-born babies. 

Mary helped organize the event alongside Students for Life, a group of high school and college students that buck the stereotype by advocating for pro-life causes. It’s a courageous act for these young people, especially considering the penchant the opposition has for screaming, belittling, and threatening violence against those who oppose them. 

Gio Moceri and Mari Ward are Students for Life leaders from Holy Rosary Academy, and they both spoke to the 40-person gathering. Joining Gio and Mari were students from Grace Christian and other Students for Life clubs in the area, as well as ten college student Catholic missionaries from Louisiana who are here in Alaska to help run vacation Bible schools.

How refreshing to have young people so dedicated to a wholesome cause that they are willing to show up on a busy street corner to publicly show their support. The gathering was Catholic led, as many pro-life marches and prayer vigils in Anchorage tend to be, with Father Whitney of St. Elizabeth Ann Seaton on hand to lead in prayer. 

Those of us of Protestant faiths were fully welcomed, albeit a bit lost (as usual) when it came time to pray the Rosary. The beads and repetitious “Hail Mary” prayers are unfamiliar territory for us. Luckily, Brendan, a young man entering his senior year at Grace Christian School and contemplating a future in the priesthood, was more than happy to provide me with a Rosary of my own and explanations for each stage, or decade, of the sacred ritual.

Mary Kemper was gracious enough to ask this author to say a few words about legislation before the state and federal legislatures, including:  

  • Sen. Shelley Hughes’ joint resolution clarifying that the Alaska Constitution does not – despite what certain judges say – guarantee a right to abort babies or use taxpayer money to do so, has not seen a hearing, but her courage to take such a stand is to be applauded. 
  • On the other hand, SB147, introduced by Sen. Cathy Giessel, opens up the ability for pharmacists to prescribe and dispense abortion pills, and is something that needs to be opposed.
  • On the federal side, the Big Beautiful Bill before the US Congress has provisions that will cut federal funding to organizations that perform abortions, to include Planned Parenthood, which aborts over 400,000 babies per year. It is this bill, in particular, that determined the location of Tuesday’s gathering. Directly across the street from the gathered at 5th and L are the Anchorage offices of US Senators Sullivan and Murkowski. 

Mary and the Students For Life leaders personally delivered letters for each of Alaska’s U.S. Senators and their staff members, encouraging them to keep the funding cuts in the bill. The letters were drafted collectively by more than 225,000 Students For Life members across the country; yet another encouraging action on the part of young people. 

Sullivan and Murkowski receive grades of C and D, respectively, from the Catholic Accountability Project, which scores the senators on their votes on social issues, with abortion-related topics being a priority. We can hope – or better yet, pray – that these two senators take into account their professed Catholic ideologies when voting on such matters.

Tim Barto is a regular contributor to Must Read Alaska, and vice president of Alaska Family Council.

Anchorage at a breaking point: Time to end the era of lawless encampments

By KEITH MCCORMICK, JARED GOECKER, SCOTT MYERS

Anchorage is at a crossroads. We have reached a point of normalizing the sprawling, unauthorized encampments that have taken over many of our public spaces. They cause serious harm to both the neighborhoods they spring up in and to the campers themselves, who often become trapped in cycles of addiction and dysfunction. There is no version of these camps that promotes well-being. They are fundamentally incompatible with healthy lives and with a healthy city. 

For too long, neighborhoods and public spaces have been taken over by encampments where drug use is rampant, women are being trafficked in plain sight, people are being murdered and hurt, and our parks, meant for children and families, are rendered unsafe. Anchorage’s timid, accommodating response to encampments is not mercy. It is not tolerance. It is abandonment. And it has allowed this problem to grow into a crisis.

That’s why we introduced AO 2025-74, an ordinance that clearly prohibits camping on public property and makes such conduct a Class B misdemeanor. This ordinance empowers our city to take swift, lawful action to restore public order while upholding the due process rights of individuals. This ordinance also gives the city the ability to divert people into mandatory rehab and treatment, a tool desperately needed to help break the cycle of addiction that has destroyed so many lives. 

This is not about punishing people for being homeless. We want services and support to be available to those who will take advantage of them. This is about drawing a firm line against the chaos unfolding in full view of all. This is about protecting the vulnerable — from residents afraid to let their children walk to school, to the individuals being trafficked or slowly dying in tents, out of sight and out of hope. Failing to act in the face of this growing crisis would not be compassionate; it would be cruel.

We’ve crafted AO 2025-74 in line with the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, which confirmed that municipalities have the right to regulate public spaces. Our ordinance focuses on conduct, not status. It is not illegal to be homeless, but it is no longer acceptable to turn our city’s greenbelts, sidewalks and bus stops into sites of criminal activity and human misery.

Enforcement is not the enemy of compassion. In fact, it is the first step towards real help. No outreach team can succeed in an environment where lawlessness is tolerated. No detox bed, housing program or shelter expansion will make a dent if we continue sending the message that anything goes in Anchorage’s public spaces.

We know this ordinance won’t solve everything overnight. But we also know that the hands-off approach adopted by the city in the past hasn’t worked. The result has been more deaths, more fires, more violence, more decay and a city in decline. It is time we acknowledge what everyone else sees plainly: this approach has failed. We need a reset. AO 2025-74 is that reset. 

Let’s stop pretending that tolerance of public camping is kindness or acting as if we can’t do anything about it. We need to recognize the problem, take action to fix it and start building a better, safer, and more dignified Anchorage together.

The public will have a chance to weigh in on this ordinance at the regular Assembly meeting at 6 pm on June 24 at the Loussac Library. We encourage everyone to show up, speak out and help us confront this issue with the seriousness it demands. 

Keith McCormick, Jared Goecker and Scott Myers serve on the Anchorage Assembly. McCormick is from South Anchorage, Girdwood and the Turnagain Arm area. Goecker and Myers are both in the Eagle River/Chugiak area.

Congressional ‘watchdog’ or partisan hit job? Dark money 907 Initiative is at it again

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The leftist political activist organization known as the 907 Initiative launched an online project in January — AKDelegationWatch.org — a self-described “resource for information about Alaska’s congressional delegation.” It’s one of the latest salvos in a series of partisan attacks on Republicans ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

Although the site bills itself as a neutral watchdog effort, its content relies heavily on mainstream media reporting and left-wing political blogs known for targeting Alaska Republicans. The site currently focuses on Rep. Nick Begich and Sen. Dan Sullivan, both of whom are expected to face re-election campaigns in 2026. The group is now advertising the website with Google ads.

This pattern of politically charged media efforts is not new for the 907 Initiative. Since its formation in 2022, the Anchorage-based nonprofit has positioned itself as a progressive advocacy organization, aligning with the Democratic Party. Founded by Democrat activists Aubrey Wieber, Sara Dykstra, and Kati Ward-Hamer, the group is now led by Debra Call, Eleanor Andrews, and Sydney Scout — all with histories in Democratic Party organizing or left-wing political circles, with Wieber as the executive director.

Despite presenting itself as a grassroots Alaska group, the 907 Initiative has ties to Arabella Advisors, a Washington, DC-based consulting firm known for managing billions in left-wing “dark money” to influence state and national politics. The 907 Initiative is also part of the national ProgressNow network, which describes its mission as creating a “never-ending progressive campaign” to advance leftist causes year-round.

Alaska’s conservative leaders have increasingly come under fire from the group. In 2021, the 907 Initiative mounted a campaign against Anchorage Mayor Dave Bronson during the municipal election cycle, culminating in a scathing “Annual Performance Report” in early 2024, just before the election, that accused his administration of mismanagement, poor hiring practices, and ethical lapses. A similar campaign was mounted against Gov. Mike Dunleavy over his veto of a bipartisan bill to boost school funding.

The organization has also backed progressive policies such as reviving defined-benefit pensions for public employees and increasing state spending on public education — all issues that reflect national Democratic priorities.

With AKDelegationWatch.org, the group is taking its messaging to the federal election level, using an investigative format to draw attention to what it portrays as the shortcomings of Alaska’s congressional Republicans Sen. Dan Sullivan and Congressman Nick Begich. Though no endorsements have been made, the timing and focus of the site suggest a coordinated campaign to soften the target on GOP incumbents ahead of the 2026 elections.

While the 907 Initiative claims to provide public accountability, it functions as an arm of the Democratic Party in Alaska — funded largely by out-of-state donors and modeled on a national playbook to shift red states blue through long-term advocacy. The group has a separate “action” arm run by the same people, where the actual campaigning takes place.

As 2026 approaches, Alaskans can expect to see more from the 907 Initiative, bringing dark Outside forces to bear in Alaska’s elections.

Gavin Newsom loses: Appeals court sides with Trump on use of National Guard

By DAVE MASON | THE CENTER SQUARE

Authority on deployment of the National Guard in California by the president was given approval late Thursday by a panel in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

A panel of three justices ruled unanimously to indefinitely block a June 12 U.S. District Court ruling that would have transferred control of the National Guard immediately back to California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. 

The ruling means second-term Republican President Donald Trump can keep control of the National Guard while Newsom proceeds with a lawsuit over the legality of Trump’s use of the National Guard to handle protests in downtown Los Angeles. The suit could ultimately end up in the U.S. Supreme Court.

The panel didn’t agree with the Trump administration that federalization of the National Guard can’t be reviewed by a court.

“We disagree with defendants’ primary argument that the president’s decision to federalize members of the California National Guard under 10 U.S.C. § 12406 is completely insulated from judicial review,” justices wrote in their opinion. “Nonetheless, we are persuaded that, under longstanding precedent interpreting the statutory predecessor to § 12406, our review of that decision must be highly deferential.”

Section 12406 of Title 10 of the U.S. Code covers the nation’s armed forces. Trump invoked Section 12406 to deploy 4,000 National Guard members on June 7 in response to protests and riots in downtown Los Angeles. Enforcement of federal law – anyone coming to America who is not a U.S. citizen must show a visa, or travel authorization, at a port of entry – by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was at the heart of the protests.

“Affording the president that deference, we conclude that it is likely that the president lawfully exercised his statutory authority under § 12406(3), which authorizes federalization of the National Guard when ‘the president is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States,'” the justices wrote.

Newsom expressed disappointment with the ruling but welcomed the justices’ rejection of Trump’s claims that he didn’t have to answer to a court about federalizing the California National Guard.

“The court rightly rejected Trump’s claim that he can do whatever he wants with the National Guard and not have to explain himself to a court,” Newsom said in a statement. “The president is not a king and is not above the law. We will press forward with our challenge to President Trump’s authoritarian use of U.S. military soldiers against citizens.”

The Trump administration is using National Guard members to guard federal buildings, and workers, in downtown Los Angeles. The administration is using Marines to guard a federal building and its workers near the University of California at Los Angeles, which is in a district about 14 miles from the downtown area.

Sun up … and sun still up: Alaska celebrates the longest day of the year on Friday

As the clock strikes 6:42 pm on Friday, June 20, the summer solstice will have arrived. Continuous daylight is already a feature for Alaskans as the days have grown longer since the 2024 winter solstice on Dec. 21 — but no sense in reminding readers that the shortest day is just 185 days away. And yet, there we did it.

Fairbanks has about 22 hours of daylight stretching from the early morning hours to after midnight. Even in Anchorage, more than 19 hours of sunshine illuminates the city, leaving only a faint, dusky twilight to mark the so-called night. Further north, towns above the Arctic Circle like Kotzebue and Utqiagvik are not getting any relief from the sun — and haven’t for weeks on end. There’s just no star-gazing at this time of year, unless you’re staring at the sun.

This unending sunlight is the result of Earth’s 23.5-degree axial tilt. As the planet orbits the sun, that tilt means the Northern Hemisphere leans toward the light in June. On the solstice, the sun reaches its highest and longest path through the sky, delivering maximum daylight and an annual turning point in Earth’s solar rhythm.

But in Alaska, this celestial alignment is more than an astronomical milestone — it’s a reason to party, and there will be parties in every corner of the state.

Tips about things to do, like hiking Flattop, can be found at Alaska.org.

One of the most storied solstice traditions in the state is at a Fairbanks baseball diamond: the Midnight Sun Game. Played since 1906 without artificial lights, the game starts in the late evening and continues under the golden afterglow of the barely setting sun. Around true midnight, players and fans pause to sing the Alaska Flag Song, a nod to tradition, pride, and the surreal beauty of the summer in Fairbanks.

In towns small and large, there will be potlucks, bonfires, dancing — and probably some drinking. Take it easy, if you’re driving.

And while the solstice is the longest day, it is not the hottest. That comes a couple of weeks later, as the land and water slowly warm in the long days that follow.

Anchorage communists don’t golf? PSL demands city convert golf course to vagrant tents and ban Airbnbs

The Party for Socialism and Liberation in Anchorage has kicked off a “Housing for All” campaign, presenting a sweeping platform of demands aimed at addressing the city’s mounting homelessness and housing crisis. The group, part of a national Marxist–Leninist party, is calling on the Municipality of Anchorage to take immediate action.

Here are the six key demands at the start of their campaign:

Designate the Anchorage Golf Course as a transitional housing area.
PSL proposes using the municipal Golf Course land to host temporary shelters and facilities for people experiencing homelessness, arguing that underused city land could serve urgent public need. The 18-hole public golf course is located on O’Malley Road, far from social services.

Most of Anchorage’s homeless population is made up of criminals, vagrants, and drug- and alcohol addicts who have already taken over many city parks and have used them for criminal activities including arson.

Ban all short‑term housing rentals.
They want the city to prohibit Airbnb-style rentals citywide, claiming such conversions reduce affordable housing stock and drive up rents.

Create a municipal housing authority.
PSL calls for a publicly controlled agency to oversee housing allocation, development, and regulation.

This proposal would likely lead to rent controls as in San Francisco and other socialist-run cities.

Seize abandoned properties through eminent domain.
The group advocates using city powers to take over ownership of unused buildings and land, then repurposing them for public housing.

Build social housing units.
PSL demands the development of municipally or publicly funded housing stock available at “affordable rates” that prioritize low-income residents.

Declare housing a public health emergency and a human right.
They urge the Assembly to pass resolutions recognizing the housing crisis as a health emergency—and ally it with a human‑rights framework.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation is a Marxist–Leninist political party associated with hardline Democrats that emerged nationally in 2004. It aims to replace capitalism with a socialist economy where basic needs, like housing, healthcare, and education, are guaranteed for all. In Anchorage, the PSL has been active in housing advocacy, staging winter shelter events and highlighting inequities in rental and homelessness trends.

Senate Finance unveils GOP plan to lock in Trump tax cuts, gut green spending

US Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo of Idaho this week released the legislative text under the committee’s jurisdiction for inclusion in Senate Republicans’ sweeping budget reconciliation bill. The proposed legislation is to make permanent the economic framework of President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax law while rolling back spending priorities from the Biden era.

The bill is designed to permanently extend provisions from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which are set to expire after 2025. Senate Republicans say the legislation would prevent what they describe as an impending $4 trillion tax increase and would offer new relief to middle-class families, whom they argue are still facing the effects of high inflation under the Biden administration.

“This bill prevents an over-$4 trillion tax hike and makes the successful 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent, enabling families and businesses to save and plan for the future,” Crapo said in a statement announcing the legislative release.

The bill includes additional tax benefits for families and businesses, while proposing long-term certainty for small and large companies through pro-growth tax incentives. It also introduces new measures designed to encourage domestic investment.

According to the Finance Committee’s summary, the legislation seeks cost savings by eliminating what Republicans call “Green New Deal” spending and by addressing fraud and inefficiencies in existing federal programs. GOP lawmakers say these steps will protect programs for the most vulnerable while reining in excessive government expenditures.

The proposal aligns closely with former President Trump’s current economic vision, which includes broad tax cuts, deregulation, and a shift away from environmental spending initiatives that gained traction during the Biden administration.

“I look forward to continued coordination with our colleagues in the House and the Administration to deliver President Trump’s bold economic agenda for the American people as quickly as possible,” Crapo said.

The bill’s release is another step in the budget reconciliation process, a legislative pathway that allows Senate Republicans to advance tax and spending policy with a simple majority vote, bypassing the 60-vote threshold typically required in the Senate.

Drugs, guns, and gangs: Feds strike back in Alaska “Operation Take Back America” crackdown

The Justice Department announced a sweeping law enforcement success in Alaska on Wednesday, with US Attorney Michael Heyman announcing that 39 defendants were criminally charged in the state so far, as part of Operation Take Back America, a national campaign to combat violent crime, drug trafficking, and transnational criminal organizations.

Launched on March 5, the initiative aims to “achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations, repel the invasion of illegal immigration, and protect our communities,” the department said. Alaska’s contributions to the campaign have already led to dozens of indictments for serious drug and violent offenses.

The operation is a coordinated effort involving the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Alaska, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Postal Inspection Service, and Homeland Security Investigations, as well as state and local law enforcement partners.

Among the 28 federal criminal cases filed in Alaska between Jan. 21 and June 10, three stand out as particularly egregious:

  • US v. Sean Mobley: Mobley, 45, is accused of distributing carfentanil, a synthetic opioid 10,000 times more potent than morphine, to two individuals, including a minor who died from the overdose. Prosecutors say Mobley disposed of the girl’s body along a remote ATV trail in Wasilla in the middle of the night. He faces a minimum of 20 years to life in prison if convicted.
  • US v. Corey Clifton and Elizabeth Cruickshank: Between August 2024 and February 2025, the pair allegedly distributed over 4.5 kilograms of fentanyl — equal to more than 42,000 pills — and laundered over $500,000 in drug proceeds. Clifton is also charged with illegal possession of firearms. They face a minimum of 10 years and up to life in prison.
  • US v. Alexander Kawanishi: Kawanishi, 32, allegedly shot a person in an Anchorage motel during a drug deal, then was later found armed and wearing body armor in a vehicle stuck in a snowbank. He had meth, fentanyl, cocaine, and three firearms in his possession. As a convicted felon, he could face up to 15 years in prison.

The 39 defendants span a range of serious criminal conduct, including drug trafficking, violent crime, and immigration violations. Some of the other notable cases charged include:

  • U.S. v. Greydanus et al. – drug trafficking
  • U.S. v. Miles et al. – drug trafficking
  • U.S. v. Rowcroft-Ivy – violent crime
  • U.S. v. Santiago-Martinez–  illegal immigrant

A complete alphabetical list of charged individuals is here.

Officials say the work is far from over. Operation Take Back America remains active, and future investigations and arrests are expected.

The prosecutions are being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys from the Criminal Division in Alaska. Federal officials commended both federal and local law enforcement partners for their contributions to the early success of the initiative.