Thursday, June 18, 2026
Home Blog Page 496

Julie Kitka announces retirement from presidency of Alaska Federation of Natives

12

Julie Kitka, who has served as president of Alaska Federation of Natives for 33 years, is retiring, the board announced on Friday.

The board of directors of the highly political Alaska Native organization has developed a succession and search committee “and will be casting a wide net to seek diverse candidates with strong commitments to serving the Alaska Native community”

The position will be announced and open for application in March, with the new president in place by the time the 2024 AFN convention convenes Oct. 17-19 at the Dena’ina Civic & Convention Center in Anchorage.

AFN was started in 1966 to address Alaska Native land rights, and was formally incorporated in 1967. Over the past few years it has become stridently leftist and anti-development, to the point where some Alaska Native corporations, such as Arctic Slope Regional Corporation, Doyon, and Aleut Corporation withdrew from the organization. Tlingit and Haida Tribal Central Council and Tanana Chiefs Conference, which represents 39 Alaska Native villages and 37 federally recognized tribes in the Interior, also left in 2023. The village of Barrow also withdrew.

Kitka was born in Cordova to a father of Eskimo and Chugach lineage and a mother who was of German descent. After graduating from Alaska Pacific University, she started as a bookkeeper at AFN, and rose to become its president within eight years; she is the longest-serving president in the organization’s history.

During her time as president, the storied organization has drifted into national missions, such as support for Black Lives Matter, in spite of unlawful and violent riots during 2020 in the lead-up to the elections. Kitka called for the resignation of President Donald Trump after some of his supporters made a surge into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The organization endorsed then-Sen. Mark Begich in 2014 for Senate, rather than his Republican challenger Dan Sullivan, and Democrat Mary Peltola for Congress during 2022’s election cycle. It also endorsed Sen. Lisa Murkowski over Kelly Tshibaka that year.

In 2023, the organization approved a resolution supporting the new ranked-choice voting and open primary system now implemented in Alaska elections, which is also supported by liberal entities.

ConocoPhillips earnings: Net income of $1.8 billion, and paid $1.8 billion in taxes and royalties

8

ConocoPhillips Alaska reported the following earnings for 2023, with net income of $1.8 billion, and taxes and royalties of $1.8 billion. The State of Alaska got $1.2 billion of that, and $600 million went to the federal government.

Also in 2023, ConocoPhillips Alaska invested $1.7 billion in capital projects.

Additionally, for the full year of 2023, ConocoPhillips Alaska invested $1.7 billion in capital.

“On December 22, 2023, ConocoPhillips announced that it will move forward with development of the Willow project. The Final Investment Decision, which approves the project and funds construction needed to reach first oil, is a significant milestone for Alaska and the company,” said Erec Isaacson, president, ConocoPhillips Alaska. “Winter construction season is underway supporting thousands of jobs and the Alaska economy.”

“ConocoPhillips remains committed to investing in projects on the North Slope that will deliver new barrels and contribute significantly to the State’s economy through job growth and revenue generation. Alaska’s existing fiscal regime is key to promoting a stable environment for ongoing investment and helped make the Willow project a reality.”

Since 2007, ConocoPhillips Alaska has incurred more than $44 billion in taxes and royalties to the State of Alaska and the federal government. Of that amount, about $34 billion went directly to the state. In that same period, ConocoPhillips Alaska’s earnings have been approximately $26 billion.

Mary Peltola’s assessment of Biden’s mental acuity: ‘One of the smartest, sharpest people I’ve met in D.C.’

President Joe Biden was the butt of jokes far and wide on Friday, after his Thursday press conference mixup, when he confused Mexico’s president with Egypt’s president.

He was trying to do damage control after a special counsel assessed him as “an elderly man with a poor memory” who failed to recall basic facts of his life and career, even momentous ones, such as when his son Beau died and when he was vice president.

Biden only gave more kindling to the fire growing around him as the public begins to realize how far gone his mind really is.

The critics of social media were way ahead of him, including Western Lensman, a X/Twitter account that put together a montage of Biden flubs.

Yet while others are piling on, Alaska’s Rep. Mary Peltola is a Biden loyalist.

On Meet the Press in late December, Peltola defended Biden as mentally sharp and that  “as a native person, I think age is a good thing. Wisdom and experience are a good thing.”

“I think that Joe Biden’s mental acuity is very, very on. He’s one of the smartest, sharpest people I’ve met in D.C.,” Peltola told the camera.

The White House came out blasting on Friday, with a rarely heard-from spokesman from the White House, Ian Sams, saying that the special counsel’s report assessment of Biden’s mental frailty was “inappropriate” and “gratuitous.”

Although the report that details Biden’s decades-long sloppy storage of classified documents, it recommends that charges against Biden would be difficult to prove because of his age and loss of memory.

“When the inevitable conclusion is that the facts and the evidence don’t support any charges, you’re left to wonder why this report spends time making gratuitous and inappropriate criticisms of the president,” Sams told reporters.

The report by Robert Hur also was criticized by Vice President Kamala Harris as politically motivated.

“So the way the president’s demeanor in that report was characterized could not be more wrong on the facts, and clearly politically motivated. And so I will say, when it comes to the role and responsibility of a prosecutor in a situation like that, we should expect that there would be a higher level of integrity than what we saw,” Vice President Harris said.

Hur initially was appointed by President Donald Trump to a position in the Department of Justice, but it was Attorney General Merrick Garland who appointed him as special counsel. In effect, Vice President Harris was criticizing her own attorney general’s pick.

A former White House doctor has now wondered aloud whether it is time to invoke the 25th Amendment to the Constitution and remove the president.

Rep. Ronny Jackson, who was the White House doctor for 14 years, said the Hur report is “validation” that Biden is suffering from a “significantly limited” memory issues, and that “we’re at the point now where they should be thinking about” invoking the 25th Amendment.

“He’s our Commander-in-Chief, our head of state and you know, if he can’t stand trial, because of his cognitive issues, I mean, it goes without saying that he can’t be the president of the United States. And so then he gets on TV and he tries to refute this. And he makes it even worse,” Jackson said to Breitbart News.

Sen. Rand Paul, jesting on X/Twitter, noted, “Gonna build a wall with Gaza and make Mexico pay for it and boy are they gonna be confused.”

Nikki Haley signs a team to lead her Alaska effort

The campaign of Nikki Haley gave the news to Alaska Public Media: She has added Art Hackney, Alaska political consultant, to lead the effort to get Alaska Republicans to support her campaign. And she has assembled a team of supporters that includes former Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell, Sen. Bert Stedman of Sitka, and Rep. Louise Stutes of Kodiak. The rest of the list was not revealed by Alaska Public Media, but Must Read Alaska has acquired it from several sources:

Haley’s Alaska Leadership Team:

  • Statewide Co-Chair: Art Hackney, Chairman Emeritus, American Association of Political Consultants
  • Anchorage Co-Chair: Curtis Thayer, Executive Director of Alaska Energy Authority
  • Anchorage Co-Chair: Sara Rasmussen, Former State Representative
  • Anchorage Co-Chair: Natasha von Imhof: Former State Senator, Co-Chair of the Senate Finance Committee
  • Eagle River Co-Chair: Kai Binkley-Sims, Businesswoman
  • Fairbanks Co-Chair: David Pruhs, Mayor of Fairbanks
  • Mat-Su Co-Chair: Glenda Ledford, Mayor of Wasilla
  • Kenai Peninsula Co-Chair: Tom Wright, Senior Legislative Aide, Commercial Fisherman
  • Southeast Co-Chair: Laraine Derr, Board Member, Greater Juneau Chamber of Commerce

Endorsers:

  • Bert Stedman: State Senator, Co-Chair of the Senate Finance Committee
  • Louise Stutes: State Representative, Former Speaker of the House
  • Jay Ramras: Former State Representative
  • John Harris: Former Speaker of the House
  • Mead Treadwell: Former Lieutenant Governor
  • Ralph Samuels: Former State Representative
  • Anna Mackinnon: Former State Representative, State Senator
  • Jennifer Johnston: Former State Representative, Co-Chair, Finance Committee
  • Charisse Millett: Former Statehouse Majority Leader
  • Lesil McGuire: Former State Representative, State Senator
  • Sheila Cernich: Officer, Anchorage Republican Women’s Club
  • Miranda Strong: Former General Counsel, Alaska Republican Party
  • Eddie Grasser: Director of Wildlife Conservation, Department of Fish and Game
  • John Sims: President, ENSTAR Natural Gas
  • Perry Green: Member, American Israel Public Affairs Committee
  • Lottie Michael: Commercial Real Estate Developer
  • Tyra Chandler: Anchorage businesswoman
  • Amber McDonald: Anchorage businesswoman
  • Athena Fulton: Real Estate Consultant
  • Ashley Reed: Government Relations & Public Affairs Consultant
  • Ginger Johnson: Former Legislative Assistant, Department of Transportation
  • Gale Vandor: Former Director, Alaska Division of Vocational Rehabilitation
  • Angela Rodell: Former Executive Director, Alaska Permanent Fund
  • Mike Welch: Mayor of North Pole
  • Madison Fagnani: Anchorage businesswoman
  • Cherie Curry: Media Consultant and Strategist
  • Mary Ann Pease: Regulatory/Government Affairs Consultant
  • Kati Capozzi: President & CEO, Alaska State Chamber of Commerce

The Haley team is going to focus on getting out the vote for the GOP Presidential Preference Poll, which is being held by the Republican Party on Super Tuesday, March 5.

Trump wins Nevada Republican Caucus with 97.6% of the vote

Two days after Republican candidate Nikki Haley lost the Nevada Republican primary to “none of these,” in a primary run by the Nevada Secretary of State, former President Donald Trump won the Nevada Republican Caucus on Thursday, which means he will get all of the 26 Nevada GOP delegates to the Republican National Nominating Convention in July.

Trump received 97.6% of the vote. Only one other candidate was participating — Ryan Binkley, who had 2.4%. (Note: He is not the Ryan Binkley who is president of the Anchorage Daily News).

Trump didn’t take part in the non-binding primary that the state ran, but Haley did. She took second after “none of these candidates” received the most votes.

There was confusion in Nevada after the state decided to do a primary, but the Republican Party said it would stick to its own nominating process, via caucus. Primary ballots were mailed out to eligible voters and Nevadans were also able to vote in person. For the caucuses, voters had to attend in person from 5-7.30 pm PT at their local GOP polling location and provide photo ID in order to participate.

In the Nevada Democrat Primary, Biden won with 112,611 votes and gets 36 delegates at the Democrat Party’s national convention. On Thursday, Marianne Williamson, a self-help guru running as a Democrat for president, suspended her campaign.

“We did what we could to shed some light in some very darkened times. For that I will always be so grateful,” Williamson said on social media.

Trump is far-and-away leading in the delegate count in the march toward the national GOP convention.

The Virgin Islands also held their GOP caucus on Thursday and Trump won 74% of the vote, getting all four delegates. The vote was 184 for Trump, 62 for Haley.

There are 2,429 delegates total available for the GOP convention in Milwaukee, which takes place July 15–18, and 1,215 delegates are needed to win the nomination. With 157 days to go, Trump now has 62 delegates, while Haley trails at 18.

The next primary contest is in Haley’s home state of South Carolina, where she served as governor from 2011 to 2017. That primary will be held Saturday, Feb. 24, 15 days from this writing. Fifty delegates to the Republican National Convention will be allocated on a winner-takes-all basis.

Morning Consult, a polling firm, has Trump leading Haley, who served as his ambassador to the United Nations, among registered voters (of any party or those with no party) who say they will vote in the South Carolina Republican primary. Trump leads with 68% to Haley’s 31%. South Carolina allows anyone to vote in either the Republican or Democrat primary, but if they have already voted in the Democrat primary of Feb. 3, they will not be able to vote in the Republican primary.

The Democrats held their primary in South Carolina on a different date because they were instructed to do so by President Joe Biden, who wanted the Palmetto State to go first before New Hampshire, since blacks in South Carolina helped him win in 2020. He won the Feb. 3 primary with 126,336 votes, over 96% of those who voted, giving him 65 delegates.

On the website Fivethirtyeight.com, which aggregates polling, Trump is now polling at nearly 76% among likely Republican voters, and Haley is polling at nearly 18%, in polls done nationally.

Biden lashes back on report’s competency concerns: ‘How in the hell dare he raise that?’ Then, he mixes up presidents of Mexico and Egypt

In a surprise live video appearance on Thursday, President Joe Biden hit back at the characterization of him as a well-meaning but forgetful old man. His appearance at a podium in the White House was in response to a special counsel report to the Department of Justice concerning Biden’s decades-long habit of storing classified documents in his garage and other places.

The report said the president could not remember important details, such as when his son Beau died or when he was Vice President.

Yet Biden fumbled badly during the press conference.

In answering a reporter’s question he confused Egyptian Head of State Abdel Fattah El-Sisi by calling him with the president of Mexico.

“As you know, initially, the president of Mexico, Sisi, did not want to open up the gate to allow humanitarian material to get in,” Biden said, when asked about the border between Gaza and Egypt. “I talked to him. I convinced him to open the gate.”

He did not appear to realize he had confused the names of Mexico President Andrés Manuel López Obrador with El-Sisi of Egypt.

The C-SPAN link to that section of his remarks is here.

In referring to the special counsel report, Biden said, “I’m well-meaning, and I’m an elderly man, and I know what the hell I’m doing. I’ve been president, and I put this country back on its feet. I don’t need his recommendation. That’s totally out –“

A Fox News reporter asked him, “How bad is your memory? And can you continue as president?”

“My memory is so bad I let you speak,” he replied.

A reporter asked him, “Do you feel your memory has gotten worse, Mr. President?”

“No, look, my memory is not — my memory is fine. My memory — take a look at what I’ve done since I’ve become president. None of you thought I could pass any of the things I got passed. How did that happen? You know, I guess I just forgot what was going on,” Biden responded.

He also commented on the report’s allegation that he could not remember when his son died.

“The decision to decline criminal charges was straightforward. The evidence suggests that Mr. Biden did not willfully retain these documents. The evidence, he said, I did not willfully retain these documents. In addition, I know there’s some attention paid to some language in the report about my recollection of events. There’s even reference that I don’t remember when my son died.

“How in the hell dare he raise that? Frankly, when I was asked the question, I thought to myself, it wasn’t any of their damn business. Let me tell you something. Some of you have commented I wear, since the day he died, every single day the rosary he got from our lady of — every Memorial Day, we hold a service remembering him, attended by friends and family and the people who loved him.”

He continued, “I don’t need anyone. I don’t need anyone to remind me when he passed away — or he passed away. Simple truth is I sat for five-hour interview over two days of events going back 40 years. At the same time, I was managing an international crisis. Their task was to make a decision about whether to move forward with charges in this case.”

The White House also published a written statement from Biden about the report. It says, in full:

“The Special Counsel released today its findings about its look into my handling of classified documents. I was pleased to see they reached the conclusion I believed all along they would reach – that there would be no charges brought in this case and the matter is now closed.
 
“This was an exhaustive investigation going back more than 40 years, even into the 1970s when I was a young Senator. I cooperated completely, threw up no roadblocks, and sought no delays. In fact, I was so determined to give the Special Counsel what they needed that I went forward with five hours of in-person interviews over two days on October 8th and 9th of last year, even though Israel had just been attacked on October 7th and I was in the middle of handling an international crisis. I just believed that’s what I owed the American people so they could know no charges would be brought and the matter closed.
 
“Over my career in public service, I have always worked to protect America’s security. I take these issues seriously and no one has ever questioned that.”

Watch the extended version of his remarks at this C-SPAN link.

The Biden handlers do not put the president in front of the press corps for live press conferences often. In fact, Biden has held fewer solo news conferences with American reporters than any previous president except Reagan.

Presidents Barack Obama held 44 and Donald Trump 64 solo press conferences during their respective eight and four years in office. Biden has had a total of 14 solo press conferences in his three years, according to the American Presidency Project.

Passengers reported a ‘whistling sound’ from door plug on prior flight of Alaska Airlines 737-9 MAX

More passengers have joined a lawsuit against Alaska Airlines over a midair door plug blowout of a Boeing 737-9 MAX last month. Attorney for the plaintiffs Mark Lindquist say that passengers from a previous flight reported hearing “a whistling sound” from the “vicinity” of the door plug.

But no known further action was taken after the pilot checked cockpit instruments, “which purportedly read normal,” Lindquist said in a statement, in which he cited that the National Transportation Safety Board preliminary report found the cockpit door was designed to blow out in a depressurization situation. Pilots and crew were not informed of the design feature, which created “shock, noise, and communication difficulties” that contributed to strained communication between the flight crew and passengers, which intensified confusion and stress..

“Boeing is still cutting corners on quality,” Lindquist said in his statement. “The company is cutting so many corners, they’re going in circles.” 

The NTSB preliminary report found Boeing delivered the plane to Alaska Airlines with four retaining bolts missing, which resulted in the eventual door plug blowout.

“This plane was a ticking bomb,” Lindquist said. “A blowout could have happened at a cruising altitude where it would have been catastrophic.” 

Report: Biden’s serious memory issues, competency mean he can’t be prosecuted for classified stash

“We have also considered that, at trial, Mr. Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.” – Robert Hur, special counsel

President Joe Biden is an elderly, forgetful man, writes special counsel Robert Hur, who released a report on Thursday about Biden’s retention of classified materials throughout his 36 years in the Senate and eight years as Vice President.

Biden “willfully retained and disclosed classified materials,” that he kept in cardboard boxes in his garage in Wilmington, Del., in piles of things that contained “household detritus.” He also stored classified documents in other locations, according to the 388-page report to the Justice Department.

Among the junk in Biden’s garage were documents that “remains classified up to the Top Secret level and includes Sensitive Compartmented Information, including from compartments used to protect information concerning human intelligence sources,” the report says.

Many of the documents were marked classified documents about Afghanistan.

“These documents from fall 2009 have classification markings up to the Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information level. They were found in a box in Mr. Biden’s Delaware garage that contained other materials of great personal significance to him and that he appears to have personally used and accessed.

As president and Vice President, he was entitled to have classified materials. Not as a private citizen, however.

“The best case for charges would rely on Mr. Biden’s possession of the Afghanistan documents in his Virginia home in February 2017. when he was a private citizen and when he told his ghostwriter he had just found classified material,” the report says.

The problem is, the report says, Biden can’t remember things. He can’t remember the dates when he was vice president.

“Mr. Biden’s memory was significantly limited, both during his recorded interviews with the ghostwriter in 2017, and in his interview with our office in 2023. And his cooperation with our investigation, including by reporting to the government that the Afghanistan documents were in his Delaware garage, will likelyconvince some jurors that he made an innocent mistake, rather than acting willfully-that is, with intent to break the law-as the statute requires.”

Mark Zwonitzer, who was Biden’s ghostwriter, said that Biden’s memory was “painfully slow, with Mr. Biden struggling to remember events and straining at times to read and relay his own notebook entries.”

Hur says Biden did not remember the dates he was vice president when his son Beau died, “even within several years.” Her says Biden “appeared hazy when describing the Afghanistan debate that was once so important to him.”

Hur says Biden’s legal council would “emphasize these limitations in his recall” if the case went to trial.

Given Biden’s “limited precision and recall during his interviews with his ghostwriter and with our office, jurors may hesitate to place too much evidentiary weight on a single eight-word utterance to his ghostwriter about finding classified documents in Virginia, in the absence of other, more direct evidence. We searched for such additional evidence and found it wanting. In particular, no witness, photo, e­ mail, text message, or any other evidence conclusively places the Afghanistan documents at the Virginia home in 2017.”

Hur was appointed by former President Donald Trump to serve as U.S. attorney for the District of Maryland in 2017. With a shortage of evidence, he says that Biden would not be a credible witness.

“We have also considered that, at trial, Mr. Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory,” the report says. “Based on our direct interactions with and observations of him, he is someone for whom many jurors will want to identify reasonable doubt. It would be difficult to convince a jury that they should convict him — by then a former president well into his eighties — of a serious felony that requires a mental state of willfulness.”

Read the report at this Department of Justice link.

Murkowski loses chief of staff

Last month, Sen. Lisa Murkowski announced that her state director was leaving for the private sector. Today, it’s her Chief of Staff Kaleb Froehlich who is leaving.

“Kaleb has led my office for well over three years, and while I’m sad to lose him, I’m grateful he will have this opportunity to spend more time in Alaska with his family. Kaleb is a strong and talented leader and has been a valuable asset for the Alaskans we all serve. I wish him, Annie, and their three children well in their next chapter.”

Murkowski will announce her new Chief of Staff in the weeks ahead, she said in a press release.

Froehlich came on as chief of staff in January, 2021, upon the departure of Michael Pawlowski, who had served since 2011, when Ed Hild left for other opportunities.

Froehlich was born and raised in Juneau and is the son of retired Alaska District Judge Peter Froehlich.