Sunday, October 19, 2025
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Trump says he expects to be arrested on Tuesday

No president in history has been prosecuted after leaving office, but Former President Donald Trump says that is about to change.

He wrote on Truth Social, his social media platform, that he will be arrested on Tuesday over claims he paid former porn star Stormy Daniels to keep quiet about an alleged relationship between them. Six years ago, Trump’s lawyers were rumored to have paid Daniels to stay mum about the affair, and New York prosecutors considered charging him at the time. Now, he says the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office will arrest and charge him on Tuesday over these allegations.

“Now illegal leaks from a corrupt & highly political Manhattan district attorneys office, which has allowed new records to be set in violent crime & whose leader is funded by George Soros, indicate that, with no crime being able to be proven, & based on an old & fully debunked (by numerous other prosecutors!) fairytale, the far & away leading Republican candidate & former president of the United States of America, will be arrested on Tuesday of next week,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Protest, take our nation back!”

Trump’s campaign also released another in many fundraising pitches he has made for his campaign over the past many weeks. He is using the pending possible arrest of himself as a message to supporters to pitch in.

“With the Deep State gunning for us like never before, President Trump is counting on your sustained support to DEFEND our movement from these never-ending witch hunts. Please make a contribution of any amount to help FIGHT BACK against the radical Left’s endless attacks, vile lies, and phony witch hunts – for 1,200% impact,” his fundraising pitch said.

A spokeswoman for District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office told AP that the office “will decline to confirm or comment” any queries about Trump’s legal situation. Bragg is a Democrat and the position he holds is an elected office.

“This is what they do in communist countries,” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene told the Washington Examiner on Saturday.

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wrote: “No matter what the Grand Jury decides, its consideration makes it clear: no one is above the law, not even a former President of the United States. The former president’s announcement this morning is reckless: doing so to keep himself in the news & foment unrest among his supporters. He cannot hide from his violations of the law, disrespect for our elections and incitements to violence. Rightfully, our legal system will decide how to hold him accountable.”

On Twitter, Elon Musk wrote: “If this happens, Trump will be re-elected in a landslide victory.”

Veterans Affairs has new mission statement that removes Abe Lincoln’s words, makes it more LGBTQ friendly

On Thursday, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced an updated version of its 1959 mission statement that takes away the male pronoun. The new mission statement is: “To fulfill President Lincoln’s promise to care for those who have served in our nation’s military and for their families, caregivers, and survivors.”

The original mission statement was a quote from President Lincoln, as taken from his second inaugural address in 1865: “To fulfill President Lincoln’s promise ‘to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan.”

The previous mission statement is posted in roughly 50% of VA’s facilities. Over the coming months, VA’s new mission statement will replace the previous version.

According to the VA’s press release, the original statement left out other groups, such as women, and LGBTQ+.

“The new mission statement is inclusive of all those who have served in our nation’s military — including women Veterans — as well as Veteran families, caregivers, and survivors. VA currently serves more than 600,000 women Veterans, the fastest growing cohort of Veterans. VA also serves more than 50,000 Veteran caregivers, more than 600,000 Veteran survivors, and millions of Veterans who did not serve in combat,” the statement says.

“In crafting the new mission statement, VA surveyed roughly 30,000 Veterans. Among Veterans surveyed, the new version of VA’s mission statement was chosen over the current version by every age group; by men and by women; by LGBTQ+ Veterans; and by white, Black/African American, Hispanic/Latino, Asian and American Indian/Alaska Native Veterans,” the statement reads.

The VA conducted small focus groups with Veterans to understand what was most important to them in a VA mission statement, then incorporated that feedback into quantitative research, the agency said.

“The new mission statement reflects that VA serves all of the heroes who have served our country, regardless of their race, gender, background, sexual orientation, religion, zip code or identity, according to the agency.”

A year since the ending of the era of Congressman Don Young

On March 18, 2022, Alaska and American history took a huge turn, when Congressman Don Young died while on a flight back to Alaska. He had served the state for 49 years in Congress, and before that as a state House and Senate member, and the mayor of Fort Yukon. When he died at age 88, he was the longest-serving Republican in the history of the U.S. Congress; he had worked with 10 different presidents, starting with President Richard Nixon and ending with Joe Biden.

Young was born on June 9, 1933 in Meridian, Calif. After earning a bachelor’s degree in teaching from Chico State University and serving in the U.S. Army, he moved to Alaska in 1959 and settled in the village of Fort Yukon, seven miles north of the Arctic Circle, where he became a school teacher, tugboat captain, miner, and trapper. From 1964 to 1967 he was the mayor of the predominantly Gwich’in Athabascan village. He married Lula Young in Fort Yukon and they had two daughters, Dawn and Joni, and later 14 grandchildren. After Lu’s death in 2009, he met and married Ann Garland Walton in 2015.

Young served as chair of the Natural Resources Committee and the Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives. He was chairman of the Subcommittee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs.

Known for being both irascible and able to work across the aisle with all political perspectives, among his notable achievements was working to ensure the authorization of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System and important amendments and the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.

Young authored and advocated for the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act in 1975, the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act in 1976, the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997 in 1997, SAFETEA-LU in 2005, Multinational Species Conservation Funds Reauthorization Act of 2007, and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in 2021.

After his death, Gov. Mike Dunleavy called for a special election, as required by statute, and although Nick Begich was already a candidate for the position, having filed to challenge Young in the previous October, several dozen other Alaskans put their names in for the seat, including former Gov. Sarah Palin.

In the end, Alaska elected Democrat Mary Peltola to fill the temporary seat for the long-time Republican, and Peltola then went on to win the two-year spot in Congress, where she serves today, the first Democrat to represent Alaska in Congress since former Rep. Nick Begich Sr. died in a plane crash in 1972 en route to Juneau from Anchorage. Her tenure has been marked by extreme partisanship.

“It’s been a year now since we lost Don Young.  As I reflect upon his life it seems only fitting that he passed on his way home to Alaska. The place that he loved.  For Don Young was all about Alaska – truly the congressman for all Alaska. Even after 49 years in office Don was tireless, even relentless in his advocacy for legislation and initiatives that benefitted Alaska.  Don did everything in his own gruff, feisty, and passionate style. He was a force of nature.” Sen. Lisa Murkowski said. “He strongly supported Alaska Native peoples, led the authorization of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System, improved Alaskans’ access to public lands, and so much more. He was a big help in our fight to open Willow and would have been pleased with the news this week. I think about him every day, and miss his tough and loving spirit. He was Alaskan to his core, and I’m forever grateful for all that he did for our state and its people.”

Since Young’s passing, Sen. Murkowski and Sen. Dan Sullivan have introduced measures honoring the late congressman, including:

  • Resolution Honoring Congressman Don Young
  • The Don Young Arctic Warrior Act, legislation to alleviate some of the hardships faced by service members in Alaska, most of which was signed into law in December 2022.
  • The Don Young Recognition Act, which designated one of the most active volcanoes in the Aleutian Islands, formerly known as Mount Cerberus, as Mount Young; the federal office building in Fairbanks as the Don Young Federal Office Building; and the Job Corps Center in Palmer as the Don Young Alaska Job Corps Center. It became law in December 2022. 

Assembly files appeal over accessing personnel documents from Mayor’s Office

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The Anchorage Assembly has filed an appeal with Alaska Superior Court to try to get its hands on personnel documents that relate to the short duration of the employment of former Health Department Director Joe Gerace.

Gerace was found to have falsified his resume and ended up resigning after suffering a stroke. Mayor Dave Bronson has maintained that Gerace’s personnel record is confidential, as are the records of all employees of the city.

On Feb. 14, the Assembly leaders asked for two documents from the internal Human Resources investigation into Gerace. Those were denied, again because of confidentiality laws and rules around personnel files.

The Assembly wants the court to determine if an employee’s personnel files are indeed confidential, or if they can be accessed by political adversaries of the mayor.

The Assembly’s appeal argues that Bronson’s denial order incorrectly asserts that the requested records are personnel files that cannot be disclosed under the Anchorage Municipal Code. 

The Assembly says Bronson’s denial order incorrectly asserts that the requested records are exempt from disclosure by the Anchorage Municipal Code.

The Assembly is saying that any personnel record must be released to it upon its demand.

After both sides have presented their arguments, the court will render its decision.

Positive changes made in ballot handling by Anchorage Election Office this year

Important procedures are changing at the Anchorage Election Office for this municipal election that may address some of the concerns raised by election observers in years past, when volunteers watching the counting of ballots found fault with protocols established by Municipal Clerk Barb Jones, who retires in June.

The election ends April 4, and in addition to candidates for Assembly and School Board, there are three pages of propositions.

Here are some of the changes implemented:

Signature verification. In the past, the paid signature verifiers sat next to each other and verified voter signatures unilaterally, working individually. Now, two people will have to agree that signatures match or don’t match with what the Municipality has on file. If the two verifiers don’t agree, they discuss their different conclusions and continue until they come to a conclusion. If they agree that the signature matches, the ballot envelope can proceed to the next step, where the ballot gets separated from the envelope.

Green bins: When the voter signature is verified, the computer can then read the ballot. In the past, all the ballots went into green bins, which meant they were ready to be counted. But the election officials in past years had no idea how many ballots were in each bin, and numerous election workers had access to the locked cages where the ballot bins were kept. Now, every single green bin will have a printed sheet of paper attached to it that has the exact count of the ballots in that bin. Two human counters will count how many ballots are going into the bin, and how many envelopes have been separated from the ballots. Everyone with access to the cage must be accompanied by another employee who has similar access. This was a big issue with election observers in recent years.

Fax votes: The Municipal Election Office has never kept track of the number of faxed votes that were received. Now, it will be tracking those votes every day.

Computers don’t see red: The ballot reading machines do not see the color red. The bubbles that voters fill in are red. Observers were not able to tell where stray marks on ballots were, because the screen that observers were required to use did not show the red bubble outlines. Now, there is a new place where observers can go and look at the ballots themselves, so they can verify where the marks are on the ballot. Jones did not allow people to see these ballots in prior years.

Notification: In years past, Jones would not tell observers when the adjuration process would start, but miraculously some candidates, like Forrest Dunbar and Chris Constant, would show up right before ballot adjudication started. Observers for other candidates had to stay at in the building at all times to wait for when Jones would start an adjudication session. Now, the election office has established and published a schedule that gives the times for adjudication, signature verification, and sorting.

Ballots arrived in most Anchorage voters’ mailboxes this week and already the ballots are coming into the election office. You can watch the various cameras around the building at this YouTube channel.

Downing: The revenge of Deb Haaland

By SUZANNE DOWNING

Revenge, the saying goes, is a dish best served cold. But when it comes to Secretary of Interior Deb Haaland, vengeance on Alaskans is icy.

When Haaland was pressured to approve the ConocoPhillips Willow Project, a modest oil field in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, she did so against her will. 

Haaland choked up while speaking with a room of Alaska Natives from the radical side of the spectrum who oppose the drilling permit, as she explained her agency had “difficult choices to make,” according to those present at the meeting.

The choice, it seems, had been taken out of her hands and was made by election strategists in the Oval Office, because Haaland could not be trusted to take the correct political action. The White House is especially sensitive to the election cycle ahead and propping up Democrat Rep. Mary Peltola of Alaska, who is somewhat of an electorally endangered politician in this still-red state. 

Haaland, however, is sympathetic to a village of Alaska Natives who oppose the NPR-A project, while nearly all other Alaskans of all stripes support responsible oil development.

President Joe Biden stated during his 2020 campaign that he would put an end to oil. Then-Rep. Haaland was in agreement with that, so long as future curbs on hydrocarbons do not impact her home state of New Mexico’s relatively new position as the No. 2 producer of oil in America, after Texas. 

While she has remade the Interior Department into a parks-and-rec agency, New Mexico has a carve out. It now produces 1.7 million barrels per day of oil, and in 2021 produced 2,237 billion cubic feet of natural gas.

Haaland’s actions show she prefers Alaska oil remains locked down. With her hand forced on Willow, Haaland announced her agency would not only reduce the scope of the project by 40 percent, it would take another 16 million acres of Alaska off the table for any future development. Haaland is taking the equivalent of West Virginia.

The day after the Willow decision and simultaneous land grab was formally announced, Haaland exacted further revenge: She took back land the Interior Department had traded with a tiny Native corporation in Alaska in 2019.

King Cove, population about 875, has an economy tied to year-round commercial fishing. It’s a stormy corner on the edge of the world and while the cove provides protection from the wild Bering Sea, it is shrouded with low-hanging fog much of the time. Small planes cannot get in or out, and if a worker is injured or a mother is in labor, the people must hope for the best and take a boat to Cold Bay, where there is an all-weather, FAA-managed airport and where medical evacuation to Anchorage is much more likely. In the winter, King Cove’s waters are covered with foot-deep ice, and so not just any boat will do.

King Cove, Alaska

King Cove Corp., the Native village, has been trying to build that short gravel road to Cold Bay for decades, but the Izembek Wildlife Refuge sits between the communities, and the federal government allows no overland access between the towns.

The matter bounced around the courts for years, with environmentalists using the same “existential threat to humanity” messaging they recently played on Willow.

Finally, former Interior Secretary David Bernhardt agreed to a land swap with the village corporation to allow the one-lane gravel road. That was during the Trump Administration, but even the Biden Administration joined with King Cove Corp., the Agdaagux Tribe of King Cove, the Native Village of Belkofski and the State of Alaskato defend it after environmental groups sued, as they do.

A year ago, a federal appeals court reversed a district court decision that rejected the land swap. Things were looking up for the people of King Cove, at long last. 

Now, however, Haaland is in a dark mood. She lost face among Nuiqsut village leaders when she was forced to announce the Willow record of decision, and she was out for blood. She took her revenge on the people of King Cove, about half of which are Alaska Natives, by unilaterally taking back the land the department had already traded. The cover story is that it needs to be studied more. This is the equivalent of a kill shot; she has put the land swap in a place where it simply cannot be extracted — the bureaucracy.

Haaland’s actions are inconsistent with her stated support for the Natives of Alaska. She denied a life-saving road for the purpose of face saving, virtue signaling, and score settling in a corner of the world that the Biden Administration continues to treat as a colony. 

Suzanne Downing is publisher of Must Read Alaska.

Dutch farmers win at ballot box against elite climate-change government mandates on nitrogen in farming

Last October, Dutch farmers protested. They used their tractors to block roads to The Hague after the Netherlands government attempted to curtail the use of nitrogen in agriculture.

The agricultural sector represents less than 5 percent of the small nation’s gross domestic product. The country, at 16,040 square miles, is roughly half the size of Indiana. Farmers represent a tiny minority of voters.

But in a national vote, the farmers have won the day, as the public rebuked Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s attempt to slash nitrogen emissions, which farmers said would make their livelihoods disappear.

Nitrogen is needed for plants to grow. Farmers get better, more predictable yields by adding nitrogen fertilizers to the soil. Too much nitrogen, however, leads to various kinds of pollution of waterways and air.

Farmers associated with the Farmer Citizen Movement party, known in the Netherlands as BoerBurgerBeweging, or BBB, characterized the win as a victory of the common person over the nation’s elite.

The populist BBB party, founded just four years ago, only has about 11,000 actual members. But it has just won a victory over the four-party coalition associated with Rutte, who has made it his mission to cut nitrogen emissions by 50 percent by 2030, in order to fight climate change and to bring the nation in line with the climate change goals of the European Union.

The Netherlands has a population of about 17.2 million and a voting base of over 13.3 million. Voter turnout is typically over 71%.

The farmer party, which focuses on agrarian and rural issues, was founded in October 2019 by Caroline van der Plas, a journalist and former member of the Christian Democratic Appeal party.

Biden requests billions to advance ‘Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Intersex community’ globally

By CASEY HARPER | THE CENTER SQUARE

President Joe Biden’s 2024 budget proposal requests billions of dollars to advance his gender and sexuality agenda around the world, allocating far more taxpayer dollars to that issue than dozens of other spending priorities, such as stopping fentanyl from being smuggled across the southern border.

Biden’s budget request for this issue in particular has more than doubled in the last two years. In the past, that focus would have been almost entirely on women and young girls. In recent years, though, advancing women’s rights across the globe is sharing the focus, and the funds, with the president’s gender agenda.

While Biden says he is cutting $3 trillion from the deficit over the next decade, his budget plan would increase the funding to promote “Gender Equity and Equality Around the World.”

From the budget:

The Administration remains steadfast in its commitment to invest in opportunities for women and girls and support the needs of marginalized communities, including the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Intersex community. Reflective of that commitment, the Budget requests more than $3 billion to advance gender equity and equality across a broad range of sectors.

Last year, the U.S. Agency for International Development touted Biden’s budget request of $2.6 billion to promote “Gender Equity and Equality Around the World,” saying it was “more than doubling the amount requested for gender programs in the prior year,” calling it the “largest-ever gender budget request.”

That funding will fuel the USAID and the State Department to pay particular attention to “those who face multiple forms of discrimination, such as adolescent girls and young women, Indigenous women, women and girls in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex (LGBTQI+) community, women with disabilities, and racial, ethnic, and religious minorities.”

Biden’s request for advancing this kind of equity this year increased from the previous doubling by another $400 million, a new record.

Federal spending, in particular debt spending, is under increased scrutiny as inflation remains elevated.

“At a time of dangerous deficits and painful inflation caused by too much federal spending, the Biden administration is constantly seeking ways to waste even more taxpayer resources on ideological crusades,” David Ditch, a budget expert at the Heritage Foundation, told The Center Square. “The obsession with ‘equity’ permeates the entire Biden agenda, often at the expense of core federal duties and functions. Biden is regularly touted as a ‘moderate’ by the press, but he has been comfortable allowing radical activists in his administration to control the agenda and regularly flout the rule of law.”

Biden took fire after the budget’s release for mentioning “equity” 62 times while other major issues received less attention. “Inflation” is mentioned 56 times, though that number is far less if you omit references to the Inflation Reduction Act, which has nothing to do with higher prices. “Border” is mentioned 33 times. “Poverty” is mentioned 21 times. “Ukraine” is mentioned 13 times. “Opioid” is mentioned four times and “fentanyl” is mentioned twice.

For comparison, the budget proposal includes $25 billion for U.S. Customs and Border Patrol but specifies that only $40 million of that is to “combat fentanyl trafficking and disrupt transnational criminal organizations.” According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, more than 100,000 Americans died of drug overdose in 2021.

Opioid spending gets a fraction of the attention that equity receives in the budget.

The proposed budget seeks to spend “$715 million toward opioid use disorder prevention and treatment programs such as VA’s Stratification Tool for Opioid Risk Mitigation, the VA Opioid Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution program, and programs authorized in the Jason Simcakoski PROMISE Act.”

While the opioid issue may receive federal aid directly or indirectly from other established health and drug grants and programs, the gender issue would also benefit from the same kind of additional help.

A litany of domestic crime issues also receives less funding than the $3 billion overseas investment.

From the budget:

The Budget makes robust investments to bolster Federal law enforcement capacity. The Budget includes $17.8 billion, an increase of $1.2 billion above the 2023 enacted level, for DOJ law enforcement, including a total of nearly $2 billion for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives to expand multijurisdictional gun trafficking strike forces with additional personnel, increase regulation of the firearms industry, and implement the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. The Budget includes $1.9 billion for the U.S. Marshals Service to support personnel dedicated to fighting violent crime, including through fugitive apprehension and enforcement operations. The Budget also provides $51 million to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to support the continued implementation of enhanced background checks required by the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. In addition, the Budget provides a total of $2.9 billion for the U.S. Attorneys, which includes 130 new positions to support the prosecution of violent crimes.

Certain overseas grant funding opportunities from the federal government prioritize LGBT issues. The State Department’s “Global Equality Fund” is a public-private partnership that funnels federal dollars overseas to “provides critical resources to civil society organizations (CSOs) and human rights defenders, including those working to increase the visibility and empowerment of queer women, transgender and other gender diverse people, intersex people, and members of other marginalized LGBTQI+ communities…”

Casey Harper is a Senior Reporter for the Washington, D.C. Bureau. He previously worked for The Daily Caller, The Hill, and Sinclair Broadcast Group. A graduate of Hillsdale College, Casey’s work has also appeared in Fox News, Fox Business, and USA Today.

It’s a blast: Legislative Shoot is Saturday in Juneau

The annual Alaska Legislative Shoot takes place Saturday at the Juneau Gun Club at half-mile Montana Creek Road in Juneau. Each member of the three-person team will compete at shooting stations that include handguns, shotguns, .22 rifles, and archery.

Above, the 2022 team of Rep. Mike Cronk, Sen. Peter Micciche, and Rep. Josiah Patkotak made up “Team Mccronkotak.”

The event is sponsored by the Alaska Correctional Officers Association (ACOA) and starts with the “Bulls-Eye Breakfast” at 8 am, operational range instruction from 8 am to 9 am, and legislative shoot from 9 am to 3 pm. Invited participants are legislators, Governor’s Office, Lt. Governor’s Office, commissioners, and all support staff and family members. Those who are solo will be assigned a team.

Last year’s winning team did not have any legislators on it, but was made up of members of the Juneau High School Rifle Team.

Sen. Jesse Kiehl presents the winning trophy in 2022 to Luke and Beck of the Juneau High School Rifle Team.

Those who wish to take part this year should get in touch with Sen. Kiehl’s office at Pick up and turn in entry forms to Sen. Jesse Kiehl’s office (Room 514), where there are entry forms. Participants can also sign up at the Juneau Gun Club Range on the day of the Legislative Shoot. The fee to enter is $10 per person.