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Ghislaine Maxwell, last seen in Alaska with Alice Rogoff in 2014, now in prison for 20 years for sex trafficking

Ghislaine Maxwell, the British socialite who traveled the Iditarod Trail by plane in 2014 with former Alaska Dispatch (Anchorage Daily News) owner Alice Rogoff, is now a convicted sex offender sentenced to 20 years in prison for trafficking of children with now-dead sexual deviant Jeffrey Epstein.

In December, a jury found Maxwell guilty on five counts of sex-trafficking. Maxwell had groomed and delivered young girls to Epstein, the millionaire financier and convicted sex offender who supposedly hanged himself in his jail cell in 2019. 

Maxwell and former ADN owner Alice Rogoff were friends and colleagues back in the days when Rogoff owned and shaped the political landscape of the state, pushing Bill Walker into power as governor, and trying to get her hands on the Alaska Permanent Fund. Rogoff encouraged Walker to use the fund as collateral to borrow money for Alaska projects she was interested in, particularly around Port Clarence.

When Maxwell came to Alaska to spend time with Rogoff during the Iditarod Sled Dog Race in 2014, the year Walker became governor with the help of her newsroom, the two adventured across Alaska, as detailed a few days later in the New York Post’s Page Six gossip column, when it tracked Maxwell down at a soiree in New York City.

Maxwell lived a fast lifestyle and Rogoff and Maxwell both had interests in Arctic issues. Both presented themselves as Arctic experts, although neither had any true expertise.

“Maxwell traveled across hundreds of miles of icy wilderness to the finish line in Nome, where thousands of fans of ‘the last great race’ cheered on the mushers and their dogs,” the Post reported. They flew the race route in two of Rogoff’s private Cessna 206s. Three years later, Rogoff, who obtained her pilot’s license during her time in Alaska, crashed one of planes while visiting former Sen. Clem Tillion in Halibut Cove.

It appears Rogoff and Maxwell had become close a year earlier in Reykjavik, Iceland during the Arctic Assembly, a conference concerning Arctic Circle nations, attended by people like Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Rogoff, who were featured speakers:

Soon, the Clinton Global Initiative made “commitment to action” to the TerraMar Project. Little evidence exists that it amounted to much, and Maxwell was not any sort of expert in the Arctic; she just had access to hundreds of thousands of dollars from public funds. Maxwell was an invited speaker in 2014 at the Council on Foreign Relations, again accepted as an expert on the ocean and the Arctic. Her TerraMar Project was little more than a scam, however.

The Department of Justice wrote on Tuesday of Maxwell’s actual area of expertise: Grooming young girls for sex.

“Today’s sentence holds Ghislaine Maxwell accountable for perpetrating heinous crimes against children.  This sentence sends a strong message that no one is above the law and it is never too late for justice.  We again express our gratitude to Epstein and Maxwell’s victims for their courage in coming forward, in testifying at trial, and in sharing their stories as part of today’s sentencing.”

According to the allegations in the indictment, court documents, and evidence presented at trial:

From at least 1994 until about 2004, Maxwell assisted, facilitated, and participated in Epstein’s abuse of minor girls by, among other things, helping Epstein to recruit, groom, and ultimately abuse victims known to Maxwell and Epstein to be under the age of 18. 

The victims were as young as 14 years old when they were groomed and abused by Maxwell and Epstein, both of whom knew that their victims were minors.  As a part of the scheme to abuse minor victims, the two brought the children to Epstein’s residences in different states, which Maxwell knew and intended would result in their grooming for and subjection to sexual abuse.

Maxwell attempted to befriend certain victims by asking them about their lives, their schools, and their families, and taking them to the movies or on shopping trips.  She also acclimated victims to Epstein’s conduct simply by being present for victim interactions with Epstein, which put victims at ease by providing the assurance and comfort of an adult woman who seemingly approved of Epstein’s behavior.

Additionally, Epstein offered to help some victims by paying for travel and/or educational opportunities, and MAXWELL encouraged certain victims to accept Epstein’s assistance. As a result, victims were made to feel indebted and believed that Maxwell and Epstein were trying to help them.  Maxwell normalized and facilitated sexual abuse for a victim by discussing sexual topics, undressing in front of the victim, being present when the victim was undressed, and encouraging the victim to massage Epstein.

The grooming behaviors left the victims vulnerable and susceptible to sexual abuse by Epstein.  Maxwell was present for certain sexual encounters between minor victims and Epstein, such as interactions where a girl was undressed, and Maxwell was also present for sex acts perpetrated by Epstein on the girls, including sexualized massages during which a child was fully or partially nude, as well as group sexualized massages of Epstein involving a child, in the presence of Maxwell. In some instances, Maxwell participated in the sexual abuse of minor victims. 

Ultimately minor victims were subjected to sexual abuse that included, among other things, the touching of a victim’s breasts or genitals, placing a sex toy such as a vibrator on a victim’s genitals, directing a victim to touch Epstein while he masturbated, and directing a victim to touch Epstein’s genitals.  Maxwell and Epstein’s victims were groomed or abused at Epstein’s residences in New York, Florida, and New Mexico, as well as Maxwells residence in London, England.

In the earlier phase of the conspiracy, from at least approximately 1994 through approximately 2001, Maxwell and Epstein identified vulnerable girls, typically from single-mother households and difficult financial circumstances.  This earlier phase required the defendant and Epstein to identify one girl at a time to target for grooming and abuse. 

In the later phase, from approximately 2001 until at least approximately 2004, Maxwell and Epstein enticed and recruited, and caused to be enticed and recruited, minor girls to visit Epstein’s Palm Beach Residence to engage in sex acts with Epstein, after which Epstein, Maxwell or another employee of Epstein’s would give the victims hundreds of dollars in cash.

Maxwell and Epstein encouraged one or more of those victims to travel with Epstein with the intention that the victim engage in sex acts with Epstein.  Moreover, and in order to maintain and increase his supply of victims, Maxwell and Epstein also paid certain victims to recruit additional girls to be similarly abused by Epstein.  In this way, Maxwell nd Epstein created a network of underage victims for Epstein to sexually exploit.

Younger, more liberal Americans have less faith in God

The majority of U.S. adults believe in God, but percentage who believe is down six percentage points from 2017 and is the lowest in Gallup’s polling since the 1940s. It’s lower with liberals and younger Americans.

Between 1944 and 2011, more than 90% of Americans believed in God. Now, 81% believe in God while 17% say they do not believe in God.

The poll was the May 2-22 “Values and Beliefs” survey, first conducted in 1944 and repeated every few years since then. In the early years, 98% of Americans said they believed in God; by 2011, 92% said they did. In 2013, it dropped to 87%, and this year dropped again to 81%.

Gallup has also in recent years asked other questions aimed at measuring belief in God or a higher power. All find the vast majority of Americans saying they believe. When given the option, 5% to 10% have said they were “unsure,” the polling company said.

While younger leftists are less believing, conservatives and married adults are generally at the same percentage as before, with over 90% believing in God.

The groups with the largest declines are also the groups that are currently least likely to believe in God, including liberals (62%), young adults (68%) and Democrats (72%). Belief in God is highest among political conservatives (94%) and Republicans (92%), reflecting that religiosity is a major determinant of political divisions in the U.S., according to Gallup.

Win Gruening: Dennis Egan, a true citizen legislator

By WIN GRUENING

“The single most important ingredient in the formula of success is knowing how to get along with people.”  Theodore Roosevelt

One of the toughest jobs in the world is being a state legislator.  Sure, elected office at the national level is no easy job. But, at that level, there is a tendency to be somewhat insulated and rely more on advisors and administrative aides.  In Alaska, you are eyeball to eyeball with constituents frequently and must depend more on your instincts and communication skills to do your job.

No one demonstrated that more and represented his community better in recent history than Juneau’s former state senator, Dennis Egan.

Egan’s recent passing after retiring in 2019 brought to the forefront just how important that is in a time of increasing political polarity and lack of compromise.

Egan took to the job naturally, not just because politics ran in his family, but because of his personality and his innate affinity for helping others.

Dennis and I knew each other from a very young age as our families were equally involved in state politics.  Even though he was a year ahead of me in high school, often we did things together – either visiting him at the Governor’s Mansion when his father was governor or at my grandparent’s cabin at Amalga Harbor.

Egan was always the life of the party and while we were often one step away from trouble we managed to avoid it.   But he was serious too.

Egan got his start in communicating with an audience in high school when he began working at the local radio station – cementing a life-long connection with the industry later as a station owner and radio personality.  But it also was where Egan honed the people skills that got him elected to the borough assembly and later as Juneau’s mayor.

When Gov. Palin was looking to appoint someone to fill Juneau’s vacant state senate seat in 2009, she eventually turned to Egan – someone that would be accepted by party leaders from both sides of the aisle.

Elected officials, particularly local mayors and legislators, are the face of their communities and can define how they wish to be regarded.  At Dennis’s retirement four years ago, Egan’s colleagues spoke of his affability, his sense of humor and his devotion to Alaska and Juneau.

Egan possessed a fundamental respect for the institutions to which he was elected.  He was courteous to all members, regardless of their political affiliation and he was honorable.  

But the most important aspect of Egan Egan’s brand of politics was the way he used his influence.

Elected office carries a certain amount of power – whether it’s the ability to pick up the phone and get a department head to deal with a constituent issue or corral less senior members to vote with you on an issue.

Some politicians use their power to curry favor – or intimidate – to get their way.  Some politicians manipulate others to advance their agenda.

Egan never played those games. He held his positions strongly and explained them plainly.  He was genuinely authentic and spoke to his colleagues and constituents as individuals.

He used the power of his position to help Juneau and its surrounding communities.  He made it difficult for any legislator to think for a moment that moving the capital was a good idea.  He wasn’t afraid to buck his own party when it meant helping his district.  His unwavering support of building the Lynn Canal Highway is proof of that.

He helped appropriate the money that funded the new State Library, Archives and Museum. He fought for and secured needed Capitol renovations improving Juneau’s capital facilities.

Of course, none of that would have been possible if Egan hadn’t realized the value of relationships and true bi-partisanship – a quality in short supply these days.

Current and future legislators would be smart to emulate Egan’s tenure in office.

Alaska’s future depends on it.

After retiring as the senior vice president in charge of business banking for Key Bank in Alaska, Win Gruening became a regular opinion page columnist for the Juneau Empire. He was born and raised in Juneau and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1970. He is involved in various local and statewide organizations.

Dunleavy signs budget that prioritizes public safety, education, savings, and a huge PFD

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy signed the Fiscal Year 2023 state operating and capital budgets into law on Tuesday.

The spending plan moves Alaska into a new direction with prudent and fiscally responsible investments in public safety, public education, the University of Alaska, and infrastructure projects that create jobs and economic development, his office said. It also saves $1.6 billion dollars, which is being paid back to the Constitutional Budget Reserve for future use, when oil prices gyrate lower.

In addition, the budget includes a historical 2022 Permanent Fund dividend for every eligible Alaskan. 

“This budget is more than a spending plan; it’s a blueprint for Alaska’s future,” Dunleavy said. “Budgets should reflect the values and ambitions of the people they are designed for, and I believe this legislation accomplishes that. It strikes the right balance by continuing my administration’s commitment to rebuilding state services like public safety while holding spending in check, adding to our savings, and pointing the economy in the right direction.”

The Dunleavy Administration’s fourth state budget invests in the following:

Protecting all Alaskans – Public Safety, People First Initiative, Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons

Protecting Alaskans has been Governor Dunleavy’s number one public policy priority since taking office in December 2018. His public safety budget reflects his unwavering commitment to keeping all Alaskans safe from crime.

·        The budget authorizes 10 new Alaska State and Wildlife Troopers and 10 Village Public Safety Officer positions

·        Higher salaries for VPSOs and Troopers to attract the most qualified and motivated candidates to a career in law enforcement

·        New housing for public safety officers in rural communities

·        Additional funding to hire more criminal prosecutors and support staff

·        Creates an innovative Crisis Stabilization Center test program to treat Alaskans experiencing a mental health crisis 

Public Education – Accountability

The FY23 budget not only increases funding for Alaska’s public school and university systems; it also brings long-overdue accountability for students’ and parents’ sake.

·        $117 million investment in education, including funds dedicated to the Alaska Reads Act, a comprehensive reading intervention program so all students can read at grade level by the end of third grade. Increased resources include $57 million in one-time funds to schools, $2.5 million for Pre-K and an increase to the BSA.

·        The Alaska Reads Act will be culturally responsive to rural and Alaska Native students

·        Forward funds K-12 education in FY24 with $1.2 billion

·        Delivers tax relief for local taxpayers by funding school bond debt reimbursement

·        Enhancements to Alaska’s student loan program

·        Innovative research in drone technology, critical minerals, heavy oil, and mariculture at the University of Alaska 

Investing in Alaska: Ports, Bridges, Airports and More – FY23 Capital Budget

·        Funds critical repairs to the Port of Alaska

·        Invests in a new deep-water port in Nome – a strategic Arctic port for the United States

·        Upgrades and improvements for multiple airports across the state

·        Funds repairs for roads and bridges statewide

·        $117.3 million in state and federal funds for the Village Safe Water program, so more rural communities have safe, clean drinking water and sanitation

·        Sets state on course to pay off oil tax credits once and for all by this year. This honors the state’s commitment to pay off debt abandoned by a previous administration 

·        Invests in the Alaska Marine Highway System with a new mainline vessel and maintenance funds to keep ships on the water serving coastal communities 

Fiscal Responsibility – Savings, Endowments and Line-Item Vetoes

Governor Dunleavy carefully examined the increased spending made by lawmakers this year. His objective was to preserve the temporary surplus from higher oil revenues to the greatest extent possible. Reductions were made without harming essential state services. The line-item vetoes total $400 million, and those unspent funds will be deposited into the Constitutional Budget Reserve, a rainy-day savings account for years when state revenues are down. Funds taken from the CBR have to be repaid, which has not been done for several years.

·        All state agency budgets, except Public Safety and Education are down 10% from 2019

·        The FY23 budget deposits $1.6 billion in the CBR

·        The bottom line: Alaska’s CBR account balance more than doubled, from $1.3 billion to approximately $3 billion – enough to cover the state budget if oil prices collapse

Alaskans Accessing Alaska – Agriculture and Mariculture

·        Funds the development of a mariculture industry in Alaska

·        Increases food security with the Nenana-Tokchaket Agriculture Project  to produce more food, fuel, and fiber for in-state consumption

Rural Alaska

The FY23 budget addresses many long-standing issues with infrastructure, public safety, and technology in rural communities.

·        Broadband technology – an integral part of today’s world 

o  Up to $1 billion anticipated for Alaska to connect all Alaskans with at least 100/20 mbps internet service

o  $3 billion for the Tribal broadband program

o  Establishes a new State of Alaska Broadband office scheduled to open July 1, 2022

·        Replaces the K-12 public school in Napakiak threatened by erosion

·        Fully funds the Power Cost Equalization program for the fourth straight year

·        Fixes a technical problem in the state’s school funding formula so the Hooper Bay School receives it fair share of education funding 

·        Funds plowing of ice roads in rural communities off the road system

·        As stated before, funding for new Troopers and VPSOs in rural communities, housing for public safety personnel, the Village Safe Water program, a deep-water port in Nome and upgrades to rural airports

2022 Permanent Fund Dividend

·        The PFD is, and will always be, Alaskans’ rightful share of the state’s enormous mineral wealth.

·        2022 marks the return of substantial PFD payments to all eligible Alaskans and this year’s payment will be the largest in state history. It couldn’t come at a more critical time.

·        Based on Dunleavy’s 50/50 PFD plan, it divides the annual draw from the Permanent Fund equally between state services and the dividend 

·        Families need help now with rampant inflation, record-high fuel costs, and the economic damage caused by the pandemic

·        Dunleavy will announce the distribution plan for the PFD soon

“As Alaskans, we all know the surge in oil revenue is temporary. What it buys us is time to continue working together on a fiscal plan that smooths out the inherent volatility in oil revenue. The result will be that Alaskan families will not experience diminished services when revenues are down, and the business community is assured that Alaska’s fiscal house is in order. The first step in that legislative and public policy process is to end the arbitrary political process for funding the PFD that was used starting in 2016 to this year when lawmakers turned to the 50/50 formula. However, a permanent, sustainable solution requires giving the people of Alaska a chance to vote on any change in the formula to be protected in the Constitution. I look forward to working with lawmakers and Alaskans on a long-term, sustainable fiscal plan,” Dunleavy said.

The budget documents are at this link.

10 states make abortion illegal, with exceptions

By BETHANY BLANKLEY | THE CENTER SQUARE

So far, 10 state attorneys general have announced that abortion is now effectively illegal in their states after the Supreme Court overturned two landmark abortion cases, Roe v Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey.

In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Supreme Court ruled, “The Constitution does not prohibit the citizens of each State from regulating or prohibiting abortion. Roe and Casey arrogated that authority. We now overrule those decisions and return that authority to the people and their elected representatives.”

Thirteen states have trigger laws that enable the states to enforce laws already on the books banning abortion. On Friday, nine of them announced abortions were banned effective immediately. By Monday, a tenth state joined them. Texas’ ban, for example, doesn’t go into effect immediately.

Missouri was the first to announce its trigger law was in effect; Mississippi, the tenth. An estimated 23 states are expected to ban abortion in some capacity after the Supreme Court ruling. So far, 24 states have enacted abortion restictions through laws, statutes, or state supreme court rulings, according to recent reports.

Within minutes of the ruling, Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt issued an opinion stating that “abortion, except in cases of medical emergency, is now outlawed in the State of Missouri.”

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem and leaders of the South Dakota state legislature issued a joint statement calling for a special legislative session to be held later this year “to save lives and help mothers impacted by the decision.”

South Dakota’s trigger law immediately banned abortion after the ruling “unless there is appropriate and reasonable medical judgment that performance of an abortion is necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant female.”

Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge certified a state trigger law allowing a 2019 ban on abortion to go into effect immediately. It bans abortion with an exception to save the life of a mother in a medical emergency.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson, standing next to her, said the Supreme Court “returned the issue of abortion to the states. Since Roe vs Wade was decided, the states that desired to protect unborn life had been prohibited from doing so.”

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron issued an opinion stating Kentucky’s Human Life Protection Act, codified in March 2019, was effective immediately. The law bans abortion with the exception to protect the life of a mother in certain medical situations.

Prior to the ruling, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards signed a bill into law banning abortion. After the ruling, it went into effect immediately. The state Health Department sent letters to abortion providers stating that the state law was in effect.

Attorney General Jeff Landry issued a statement saying, “Louisiana’s trigger law banning abortion is now in effect” and his office would “do everything in our power to ensure the laws of Louisiana that have been passed to protect the unborn are enforceable, even if we have to go back to court.”

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine issued an executive order directing the Ohio Department of Health to adopt emergency rules implementing Ohio’s 2019 Heartbeat Law. U.S. District Judge Michael Barrett lifted a preliminary injunction, which had prevented the state from enforcing or complying with the law, allowing it to go into effect.

In Utah, general counsel for the Utah Legislature, John Fellows, issued a statement saying a trigger law allowed a 2020 law to go into effect immediately banning abortion with the exception of rape, incest, to save the life of the mother or in the cases of serious medical complications. Attorney General Sean Reyes said his office “will do its duty to defend the state law against any and all potential legal challenges.”

Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor sent a letter to the governor, secretary of state, and leaders of the state house and senate certifying the Supreme Court ruling. State statute banning abortion must be enforced, he said, adding that he’d notified “all state and county officials, attorneys, investigators, officers, boards, commissions, and agents” to enforce the law.

In Alabama, a federal judge granted the state’s request to lift an injunction allowing it to enforce a 2019 abortion ban signed into law by Gov. Kay Ivey.

Attorney General Steve Marshall issued a statement saying, “elective abortions are illegal in Alabama” after the judge lifted the injunction. “Alabama’s law making elective abortions a felony is now enforceable. Anyone who takes an unborn life in violation of the law will be prosecuted, with penalties ranging from 10 to 99 years for abortion providers,” he said.

Mississippi became the 10th state to ban abortion after Attorney General Lynn Fitch certified its trigger law.

“The Supreme Court very clearly held in Dobbs that the appropriate standard for courts to use for challenges to state abortion laws is rational-basis review,” she said. “And under that standard, Mississippi’s regulations for the protection of life would be upheld. We argued before the Court in December that it was time to end special rules for abortion cases, and we are pleased that the Court did just that, returning this important issue to the people to decide through the political process.”

Passing: Dennis Egan, former Juneau mayor, senator

Lifelong Juneau Democrat Dennis Egan has passed. He was a mayor of Juneau, a senator for a decade, and well-loved by the Juneau community on all sides of the political spectrum. He had been ill for many years, which led to him retiring from the Alaska Senate after serving from 2009 to 2019.

Egan was born in Juneau, when Alaska was still a territory, on March 3, 1947. He was the son of Gov. Bill and First Lady Neva Egan. Bill Egan was politically active and become the state’s first and fourth governor.

Dennis Egan lived in Washington, D.C. during the time his father was in the nation’s capital working to get statehood for Alaska. During high school and after broadcast engineer training, he worked at KINY. He graduated from Juneau-Douglas High School in 1965, and graduated from radio operation engineering school in 1967. He served in the Alaska Army National Guard’s 910th Engineer Company between 1967-1974, was an employee of Caterpillar, working on the construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System. He also worked in state government.

In 1980, Egan started hosting Problem Corner, the well-known Juneau call-in show on KINY, one of the AM radio stations in Juneau. He hosted that show until 2010. He was manager of Alaska-Juneau Communications, Inc., which owns KINY and KSUP and was the Alaska Broadcaster Association’s Broadcaster of the Year in 1990. He was named to the Alaska Broadcast Hall of Fame in 2001.

Egan ran for the Assembly of the City and Borough of Juneau in 1989. He served nearly two terms and was deputy mayor, then was appointed mayor when then-Mayor Byron Mallott resigned to become executive director of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. Egan won reelection as mayor in 1995 and 1997. Egan declined to run for re-election for a third term in 2000.

In 2009, Egan was appointed to the Alaska Senate by Gov. Sarah Palin to replace Sen. Kim Elton, who resigned to join the Obama Administration’s Department of Interior. 

After leaving the Senate in 2019, he moved south for medical care. He was married to Linda Egan and was the father of Jill and Leslie.

Photo credit: Will Fischer, Juneau, through Wikimedia Commons.

Kelly Tshibaka: Lower 48 and DC elites are funding Murkowski’s campaign

By KELLY TSHIBAKA

As Alaskans, we are keenly aware of the condescension shown to us by the Lower 48, mostly from those who have never even visited our amazing state. It’s a common theme used by politicians who want to sound Alaskan, even though their actions sometimes do not match up with their words. 

It’s especially jarring to see our senior senator, Lisa Murkowski, employ the same rhetorical trick, talking tough about defending us from outsiders while simultaneously depending heavily on their campaign contributions. She has also failed miserably in protecting us from the radical leftist agenda of the Biden administration. 

In a video announcing her intent to seek re-election, Murkowski warned of outside political interests invading Alaska via their checkbooks. 

“In this election, Lower 48 outsiders are going to try to grab Alaska’s Senate seat for their partisan agendas,” Murkowski said in the video. “They don’t understand our state, and frankly, they couldn’t care less about your future.” 

This is quite a statement from a 21-year incumbent senator who is almost entirely reliant on campaign contributions from non-Alaskans. 

To this point, using the most recent federal campaign filings available, 85 percent of the campaign funds raised by Murkowski in her 2022 re-election bid have come from outside Alaska. When looking at smaller contributions, which usually indicates the measure of local grassroots support, Murkowski’s numbers are even more dismal. A mere 4 percent of her fundraising is from small individual contributions of less than $200 each.  

If you include the super PAC that’s supporting Murkowski, the picture is even worse. The group “Alaskans for LISA” has raised nearly $1.3 million, and all of it came from the Lower 48. The donors to that PAC are not “Alaskans” at all.  

Looking strictly at the money, it’s clear that Murkowski has lost the support of Alaskans and is filling her coffers from the very Lower 48 special interests she cynically warned us all about. 

Further, she has gladly accepted massive funding from the biggest Washington, D.C. insider of them all, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. This is the same Mitch McConnell who demanded Sen. Ted Stevens resign and threatened to remove Stevens from the Senate (Sen. Stevens was later acquitted on all charges). McConnell wrongly interfered with Alaska’s senate race before, and now he’s doing it again. 

McConnell has pledged $7.4 million from his political action committee, funds that are solely dedicated to boosting Murkowski’s campaign, despite the Alaska Republican Party censuring her. This is an enormous amount of money, given the relatively low cost of advertising in Alaska, and represents significantly more than Murkowski has raised for herself so far in this election.  

In effect, Murkowski has outsourced her campaign funding to the Lower 48 and the D.C. elites, exactly as she warned us that “others” would try to do. 

Back in her announcement video, Murkowski also tried to prove her Alaska bona fides by saying, “I will always stand up to any politician or special interest that threatens our way of life.”  

This will come as a surprise to anyone who is aware of her tie-breaking vote in committee to advance the nomination of Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, who has led the anti-Alaska, energy-annihilating agenda of President Joe Biden. Haaland has killed ANWR, NPR-A, the road to Ambler Mine, and the Cook Inlet oil and gas lease sales.  

This kind of boast also runs counter to her vote for Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who completely cut off access to the Tongass National Forest for timber production and tourism, and her vote to confirm radical leftist Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court. 

Voting for the confirmation of radical Biden nominees who are obviously hostile to Alaska’s interests does not meet any definition of “standing up” to them. 

This is where the differences between Murkowski and my campaign come into sharp contrast. 

We have raised twice as much money from inside Alaska as Murkowski has, and most of my campaign has been funded by Alaskans. I also have publicly stated numerous times that, as senator, I will not support Mitch McConnell if he runs for Republican Senate Leader again. So, it’s little wonder why he has put so much capital into Murkowski’s survival. 

When I am the next senator from Alaska, I will always oppose radical leftist nominees whose agendas run contrary to our interests. Instead of fretting about the damage they will cause, and then voting for them anyway like Murkowski has, I will work to block their attack on our resource industries and protect our State. 

When I’m senator, Alaska will have someone who defends our resource industries and the workers who depend on those jobs to feed their families, and blocks an administration that wants to turn us into a giant national park. We will have someone who won’t be bought and paid for by D.C. insiders, Big Tech, leftist organizations, and radical environmentalists. 

When I was young, it was Alaskans who gave me the opportunities to succeed in life, and when I’m senator, I will always remember that they were the ones who hired me to represent them. I will fight for the Alaskans who fought for me. Our future is bright, and it’s time for a change.  

Kelly Tshibaka is a born-and-raised Alaskan, and a candidate for the U.S. Senate in Alaska who is endorsed by former President Donald Trump and the Alaska Republican Party. 

Republicans in Ketchikan vote to censure Sarah Palin

The Alaska Republican Party officers in Ketchikan have long memories.

They have not forgotten that Sarah Palin, when she was governor of Alaska, axed funding to the bridge to their airport, calling it a “bridge to nowhere.” The townspeople and visitors still have to take a ferry to and from the airport of the state’s sixth-largest community, while their bridge funds were redirected to Palin’s pet projects.

They also haven’t forgotten that Palin endorsed the Democrat-backed ticket of Bill Walker and Byron Mallott for governor and lieutenant governor in 2014, rather than endorsing the Republican incumbent Gov. Sean Parnell.

And they haven’t forgotten that the charismatic congressional hopeful quit her job as governor, while blaming “mounting legal bills.” And then went on to have a money-making career as a celebrity.

All that and more is in a resolution censuring Palin, a resolution that passed Ketchikan District 1 Republicans on Monday night.

Ketchikan is a strong Republican town of about 8,230 people, where 54.47% of voters picked President Donald Trump in 2020. Trump has endorsed Palin, but the Alaska Republican Party had endorsed Nick Begich before Palin decided to run. It now appears unlikely that Palin can win favor with the party, which she has said publicly is rift with “good old boys.”

The vote was nearly unanimous, with one person dissenting, while at the same time agreeing with the concerns detailed in the resolution. By censuring Palin, the Alaska District 1 Republican Committee is also pledging to withhold support from her in their district, as Palin makes a run for U.S. Congress this year to fill the shoes left behind by the 49-year Congressman Don Young, who died on March 18.

During the special primary election that ended June 11, Palin won 32% of the vote in Ketchikan, while Nick Begich, her leading opponent, won 18%. Mary Peltola, the Democrat, won 7.5% of votes cast. Statewide, Palin comes into the special general election in the lead with 43,601, or 27% of the vote. Begich was second with 30,861 or 19% and Peltola has 16,265, or 10%. But she evidently didn’t win the votes of Republicans in Ketchikan and now appears to be heading for the center to pick up votes from moderates.

The Ketchikan resolution follows:

FCC nominee Sohn threatens conservative media

A few months ago, Must Read Alaska highlighted the confirmation hearings of Gigi Sohn, President Joe Biden’s nominee to serve on the Federal Communications Commission.  Sohn faced intense grilling from Senate Republicans, led by Alaska’s Dan Sullivan, over her long history of inflammatory, divisive, over-the-top attacks on conservatives.

Particularly alarming from a candidate for the FCC, who would be the nation’s top regulator of broadcast, cable, and broadband internet services, were Sohn’s repeated attacks on conservative media. Also concerning is her open encouragement of using the power of the federal government to bully, silence, or simply shut down outlets like Fox News and Sinclair Broadcasting, whose political views she doesn’t agree with.

Now, Sohn is back in the news and reminding First Amendment advocates why she has no business within 1,000 miles of an FCC seat.

Axios recently reported that Sohn’s nomination appears in deep trouble as several moderate Democrats seem unwilling to blindly follow Biden’s lead on such a radical nominee.  Everyone from the Fraternal Order of Police to former Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp have strongly condemned Sohn as unfit for the position.

But in Washington, nothing’s ever over until it’s over.  As Sohn’s nomination continues to hang by a thread, she’s reminding conservatives all over again why she represents perhaps the single most pernicious threat to the First Amendment out of any federal nominee.

Breitbart reported earlier on Sohn’s recent headlining of a virtual event organized by supporters of her nomination, who openly bragged in their invitation that confirming Sohn would empower her to “break up Sinclair Broadcasting’s right wing propaganda machine” and target Rupert Murdoch’s media companies, including Fox News.  The Columbia Bugle, a conservative Twitter news account, posted a screenshot of the group’s invitation.

Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan called Sohn out months ago for suggesting the FCC should use its authority to shut down conservative news outlets, and at the time Sohn dissembled, pretending she had no idea what he was talking about. But behind closed doors, when they think no one else is around, she and her supporters appear to be much less shy about hiding her real agenda.

Sohn’s nomination appears likely to collapse under its own weight.  Vulnerable Democratic senators are clearly hoping to avoid having to go on the record voting for such an extreme, out-of-touch nominee.

Here in Alaska, Sen. Sullivan is already on record as a staunch opponent of Sohn’s nomination.  Sen. Lisa Murkowski hasn’t had to weigh in yet either way, but even on her most “moderate” day it should be a bridge too far for her to support an FCC nominee with such clear contempt for the First Amendment – particularly when several of her Democratic colleagues aren’t even willing to back Sohn.

Suzanne Downing is publisher of Must Read Alaska.