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Brigham McCown leaves Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. as president, as Danika Yeager takes over as interim

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In a brief statement to employees today, the owners of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System noted that President Brigham McCown has left the company, as of Jan. 31. Danika Yeager, the Alyeska Vice President of operations and maintenance, is serving as interim president until the company finds a permanent replacement.

Yeager has worked in multiple areas in the pipeline industry for many years.

“Thanks to all of you for your support and dedication to Alyeska during this time of transition. As Owners, we remain committed to supporting the Alyeska team and doing our part to reinforce our collective culture of safely and reliable operating the Trans Alaska Pipeline System. We are excited and optimistic about the future of TAPS,” the owners wrote in an unsigned statement.

McCown was not given a quote in the statement to explain his departure or wish his coworkers well,, which makes it appear that his was an abrupt departure. McCown has only been at the helm since January of 2020.

Charlie Pierce wins endorsement from District 8 (formerly 29) Republicans

Wayne Ogle, chair of the Alaska Republican Party District 8 (formerly 29), announced that Kenai district has endorsed Charlie Pierce as a Republican candidate for governor of Alaska. The endorsement received unanimous approval at a recent District 8 meeting.

“I thank Wayne and the District 8 members for their support and look forward to serving as governor of Alaska for them and all Alaskans. I will serve Alaska by putting Alaskans First and governing with Results not Rhetoric,” Pierce said.

The Alaska Republican Party has endorsed Gov. Mike Dunleavy, but such an endorsement is not exclusive. District 8 represents a section of the Kenai Peninsula, where Pierce has been borough mayor since 2017.

Nick Begich, in fundraising letter, says Congressman Don Young has vaccine mandate in place for his office, and fired a worker for being unvaccinated

It’s campaign season, and the kitchen was eventually going to get hot.

According to a recent fundraising letter from congressional candidate Nick Begich, Congressman Don Young is requiring everyone in his government office to be vaccinated for Covid-19. One worker has allegedly lost his/her job over the mandate, said Begich.

Begich, who has been crisscrossing the state since late October, is now starting to call out the congressman on issues where the two differ.

Calls to Young’s office and campaign, and attempts since last week to get an answer about the accusation, resulted in no answer to Must Read Alaska.

Whether or not the vaccine mandate is a winning issue for Begich remains to be seen. In an August poll reviewed by Must Read Alaska, taken when Delta variant was raging, Alaskans were split on the vaccine mandate question. Republicans greatly opposed a vaccine mandate, while Democrats supported it.

Begich’s campaign manager, Truman Reed, is a former staffer for Young and said he has known about this for a while.

“The cornerstone of the American Republic is our understanding that the government protects our rights; it doesn’t grant them. Therefore, the government cannot rescind our rights, including our right to make decisions about our individual health. I believe that this right rests with you, and as such, I have not supported and will not support these vaccine mandates,” Begich says in his email to supporters.

“Don Young disagrees. In fact, his own staff has been required to comply with a vaccine mandate he put in place in his own office. Don Young even went so far as to fire an employee who didn’t want to be vaccinated. As if that wasn’t enough, he also voted for HR 550, a bill that would establish a national vaccine tracking database. In other words, Don Young believes he and others in government have the authority to make these decisions for you! That’s plain wrong,” Begich writes.

Begich, the Republican Begich, filed for Congress in late October and has earned the endorsement of over 100 Alaskans, dozens of them conservative elected leaders from across the state. He and his family live in Chugiak, where he operates an international business and is an angel business investor.

Interior truckers are planning Freedom Convoy in Fairbanks on Feb. 6

Truckers in Alaska’s Interior are joining in with those in Southcentral Alaska for a “Freedom Convoy” on Feb. 6 in support of Canadian and American truckers who are against forced Covid vaccines.

Organized by a group known as Interior Patriots, the convoy will end at the parking lot of the Carlson Center in Fairbanks, and will bring in truckers from Delta Junction, Healy, and surrounding areas, who will join together at the Carlson at 3 pm. The routes will be announced later. Truckers have RSVP’d from the Ice Road, sources told Must Read Alaska.

The convoy is in support of U.S. and Canadian truckers who have been staging massive truck protests along the U.S.-Canada border and in the Canadian capital of Ottawa aimed at dismantling the policies of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who decreed that all truckers crossing the border into Canada, including Canadians, must show proof of a Covid vaccination. American and Canadian trucks are now blockading the U.S. Alberta border crossing, according to Canadian press.

“With RCMP warnings unheeded, more than 100 vehicles remain lined up on a southern Alberta highway blocking access to the border and a small village for the third day in a row Monday,” the Calgary Herald reported.

“Semi-trucks, cars and farm equipment filled Highway 4 south of Lethbridge on Saturday, in support of a national convoy to Ottawa with a stated goal of repealing a federal mandate requiring unvaccinated Canadian truckers re-entering Canada from the United States to get tested for COVID-19 and to quarantine. Some participating in both protests have expanded that goal, demonstrating against health orders and the federal government as a whole,” the newspaper reported.

The premier of Alberta calls the action illegal and demanded it end, but the blockade was still in place on Monday.

Many mainstream media outlets in the U.S. have created a news blackout about the major protest. The New York Times and Washington Post all but ignored it in Monday editions, with no mention of the growing trucker protests, but Twitter users have been successful in getting the word out.

Other Alaskans have been inspired by the anti-mandate protest. On Saturday, a 2.5-mile-long truck convoy in Juneau surprised capital city residents, who are not used to having conservatives organize events in their city. Some Democrats, such as Sen. Scott Kawasaki, were triggered by the strength of the protest because they could not easily reach their favorite cafes for lunch.

“Uh…great job Juneau convoy,” Kawasaki wrote. “Stop patrons from going to lunch and spending money at local small businesses that have had a heck of a year w/tourism losses-to whine about Canada?!” he wrote on Twitter.

In Anchorage, the convoy will gather along C Street and end up at the Eagle River Lion’s Club on Sunday, where there will be pizza, music, and speakers. Anchorage Assemblywoman Jamie Allard is helping to organize the event.

House Committee on Committees attempts to remove Rep. Eastman from all committees but the report is tabled for lack of votes

The Alaska House Committee on Committees on Monday voted to remove Rep. David Eastman of Wasilla from all of his committee assignments. But in the end, the attempt to remove him was unsuccessful because Eastman knew the rules and there were not enough votes to complete the removal.

Eastman has been under attack by the leftists in the House for attending the Jan. 6, 2021 Trump rally in Washington, D.C. Although he did not enter the U.S. Capitol on that day, his presence in the nation’s capital, and his association with the para-militia group called Oath Keepers, have caused him to become a target by Democrats, who control the House. He has also attended various events dedicated to election integrity and is a thorn in the side of Democrats in general. He also doesn’t work well with his fellow Republicans, and has few allies in the Legislature.

Watch the video at this link.

The move to remove him from committees would have affected his standing in Rules, Judiciary, State Affairs, Ways and Means, and Ethics, where he serves as an alternate. It also would have cost him one legislative aide position, thereby reducing his voice.

After the report from the committee was read to the House floor, Eastman rose and objected to being removed from the Ethics Committee, saying that by the House’s own rules, removal from the Ethics Committee requires a separate vote of the entire body, not just the Committee on Committees.

The House quickly went into an at-ease, while next steps were determined. The dais, where Stutes presides, was crowded by the Democrats’ best legislative team, but after a period of time, they decided to table the Committee on Committee’s report — it was apparent there were not enough votes in the House to accept it.

Eastman has already been censured in the past by the House for statements he made about abortions and rural women; there are not enough votes in the House to expel him, as some on the left are demanding.

The move came early in Monday’s House floor session, just minutes after Eastman had been asked to give the invocation that opens the proceedings.

In the U.S. House, the controlling congressional Democrats recently removed Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from her committee assignments last year for her support of Trump, her stance on the election results of 2020, and her defense of Jan. 6 protest participants.

Senate candidate Kelly Tshibaka raised $1.8 million in 2021, has over $630,000 cash on hand for her battle with Murkowski

Alaska U.S. Senate candidate Kelly Tshibaka raised over $1.8 million in 2021. That is the number she’ll file with the Federal Election Commission today.

At this point in Tshibaka’s campaign against Sen. Lisa Murkowski, the upstart candidate has raised more than any other candidate opposing Murkowski had raised in the entirety of the 2016 election cycle, and it appears she has raised more than any other candidate opposing Murkowski at this stage in 2010.

Tshibaka had nine months to raise the funds, as she filed for office on March 29, 2021. Fifty-five percent of her donations in 2021 came from Alaskans, and in the fourth quarter that surged to 64 percent.

Tshibaka has been running hard since announcing her candidacy, and has hired a professional campaign team for in-state and out-of-state help, which means she has also spent significant funds to help her with name recognition. But she’s scheduled a fundraiser with former President Donald Trump in mid-February, and he is a powerful fundraiser. She started this year with $630,000 in the bank.

Murkowski, as all federal candidates must, will also announce her final donation totals today to the Federal Election Commission, and her funds are likely to dwarf those of Tshibaka. One of the most powerful women in Washington, D.C., Murkowski ended the third quarter with more than $3.2 million cash on hand in her campaign account, after raising $4,571,976 in the first three quarters and spending over $1.4 million. Murkowski has significant fundraising prowess both in and outside Alaska, with many of her donors are writing checks over $1,000. The individual contribution limit for federal candidates is $2,900 for the primary and $2,900 for the general.

This race is made more interesting by the fact that the Alaska Republican Party voted overwhelmingly to endorse Tshibaka as its choice for Senate, and voted decisively to censure Murkowski and ask her to leave the party and not run as a Republican, which she has not yet done.

The Alaska Democratic Party has not yet found a candidate that it can convince to enter the race. The deadline is June 1 at 5 pm for the Aug. 16 primary, which will be an open primary with all candidates on the same ballot. The party has attempted to lure state Sen. Elvi Gray-Jackson into the race, but there are few signs she is going to take that risk at her age, 68. Terms for Senate are six years, which would mean she would not have time to build seniority, with takes several six-year terms.

Nick Begich campaign fundraising shows he is a legitimate contender for 2022 congressional race

Nick Begich, Republican candidate for Alaska’s only congressional seat, announced today that his campaign has raised $300,000 in the fourth quarter of 2021.

Begich was able to raise the funds in the roughly 60 days he had after the rollout of his campaign in late October. About half of the funds Begich raised came from his own bank account.

“The amount raised by Alaskans for Nick Begich in the last two months of 2021 exceeds the total raised by Congressman Don Young in each of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd quarters of 2021, the Begich campaign said in a statement on Monday.

All federal campaigns must release their fundraising totals for the final quarter of 2021 by Jan. 31. These numbers show how much support a candidate has gathered and whether they will have resources to be able to get their message out to voters and motivate them to go to the polls in August’s primary and November’s general election.

Begich, who is the Republican Begich in a family of well-known Democrats, has conducted campaign events all over the major population centers of Alaska and across much of Southeast Alaska. Most of his events have been meet-and-greets, rather than fundraisers. His strategy has been to get to know more people and and state his case for going to Washington, D.C. as Alaska’s congressional representative. He has obtained over 100 endorsements from both elected officials and community influencers across Alaska.

As of 8 am Alaska time, the Alaskans for Don Young campaign have not posted their fundraising totals on the FEC’s website, nor released a statement in advance about them.

In his statement about his fundraising results, Begich took a shot at Congressman Don Young:

“After missing nearly 2 years of committee markup sessions and after voting by proxy in 2021 more than nearly any House Republican, Alaskans are rightfully concerned about their obvious lack of representation in Congress,” his campaign said.

Young has been Alaska’s congressman since March of 1973 and is the longest-serving Republican congressman in history. He is the dean of the House, a ceremonial title given to the longest-serving member. Begich was the co-chair of Young’s successful 2020 campaign and advised the congressman then that he would almost certainly be running for the seat in 2022.

“We are seeing a groundswell of Alaskans ready for new leadership. This is not only illustrated by the campaign’s early fundraising success, but in the staggering number of endorsements from both prominent elected officials and every day Alaskans. Citizens across Alaska are stepping forward to volunteer, contribute, and engage in a movement that is much bigger than this campaign,” Begich said. “The people of Alaska are seeing what was once a bright future whither on the vine. Alaska’s best years can still be ahead of us, but to achieve the full potential of our great state, we must have 21st century leadership with energy, passion, and private sector experience. I’m committed to a future for Alaska that maximizes our potential and develops our resources for the benefit of all Alaskans.”

Young has not yet started campaigning in earnest but will begin with war chest acquired since his 2020 race. Before today’s expected filing, he had $500,000 cash on hand. Must Read Alaska will report on other campaigns’ fundraising as the information becomes available.

Kevin McCabe: What do we really know about the Oath Keepers?

By KEVIN MCCABE

I am very concerned about the alleged issues surrounding Rep. David Eastman and his membership in the Oath Keepers.

I am, however, far more concerned with the consequences of any contemplated action, to the Legislature, the government of Alaska as a whole, and the conservative Mat-Su delegation. What I mean when I say that is simply this: Representative Eastman’s voters sent him to the Legislature three different times.

Who am I and or who do other legislators (or any of us who are not his constituents), think we are to usurp their votes and to remove their representation?

Look, I don’t always 100% agree with all of my 39 colleagues. Some of them I disagree with a lot of the time. And I disagree with Rep Eastman a lot.

Sometimes it is process, and sometimes it is politics. But is it my job to try to remove a legislator if I disagree with them? No. That job belongs to his or her constituents. And there are two ways to do that – through the ballot box, or by recall petition.

Most Americans know about the concept of “due process;” and the American ideal of “innocent until proven guilty” which has legal basis found in the 5th, 6th, and 14th Amendments, as well as English common law and many other documents found in our legal (including both Alaska and US Supreme Courts) procedures and precedents.

So with no “due process” and the idea that an American is innocent until proven guilty by that due process, can I as a legislator, set myself up to be judge and jury and “punish” a fellow legislator sent to do the states work by his voters? Should I vote to “cancel” those constituents votes? Do you really want me to? Because that is what some of you are asking legislators to do. 

Many of those calling for Eastman’s ouster do not even know, or have never seen, the Oath Keepers manifesto, rules, platform or ideals. In short, Alaskans are believing the hysterical left bloggers, the left leaning mainstream media, and the Twitter warriors instead of reading the Oath Keepers constitution themselves. I read about them over a decade ago when Oath Keepers approached me about membership.

From what I remember many folks are taking the Oath Keepers platform and ideals completely out of context; especially in light of our history. Remember, our Declaration of Independence says this:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, —That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”

Is the Oath Keepers’ platform much different? Do we know? If you support removing Eastman, do you know? Have you seen the Oath Keepers platform or do you just believe  what the media/bloggers are writing? If so, ask yourself what their agenda is?

Finally, where does it end? Should we remove half the legislature because they are NRA members?

Should we find the social media posts of those legislators who supported BLM, Occupy Wall-Street, Occupy Seattle, or Antifa, and vote to remove them as well?

Should we remove legislators who are supported by various financial support groups and PACs, who also have an agenda that appears to run contra to our constitution?

Where does it end?

This whole thing is not an attempt to uphold our constitution. It is a thinly veiled personal and political hatchet job. No, this is about some who do not like a Representative’s positions, and his district’s politics, trying to get rid of him.

It is about some far far left Democrats and Socialists who see this as a way to remove a Republican from the House, shift the voting paradigm of the conservative Mat-Su, and create upheaval and strife for the conservative minority; all while cancelling the political stance of the district voters and the Mat-Su in general. 

Frankly I am dismayed to see so many smart people, educated in civics and American history, buying into this. The consequences to our state, of removing a representative in such a manner, are too great – and I cannot support this method.

Keep in mind that it could be any representative next;  but for now, the focus seems to be on shifting the voting block of the conservative Mat-Su delegation.

There is a recall procedure and a ballot box. If a representative’s constituents want him or her removed, then these are the two methods to use.

Rep. Kevin McCabe has represented District 8 as a member of the Alaska House of Representatives since 2021.

Feb. 1 is drop date for Anchorage candidates for April 5 local election

Candidates who have filed for Anchorage municipal offices but who want to withdraw have until 5 pm on Feb. 1 to ensure their names are removed from the April ballot.

Candidates dropping must file a notarized statement of withdrawal with the Anchorage Municipal Clerk either at the Municipal Clerk’s Office, 632 West 6th Avenue on the second floor, or at the Muni’s Election Center, 619 East Ship Creek Ave. The Clerk’s office downtown is often closed, according to members of the public who have reported it to Must Read Alaska on several occasions.

Notary service is available at the Election Center or the Municipal Clerk’s Office, according to the Municipal Clerk’s web page.

If the candidate withdrawal statement is filed after 5 p.m. on Feb. 1, the Municipal Clerk has the sole discretion to remove the candidate’s name from subsequent notices and the ballot.

The mail-in ballot will be mailed to qualified voters in Anchorage about 21 days before the April 5 election.

Friday was the candidate deadline for filing for the Anchorage election.