Monthly Archives: October 2014

Pro-pot group hits the airwaves

The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana like Alcohol, or more easily, the pro-pot people, are up on the airwaves with some pretty good ads. This commercial features former Deputy Commissioner of Corrections Bill Parker, who has long advocated for legalizing pot:

This one features a Valdez police officer:

The group also has a radio spot featuring another cop and a school teacher.

All told, the pro-pot people are spending $500,000 on the ads. So far, the campaign has received $860,759 in contributions to convince Alaskans to vote on Ballot Measure 2. Most of that money has come from the D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project.

The other side, Big Marijuana. Big Mistake. Vote No on 2. Or, more easily, Continue reading

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Begich speaks to voters at town halls across the state

U.S. Sen. Mark Begich has had two town halls in Anchorage this past week, which I’ve been remiss in covering. Alaska Commons has been diligent, however. Begich will be having another one tonight at the Spenard Rec Center, starting at 7 p.m. Then he’s off to Fairbanks to hold a veterans town hall on Friday.

According to a campaign press release, “From now through Election Day Mark Begich will speak directly with Alaskans about their ideas for the future of our state, his first term accomplishments and goals for a second term.”

Begich is calling it his “Standing Up For Alaska Tour” which has already visited Bethel, Homer and Petersburg, and will continue on to Fairbanks, Juneau, Palmer and Kenai and back to Anchorage.

GOP candidate Dan Sullivan may have the wind at his back, but Begich is at his best at these kinds of events.

 

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Inside/Outside morning news roundup for 10.16

  • University of Virginia Center for Politics’ Sabato’s Crystal Ball has changed his Alaska U.S. Senate race from “toss-up” to “leans Republican.”
  • More awfulness about the National Guard scandal from leaked documents.
  • Rasmussen Reports came out with a poll yesterday revealing that gubernatorial candidate Bill Walker is now leading with 50% to Gov. Sean Parnell’s 41%. The poll says that there are still 7% of undecided voters and it was conducted with a 4% margin of error.
  • The sudden tilt in the governor’s race from a solid Parnell/Sullivan win to a potential Walker/Mallott victory has caught the eye of the National Journal. In an article that explains the political dynamics behind Parnell’s fall from election grace, Jim Lottsfeildt sums it up with the closing quote. “I don’t see how [Parnell] pulls it out right now.  You could hand the guy $2 million right now and I don’t see how it’d be felt because the airwaves are choking with other messages. I don’t see this wave changing.”
  • Speaking of the governor’s race: If Parnell expected to have any votes in Government Hill, he likely lost them. The Dispatch reports that the neighborhood’s sole gas station, Tesoro, has opted to stop pumping gas amid uncertainty over the very uncertain fate of the Knik Arm Bridge. All of which took the neighborhood by surprise, which isn’t a good thing to have happen before an election.

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Another must-read from the Anchorage Press about the National Guard scandal

David Holtouse from the Anchorage Press has another must read on the National Guard scandal. This piece, like the last, is culled from investigative reports that were leaked to the Press. It focuses on three National Guard recruiters and “sexual assaults and numerous cases of sexual harassment targeting fellow soldiers, new recruits, and civilian women, including high school JROTC cadets,” perpetrated by the three between 2007 to 2011. The investigation of the three began in mid-2012. According to the article, “leadership” requested the investigation. The reports on the activity of the three were submitted to the Guard in 2013. The three are no longer recruiters. And though the article says that they weren’t arrested or charged, it doesn’t say why. Nor does it say when they were let go, or how they were discharged, if they were.

In any event, the accounts of rape and sexual abuse are repulsive.

“These three recruiters were seemingly untouchable and attempts to report their misconduct were either ignored or resulted in negative repercussions for the recruiter reporting the misconduct,” the Press quotes the investigative report as saying.

Read the must-read story here.

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Alaska Division of Election numbers show worrisome trend for Begich and Alaska Democrats

The latest numbers from the Alaska Division of Elections tallying the registered voters in the state for this election cycle, as well as the party to which they belong, show some potential holes in Sen. Mark Begich’s supposed superior ground game. A ground game involves getting people to the polls—the success of which can’t be quantified until they go there. But it also involves registering new voters, which the Begich campaign and the Alaska Democratic Party, helped by the national party, have been working hard at. The national Democrats have sent up to 90 people to Alaska to work on that ground game. Lots of money is being spent and as many as 15 offices have been opened across the state. On the other side, the RNC has only sent 11 people to Alaska, and Sullivan’s campaign has been less verbal, publicly at least, about touting its ground game.

It may very well turn out that all the efforts will win the race for Begich. However, the numbers from the Alaska Division of Elections show that when it comes to new voter registrants, the results are less than overwhelming, particularly compared to 2008 when Begich first won his Senate seat. And the numbers should be especially concerning for the Alaska Democratic Party as a whole, which continues to loose numbers.  Continue reading

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Parnell speaks directly to the public about National Guard scandal

I have in the past been critical of Gov. Sean Parnell for his seeming lack of leadership on a whole host of issues, including his handling of the National Guard scandal. But the video below, where Parnell talks directly to the public about the situation, is much needed and long overdue. I don’t know how he could have handled the situation differently, though I suspect there were better ways. (I defer to Lynn Willis on this.) And I don’t know if the current course he is on to fixing it is the right one. But I do know that, using his words, this is turning into a political witch hunt. (The countless, breathless press releases sent out by the Democrats are just one indication of this.) Parnell might deserve this. But the innocent people who are being swept up in the mix don’t. Nor do the victims of the abuse.

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Auditors from the National Guard Bureau arrive in Alaska

Three auditors from the National Guard Bureau have touched down in Alaska. They’re here to dig into allegations of financial fraud. Here’s the statement from Gov. Sean Parnell’s office:

In August, Governor Sean Parnell called for an expanded investigation into allegations of fraud in the Alaska National Guard. Today, the governor announced that a team of three auditors from the National Guard Bureau has arrived in Alaska to determine the adequacy and management of federal resources handled by the Alaska National Guard.

“We take the allegations of fraud extremely seriously,” said Governor Parnell. “I called for an immediate investigation of these fraud allegations. Those found Continue reading

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Inside/Outside morning news roundup for 10.15

  • The Koch brothers launched a Super PAC last summer that allows them to directly attack candidates, but also requires them to file  donors with the FEC.  Politico has the overview and history of the Koch brothers original super PAC and their newest entity.
  • The Fairbanks News Miner’s adjective to describe yesterday’s Fairbanks gubernatorial debate is “animated.”
  • Rasmussen Reports unveiled a new poll of 700 likely Alaskan voters that has Dan Sullivan in the lead with 48% and U.S. Senator Mark Begich with 45% with an error rate of 4%.
  • If Ballot Measure 2 passes on November 4, then it looks like Alaska might already have found its new Pot Czar. The Juneau Empire has an article about Cynthia Franklin, and her potentially new role as the person in charge of writing the Alaska regulations regarding legalized marijuana.

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Lt. gov. candidate Anchorage Mayor Sullivan talks Medicaid in Sitka

Here’s Anchorage Mayor Dan Sullivan, who, it should be noted, gets some of the best, tax-payer funded healthcare available, talking to KCAW, Sitka’s public radio station, about Medicaid expansion:

Sullivan said he opposes expanding a program that will inevitably add to the federal debt.

Sullivan: Doesn’t make sense for me to say we should borrow more money from China to expand a government program.

KCAW: Does that mean that you wouldn’t accept federal funds for anything in Alaska? Or specifically Medicaid?

Sullivan: “Well, take it issue by issue. If somebody said, you know, federal highway dollars for example can help build a road that could lead to good jobs and economic development, then you can see an end game there that’s positive…”

Medicaid, he said, doesn’t meet that bar.

“As far as expanding Medicaid, again, I’m not sure where it was ever determined that it’s the government’s role to provide Medicaid to x number of people…It was supposed to be a safety net. And it’s expanded to where the levels that are qualified I think go beyond a safety net and really just become I think another government entitlement program that’s unsustainable.”

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Video: ‘Bill Walker went down to Juneau.’ The rest of the song.

Updated: The video is no longer available on YouTube, which removed it due to a copyright claim by the Charlie Daniels Band, or CDB, informally. 

For those of you who were disappointed that the last version was truncated, be disappointed no more. Here’s the rest of the song. As for me, I’m still waiting for the counter: Maybe a take-off of Snoop Dogg’s “Drop It Like It’s Hot?
http://youtu.be/ki1InqQ5Sio

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Quote of the day: Halcro on the Uber case

If Andrew Halcro runs for mayor, which it looks like he might, the Uber situation will surely be one of his big issues. And it’s likely to be a winning one among voters, who will have a hard time understanding why, in Anchorage, Alaska of all places, they can’t decide what company they want to use to give them a ride to the airport.
Halcro uber

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Tweets of the Day: Parnell and Walker square off in Fairbanks

Here are some tweets, thanks mostly to  the News-Miner’s Matt Buxton, from the governor’s debate in Fairbanks between Gov. Sean Parnell and Bill Walker. The impression, based on these at least, is that Bill Walker, who hasn’t excelled at debates, got plenty of jabs in.

With a few exceptions, the tweets are in reverse chronological order:

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