If you thought that Americans for Prosperity would chase the sun after the Senate race, think again. The conservative group spearheaded by the Koch brothers and now backed by a bevy of conservative patrons, has pared down since the Senate race, but it’s kept its Anchorage office open and some of its staff.
“We’re here to defend the tax payer, and we aren’t going anywhere,” said Jeremy Price, the head of the Alaska chapter of the group, at an AFP-hosted dinner in downtown Anchorage on Thursday night. The dinner drew about 150 people, including legislators, tea party and Republican Party activists.
Anchorage is one of the 33 chapters across the country which have recently sprouted to counter the technological and organizational advantages held by the Democrats, at least nationally. In Alaska, the lack of such advantages hasn’t necessarily kept so called conservatives from getting elected—both the Senate and the House have a Republican majority. The problem seems to be what happens after they get to Juneau.
Alaska isn’t a right to work state, for instance. We don’t have a broad-based tax, but government employment is among the highest in the country, as is government spending per capita, which is anathema to hardline conservatives like the Koch brothers. Continue reading


