Treadwell and Sullivan trade barbs over ‘Stand Your Ground’

GOP Senate candidate Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell continued the attack against fellow Republican candidate Dan Sullivan over Sullivan’s support on ‘Stand Your Ground’ legislation. Sullivan has said that he supported the legislation, and helped pass it while he was the state’s attorney general. Treadwell, and the other candidate in the campaign, Joe Miller, as well as Sen. Mark Begich’s allies, and one political fact-checking organization, have all questioned Sullivan’s support for ‘Stand Your Ground.’

Treadwell, who said it was important to be honest, went so far as to issue a challenge: “Produce one piece of credible, time-stamped evidence that proves you fought to pass Stand your Ground during your tenure as Attorney General, and I’ll put up one of your campaign signs in my yard,” Treadwell wrote in a release on Wednesday.

Sullivan’s campaign spokesman Mike Anderson fired back: Continue reading

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Begich touts fight for F-16 fighter jets in new ad

Here’s the latest ad from U.S. Sen. Mark Begich, which this time features Iraq War Veteran, Master Sgt. Troy Bouffard, who credits Begich in the ad for pushing the administration to help save 3,000 jobs in Alaska by keeping the F-16 fighter jets at Eielson Air Force Base. As a member of Senate Armed Services Committee, Begich held up the nomination for the promotion of Lt. Gen. Herbert “Hawk” Carlisle to four-stars and taking command of Pacific Air Forces until he got a commitment to keep the F-16s in Fairbanks.

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Welcome to bad government: The mess in Government Hill that KABATA left

government hill protest 1

About 50 people chanted, waved signs and rang bells –one even rode a unicycle–to greet a group of men who showed up to bid on three properties in the Government Hill neighborhood in order to make room for a bridge that would span the Knik Arm. The Department of Transportation put out a bid to buy the properties in order to demolish them. It is spending anywhere from $500,000 to $1 million to get the job done. That’s on top of the roughly $2.5 million the state paid to acquire the properties. About seven men showed to walk through them. They were media shy and wouldn’t answer questions, particularly with the crowd of protesters across the street, imploring them to go away.

The bridge, if it gets built at all, is years away from being complete. It has yet to get necessary federal loans–loans that the state has applied for repeatedly and has been turned down for repeatedly. And even if it gets the loans, it still needs a host of permits, including from the Corp of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Continue reading

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GOP Senate candidate Dan Sullivan raises $1.2 million in quarter

GOP Senate candidate Dan Sullivan released his fundraising numbers on Tuesday for the second quarter of the year, which runs from April to June 30.  During that time, he raised $1.2 million, bringing his total haul in the election cycle to $3.8 million. It’s the third straight fundraising quarter that Sullivan has raised over a million dollars. Official FEC reports aren’t due until July 15.

No word yet on what Joe Miller and Mead Treadwell, the other Republicans running in the primary, have raised, though it likely won’t be nearly as large of a number. Begich released his numbers last week, saying that he raised $1.25 million in the quarter. He also touted in a release that he had 700 new Alaska donors. It was the first time since Sullivan has entered the race that Begich raised more than Sullivan, albeit only by $50,000.

Sullivan’s campaign said that 1,000 Alaskans have donated since he announced in October, and that in the current quarter, Sullivan raised more than $195,000 in Alaska, with over 400 new Alaskan donations.

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Fagan grills Walker over support for repeal of oil taxes

On Monday independent governor Bill Walker was on the Dan Fagan/Glen Biegel show, where he talked about his support for repealing SB 21. Fagan, who can be relentless, drilled down on Walker’s support for repeal. Fagan focused on the fact that since the current tax structure has been in place, oil production has ceased to decline. Last December, the state estimated a 4.4 percent decline for this year. That didn’t happen. For fiscal year 2014, which ended June 30, oil production averaged 530,939 barrels per day, roughly the same amount of oil produced as the year before. Production decline averaged about 5 percent between 2008 to 2011, and slipped 8 percent between 2012 and 2013.  Until this year, the last year the state didn’t see a decline in production was in 2001. Those who advocate for repeal say that the flattening is the result of geophysics, not taxes,. Some of them say that the oil companies are increasing production temporarily to make it seem as the new regime is working. Walker, who is usually not at a loss for words, stumbled his way through the interview and only alluded to the latter. Listen to the clip here. 

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Begich goes after Treadwell for ties to a firm pushing REAL ID

U.S. Sen. Mark Begich’s campaign sent out a release on Monday questioning GOP Senate candidate and Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell’s commitment to privacy. The release pointed to a company that Treadwell helped form in 1995 called Digimarc, which has provided the potential technology for REAL ID, “an invasive national ID program widely unpopular with Alaskans of all political leanings,” the release said.

“Almost everyday Mead Treadwell tells Alaskans the government ‘snoops too much’ while concealing his history of profiting from a national ID card scheme Alaskans roundly rejected as an invasion of privacy,” Susanne Fleek-Green, Begich’s campaign manager, said. Continue reading

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Pro-Begich super-PAC Put Alaska First announces big 2nd quarter haul

According to federal disclosures, Put Alaska First, the pro-Begich super-PAC, raised $3,647,539 between April 1st and June 30Only $90,000 came from donors other than the Senate Majority PAC, which is run by former aides to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Well known Democratic donor and real-estate developer Barney Gottstein gave $50,000, the San Pablo Casino gave $25,000 and the Community Leadership PAC out of Virginia gave $15,000.

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Washington Post travels with Begich. Morning Joe pokes at him.

Here’s MSNBC’s Morning Joe having some fun with Sen. Mark Begich’s strategy to distance himself from President Obama, highlighted in a not completely flattering Washington Post article:

From the Washington Post piece:

Begich, 52, is a first-term senator known for being pro-gun and pro-oil. But he is not actually that well known for anything. In the Senate, Begich is a junior figure, moving through the chamber’s power structure at the speed of a mastodon trapped in a glacier. Over five years, just one of his bills has been passed into law. It renamed a courthouse in Anchorage…. But now, thanks to the midterm elections, Begich is temporarily one of the most important politicians in the country. Continue reading

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Loose Lips: A whisperer bets on dirt. Fischer=Gandhi? Joe and Judy behave.

18955141_mDavid Mayberry has been appointed to the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. He is a lawyer who has represented lots of oil and gas companies for Crowell & Moring, LLP. He’ll have to be confirmed next session.

I wrote earlier about a whisper campaign claiming that GOP Senate candidate Dan Sullivan has lots of “dirt” on him that will come out if he wins the GOP nomination. Those of us who have seen the oppo file have rolled our eyes. Talk show host Bernadette Wilson, who supports Mead Treadwell, isn’t backing down. “I’m still taking bets theres info laying around on Sullivan if there’s any takers :),” she wrote in an email to a group of “dear friends” which was then passed on to me.

Jim Lottsfeldt, an Anchorage-based lobbyist and the head of U.S. Sen. Mark Begich’s super-PAC, had a fundraiser on Thursday for Forrest Dunbar, the young and inspiring Democrat who’s challenging Rep. Don Young. Continue reading

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State finally putting some pressure on Xerox for botched Medicaid system

Alaska has begun to finally put some pressure on Xerox Corp. to live up to its contractual obligations to build an online Medicaid Management System that actually works. The state has said that it’s entering into “mediation” with Xerox over the botched rollout, one that has caused no end of problems for hundreds of medical professionals across the state, some of whom have said they’re on the verge of bankruptcy or shutting down because of the lack of payment from the state since the faulty system went on line.

The total contract was for $146 million, including the costs of continuing to run the system for a certain number of years. The system alone, according to news accounts, was $36 million, of which Xerox has been paid $12 million. Most of that money is being paid from federal funds.

The billing system was supposed to be completed in 2010. Continue reading

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Verdict is in: More people insured under ObamaCare

On the Dan Fagan/Glen Biegel show on Friday, GOP Senate candidate Dan Sullivan said repeatedly that ObamaCare had resulted in a higher rate of uninsured in this country. However, the verdict is in and it’s clear that his claim is simply not true. It remains to be seen whether Sullivan is too partisan and too stuck on the narrative to be able to admit that he’s wrong. From Politico: 

A survey by the Commonwealth Fund found that 9.5 million fewer adults are uninsured now than at the beginning of the Obamacare enrollment season. The Urban Institute’s Health Reform Monitoring Survey found a similar drop, with 8 million adults gaining coverage. And Gallup-Healthways survey reported that the uninsured rate has fallen to 13.4 percent of adults, the lowest level since it began tracking health coverage in 2008… In recent months, other surveys in the Gallup series have consistently found the same downward trend, and a RAND survey in April estimated that the law extended health coverage to 9.3 million Americans.

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Tweet of the day: Mayoral candidate Coffey on the case in Government Hill

Mayoral candidate Dan Coffey is apparently working on Gov. Sean Parnell to stop the razing of the houses in Government Hill. If he can convince the governor, he’ll gain lots of street cred with the residents of Government Hill.

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Quote of the day: Keithley on Alaska’s oil patch

From a Brad Keithley Facebook post on where Alaska has fallen short on managing its oil patch:

There are success stories also where government owns the lands, but no disrespect intended, Alaska is not one of those and has done a horrible job at managing the lands. Basically we have lived off of the two large lighter oil discoveries at Prudhoe and Kuparuk (and a few satellites along the way) for decades and never had to do much else to manage the lands better. Now that those are producing at much lower levels, we don’t have a good strategy in place — as the owner of the lands — for further development. Given our position, the two best corollaries to look to are how the US has managed the Gulf of Mexico and Norway. The US has been successful in the GOM by only charging royalties and no severance taxes. The resulting low costs have encouraged investment and development, despite the higher cost and risk environment. Norway has gone about it differently by eliminating lease bonus payments, royalty and engaging in co-investment. As a result, even though it has imposed higher costs Norway actually has reduced risk and created alignment in a way that has enabled it to drive investment and activity in a way Alaska hasn’t….But of course …. no one wants to listen to that. The existing players on the Slope are satisfied with the current (largely non-competitive) arrangement where they set the pace of development and most of the Alaska players don’t have a clue (and don’t bother to take the time to learn about) alternative approaches, and as a result just rely on the current industry to continue to identify the terms for development.

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Mayoral candidate Coffey joins opposition to razing Government Hill properties

Anchorage mayoral candidate Dan Coffey has entered the fight to stop properties in the Government Hill neighborhood of Anchorage from being razed in preparation for a potential bridge that would span from the neighborhood. Coffey is adding his voice the voices of a handful of state Democratic officials and community activists, including Rep. Les Gara and Sen. Johnny Ellis, in calling for a halt of the demolition.

On Thursday, Coffey emailed Gov. Sean Parnell’s administration, urging them to hold off on the demolition until funding sources needed to build the bridge are secure. He plans to continue to communicate with the administration about the project.

“It makes no sense what so ever to tear down those properties when there is a housing crisis in the community,” Coffey said. He’s made affordable housing one of the big issues in his nascent campaign. Continue reading

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