Alaska Politics Blog

This is the place to talk about Alaska politics -- state, local, national. Public life in the Last Frontier has probably never been more interesting than right now -- the governor as candidate for vice president, the broad and still-evolving corruption investigation, a big election, powerful members of Congress under scrutiny, and the usual hardball Alaska politics. Come here for news, tidbits and information, and join the discussion. Keep your comments civil and on point. Avoid personal attacks. Do not use profanity. Posts that violate the Terms of Use will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be banned.


Erika Bolstad

Erika Bolstad covers Alaska issues, including the congressional delegation, from Washington, D.C., for McClatchy Newspapers. Before joining the bureau in 2007, she spent seven years as a reporter at the Miami Herald, where she covered politics, government and the state legislature. E-mail Erika at ebolstad@adn.com.

Sean Cockerham

Sean Cockerham writes about Alaska state politics. He spent three years based in Juneau for the ADN before joining the Tacoma News-Tribune to write about Washington state politics. He went to Iraq twice for the News Tribune, and previously wrote about Alaska government and politics for the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. E-mail Sean at scockerham@adn.com

Kyle Hopkins

Kyle Hopkins covers politics and other stories for the ADN. He covered the 2006 campaign for governor, has blogged extensively about Alaska politics, covered Anchorage city government and was a reporter based in the Mat-Su. He grew up in Southeast Alaska and previously was a reporter at the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner and Anchorage Press. E-mail Kyle at khopkins@adn.com

2008 Election

At one point the races with Sen. Ted Stevens and Rep. Don Young promised to be the highest-profile campaigns in Alaska history.

SECTION

Palin coverage

The nation was captivated by Sarah Palin's run to the White House, and now Alaska awaits the return of their governor.

SECTION

Alaska political corruption

The FBI raided state legislatures offices in Aug. 2006, and the fallout since has been epic in Alaska's political world.

Obama and the governors - 12/1/2008 7:50 pm

Palin mania in Georgia - 12/1/2008 4:07 pm

Palin on the trail (UPDATED: Video) - 12/1/2008 2:20 pm

Judge nixes Monday hearing in Stevens case - 11/28/2008 3:03 pm

Palin's gifts - 11/26/2008 4:32 pm

Stevens defense wants to see secret document filed by prosecutors - 11/26/2008 3:39 pm

The interview that won't die - 11/25/2008 2:21 pm

Hearing Monday on Stevens witness issue - 11/25/2008 2:07 pm

Palin back on the stump - 11/25/2008 12:28 pm

'Don't blame me! Blame Joe the Turkey Slaughterer' - 11/25/2008 12:18 pm

Senator for life - 11/25/2008 7:16 am

So what happened with DOJ and the Anderson letter? - 11/24/2008 7:33 pm

A Palin Thanksgiving: Thank-you notes or contempt charges? - 11/24/2008 11:15 am

Mayoral maneuvering - 11/21/2008 11:35 am

Palin talks turkey (Updated) - 11/20/2008 5:36 pm

Croatian village celebrates Begich victory - 11/20/2008 2:14 pm

Exit polling on Stevens-Begich - 11/20/2008 2:13 pm

Stevens farewell - 11/20/2008 9:22 am

Development crowd reserved with Palin, Begich - 11/19/2008 1:20 pm

Young, Murkowski and Palin on the Senate race (Updated) - 11/19/2008 12:20 pm

Stevens: 'It is apparent the election has been decided' - 11/19/2008 11:48 am

Begich on early voters and absentees: 'That's the group we worked.' - 11/18/2008 5:20 pm

Commentary from inside Courtroom 3

This from retired ADN editorial page editor Michael Carey. It's scheduled to run on the opinion pages tomorrow.

By Michael Carey

The FBI audio and video surveillance tapes of Vic Kohring may prove he is a criminal. Or maybe not. Let the jury decide.

But the tapes shown in open court - and now available on the ADN web site - are a revelation of character.

The Vic Kohring on tape with VECO executives Bill Allen and Rick Smith is incapable of adult conversation. He is a supplicant. Asking for money. Or a truck. Or a job for his nephew. Or, for God's sake, a hamburger. And always - always - for approval and sympathy.

Sometimes his search for approval is accompanied by bragging about his conservative pro-business beliefs. Sometimes his search for sympathy is accompanied by complaints about his health.

But in every conversation, Vic is a cloying mixture of neediness and manipulation. Vic's enemies - and some friends - have portrayed him as an air-headed innocent. He's not. He is blatantly calculating, if primitive, in attempting to satisfy his needs.

On the telephone or in the infamous Baranof 604, Vic follows a careful script that's an elevated form of pan handling. He starts with breezy ingratiating chatter, usually punctuated by recitations of how hard he is working, makes a few comments about the political scenes, and then reaches the nut of the call: Give me something.

If Vic Kohring could sing, his signature song would be The Temptations "Ain't Too Proud to Beg."

When Vic asks for help, for example the "loan" to pay off his credit card bill, he's also reciprocal. Hey fellas, anything I can do for you? I'll be your lobbyist. I'll influence other legislators. What do you need? For Vic Kohring, politeness is a form of currency. He seems to believe that by saying "Thank you" he has traded equally.

If Allen and Smith weren't trained psychologists, they were smart enough to understand Vic's haplessness and dependency. Hence Allen belief Vic will "kiss our ass."

How could a man like Vic Kohring rise so far in politics?

Well, give him credit: He campaigned relentlessly and repeatedly told his constituents what they wanted to hear about less government and lower taxes. Things like, in an ADN interview, ""The welfare situation is an area that's gotten way out of control. Too many freebies are taking away incentive, personal satisfaction and control of one's destiny."

And he certainly was polite.

He also was lucky. Vic always was in the majority while in the House of Representatives. If he had been in the minority, he would have remained a zealous conservative back-bencher of no consequence. As a long-serving member of the Republican majority, he could demand positions of influence.

And did.

His Republican colleagues made him chairman of the House Oil and Gas Committee. Then wouldn't send him the Petroleum Production Tax bill because they feared he would kill it.

Speaker John Harris and his colleagues should be ashamed of themselves. Vic Kohring shouldn't have been trusted to run anything, let alone the Oil and Gas Committee. I wouldn't trust him to pick up the ice cream for a church social. To buy it, he would have to bum money from a lobbyist.

As a legislator, Vic displayed minimal brain power and an unwillingness to learn. He mastered a few conservative slogans before he entered the Legislature and that was the extent of his knowledge. He was prepared to give the oil companies hundreds of millions of dollars in tax breaks because he self-righteously and piously believed oil industry good, government bad.

I have watched the Alaska Legislature for 40 years. Vic Kohring is the only lawmaker I have ever seen who learned nothing during his years of service. He was the same person the day he departed as the day he entered.

You might look at the FBI tapes of Vic Kohring in action and decide Vic doesn't belong in jail. But I don't think anybody, including Vic's lawyer John Henry Browne, could look at those tapes and conclude Vic Kohring ever belonged in the Alaska Legislature.


  10     October 29, 2007 - 6:41pm | gilld

Excellent Article, Mike

Thank you.

  9     October 29, 2007 - 3:02pm | Nuni

Vic's Character

I have three personal experiences to share with you about Vic's character. You be the judge.
1) The raincoat: While out helping Vic put up campaign signs it began to rain. Vic put his raincoat on me to keep me dry while he got shivering cold and soaking wet.
2) The grass: My knees are shot, you know, football. Vic asked how he could help. I told him I could use help cutting the grass. He came over and cut the grass this summer til the end of the season. 6-8 times, big yard.
3) The broken pipe: The icemaker sprung a leak and ruined the downstairs ceiling. Vic asked how he could help. He helped fix the pipe and sheetrocked the ceiling.
He asked nothing in return. In my experience he always put others first.

  October 30, 2007 - 10:10am | seewhy

a nice story, sort of

i guess i have conflicting feelings. when i help elect my senator and representative and send them to juneau, i expect them to devote all of their time to the state's business. there's a little of that, even when the legislature isn't in session. i'm not sure how i'd feel if they were doing yard work for constituents. i might think it was very strange.

  October 30, 2007 - 9:43am | AKSteveB

Nuni

I'm about to violate Godwin's Law here :) but Hitler was kind to dogs and little (Aryan) kids.

Like I said in another thread, Kohring at the very least was what we called in the old neighborhood a "shmoe." Someone you might feel sympathy for, or someone you might beat up for their lunch money depending on how nice you were.

While I wouldn't call for the death penalty for the guy, I don't get the sympathy for him (or any of these guys really). I look at postings by folks like FreezinFranz, sewinds etc. and just have to wonder "what IS your moral base." Even worse, I still think the people in Kohrings district would reelect him if they could.

  October 29, 2007 - 4:30pm | stam

This is excellent

Print off a copy and give it to the judge before the sentencing. Then give the man his coat back and plan on mowing his yard for the next few years. I have a feeling that he a decent man who some serious mistakes and he will need his friends.

  October 29, 2007 - 6:38pm | gilld

Tell Us, Nuni

...what sort of character was Kohring displaying when he had his hand out, taking hundreds from Veco?

How ethically did he represent you and other District 14 residents when he apparently spent most of the legislative year living in Portland, Oregon? How many legislative sesssions did he attend on your and other constituents' behalf during the 2007 regular session?

Is Lyda Green your Senator? How ethically do you feel she's representing you?

  8     October 29, 2007 - 1:16pm | fishwrapper

Same Conclusion

I said the same thing here 3 days ago in only 6 words. Kohring is dumber than a Stump!

  7     October 29, 2007 - 12:33pm | americus

Micheal Carey's article is

Micheal Carey's article is right on. He made a career out of using a few conservative catch phrases and blaming others (the liberals) for all his problems. One good thing about being a liberal represented by Vic was you didn't have to worry about him ever succeeding in any of his rhetoric it was like having no representation. His relentless campaigning may pay off for him in the end. He can wear the gorilla suit and wave. Maybe his friends will stick an extra hundred in his pocket after they buy their fireworks. I guess they won't be naming any Elementary Schools after Vic.

  6     October 29, 2007 - 12:02pm | JenniferJuniper

Oh dear.

Oh dear. The gallows are being built.

  5     October 29, 2007 - 10:12am | Diogenes_lamp

Michael Carey hits a Home Run...

His assessment of Vic Kohring is dead-on. I have known Vic for years, both in the Valley and in Juneau. Carey's evaluation may be harsh, but the reality of the Kohring situation is just that or worse.
Vic has been fooling most of the people, most of the time. His scam may be coming to an end for some. The Mat-Su needs to know the truth, not just about Vic but about many of it's elected delegation.

  October 29, 2007 - 12:43pm | northernlady

Great writing

Yes, Michael exactly put into words my feelings of Vic after watching his antics on the tapes.

I certainly hope that the jury feels the same disgust I feel while watching him, not sympathy.

  4     October 29, 2007 - 9:40am | robindevoe

A Little Harsh, Perhaps

But Carey's piece carries the ring of truth. Vic never should have been elected to any Legislature (thank-you Wasilla voters); and I'm sure he's beginning to wish he'd pursued a career in... anything but politics.

  3     October 29, 2007 - 8:59am | kevinlinn

finally someone nailed it.

finally someone nailed it. Mr. Carey in a few paragraphs summed up Vic Kohring along with his mentality and mode of operation. Talk heads like Dan Fagan tell us they cannot help but feel a little sorry for Kohring when they have completely missed the gist of this case and the man.

  October 29, 2007 - 12:38pm | northernlady

Fagan

in my opinion, likes to sleep with a Big Petroleum blanket.

  October 29, 2007 - 6:44pm | gilld

Fagan

...agrees with Exxon and thinks the PPT should be lowered. So much for Oil Can Dan's veracity.

  2     October 29, 2007 - 8:51am | black33

Well written!

Kohring thought that, based on the success of his public sector "panhandling" (e.g. he got $31,000 of per diem $$ in 2006 for housing, only to sleep in his office), he could use the same methods in the private sector to enrich himself. Poor Vic!

  1     October 29, 2007 - 8:37am | md

Hear! Hear!

Hear! Hear!

  October 29, 2007 - 9:59am | mollstorm

begging

Kohring is like a puppy learning a trick. Wags his tail and gets a "Scooby Snack".

On one of the audio tapes. Did anyone else catch the quote Vic said that he was looking forward to having another "Long Island Ice Tea with you guys" Audio to VECO guys

Wow, from someone who said he doesn't drink!
drinking a long Island Ice tea???

It is about time that people have taken off their blinders to see what lack of integrity Vic Has.

  October 29, 2007 - 10:53pm | edgefinder

scooby snack

Or more like another habituated garbage bear .

  October 29, 2007 - 12:35pm | northernlady

LOL

Love the Scooby Snack picture! Although, I think you insult Scooby...

  October 29, 2007 - 12:01pm | JenniferJuniper

Blame his nonexistant

Blame his nonexistant Russian wife.

She also turned him on to vodka.