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.

Governor's office: Troopergate is over and Palin testimony won't be released to public - 12/4/2008 7:43 pm

Begich on jail time for Stevens: 'I’m not sure that’s the best use of space and time' - 12/4/2008 1:45 pm

Is Monegan planning a run? - 12/4/2008 8:50 am

Brief, and not-so-brief, objections in Stevens case - 12/3/2008 4:29 pm

Begich wants money - 12/3/2008 11:38 am

Republican Chambliss wins decisively in Georgia U.S. Senate runoff - 12/2/2008 5:25 pm

Rumor patrol: Bailey & Frye - 12/2/2008 4:28 pm

'Partners in progress' - 12/2/2008 7:08 am

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

ANWR vote...sort of

From Erika Bolstad in Washington D.C. --

The U.S. Senate will be voting today on energy legislation that calls for a moratorium on putting oil in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

The amendment has bipartisan support in the Senate, where it was featured as part of energy-relief packages unveiled in recent weeks by both parties. If passed, Congress hopes that diverting fuel from the reserves to the open market will increase supply, and therefore, ease prices at the pump. President Bush has said he will veto the proposal, but it is likely to pass by a veto-proof margin in both the House and the Senate.

But a GOP provision that includes opening up ANWR for drilling is less likely to pass today in the Senate; senators will vote on it this afternoon following their vote on the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, spoke Monday afternoon on the floor of the Senate in support of the GOP plan and ANWR.

"Opening a bit of Arctic National Wildlife Refuge won’t produce new oil tomorrow, but it will affect the psychology of oil markets, because it will show that America is finally getting serious about producing the 40 billion barrels of oil and the hundreds of trillions of cubic feet of natural gas that we believe exist in current moratoria areas," Murkowski said.

Here's a link to her full remarks.


  1     May 14, 2008 - 10:20am | rfn

Now that the dust has settled

and it has, once again, been proven that our national leadership cares not a fig for energy independence, it's time for Alaska to profit from that decision.

Here's how:

1. During the forthcoming special session arrange a plan that uses a good part of the petroleum tax surplus to keep energy affordable in Alaska for Alaskans. Use some of it to build a bullet-line to get gas to South Central and a little more to make LNG for shipment to coastal and river villages.

2. Hand the Point Thomson leases back to Exxon & friends with NO strings attached. That way the oil and gas there will be safely warehoused for another 30+years and there won't be any hassle. It's like having money in the bank! Of course that also preserves the option of firing up a reserves tax.

3. Structure a natural gas tax so that there can be no hanky-panky with cheap "transfer prices" to shift Alaska's resources to a foreign country to turn mud into oil to ship to China. Then we'll see how much the oil comanies really want a pipeline.

4. Determine how much Alsaka needs, each month, from the petroleum tax to keep the state operating and fund the energy subsidies in #1 above.

5. Once that point is reached, suspend all shipment of petroleum from Alaska. That's a little tickelish; might be possible to pop "surprise" inspections of ships or the pipeline. Surely something can be found, each month, to shut it down for good, sound reasons.

6. Let prices rise. The rest of the country wants high prices; let's do our part to help them get what they want.

End result: Alaska's resources will produce maximum benefit to Alaskans (love that Constitution!); prices will rise and, along with them, tax revenue (it IS price-escalating); America will have the energy shortage it so fondly desires; the life of Alaska's reserves will be increased astronomically.