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

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.

Bob Poe running for governor - 1/7/2009 1:50 pm

Before the storm - Palin e-mails from Aug. 27 - 1/7/2009 12:07 pm

Reid on punishment for Stevens - 1/7/2009 7:32 am

Polling on Palin vs. Murkowski - 1/6/2009 3:24 pm

Citgo 'suspends' free heating oil program - 1/5/2009 2:37 pm

Palin's comments on first grandchild - 12/31/2008 4:35 pm

Suicide council audit - 12/30/2008 9:11 pm

Son of Snowzilla - 12/30/2008 8:55 pm

'People' editor: No deal for baby photos. Yet. - 12/30/2008 1:12 pm

'Baby Name Bible' - 12/29/2008 8:14 pm

Anchorage Mayor: Begich out, Claman in Jan. 3 - 12/26/2008 12:40 pm

No trash power? (Plus: School board pay) - 12/26/2008 11:22 am

PETA's beef with Palin - 12/24/2008 12:02 pm

"The opportunities that were not seized." - 12/22/2008 1:48 pm

Palin's next big speech? - 12/22/2008 12:37 pm

Here we go - a look at potential 2010 election matchups (and Palin popularity) - 12/20/2008 1:42 pm

Hawker to Palin: Try again - 12/19/2008 5:11 pm

Video: Palin on salary, energy plan - 12/19/2008 9:58 am

Walt Monegan is planning to run for mayor - 12/18/2008 4:40 pm

Covering Juneau - 12/17/2008 5:07 pm

Palin says no to raise; energy plan delayed - 12/17/2008 2:19 pm

Meyer joins majority, gets LB&A (Updated with McGuire, Menard joining too) - 12/16/2008 5:45 pm

Clean elections supporters file APOC complaint

From Kyle Hopkins in Anchorage --

Remember the Committee to Stop the Corruption?

They were pushing earlier this year for a ballot initiative that would – among other things -- forbid using public money to pay for Alaska political campaigns.

The tension at the time was that their initiative was at odds with the “clean elections” supporters who wanted to give state politicians the option of publicly funded campaigns.

So, the clean elections initiative is now on Tuesday’s ballot, while the “Stop the Corruption” group couldn’t get enough signatures in time. Their ballot question won’t go before voters until 2010.

Meantime, the Committee to Stop the Corruption has told APOC it hasn’t spent any money this year. The group’s supporters say it’s dormant.

But the Alaska Public Interest Research Group said that’s not the case. AkPIRG says the Committee to Stop Corruption is campaigning against Ballot Measure 3 and should have to report that to the state.

AkPIRG says it filed a complaint with the Alaska Public Offices Commission today, and writes:

“The Committee to Stop the Corruption lists its campaign address as: 109 West 6th Ave., Suite 202 in Anchorage. The group is either paying for that office or receiving an in-kind donation from someone. Their APOC report lists neither.”

I talked briefly to Anchorage attorney Ken Jacobus, who has been debating against the clean elections ballot measure. (He says he’ll be on KUDO today at 3:30 for another debate, with Alaskans for Clean Elections co-founder Tim June.)

Jacobus helped write the Committee to Stop the Corruption’s ballot initiative, but says he’s not being paid to oppose Ballot Measure 3.

“None of this is on behalf of the Committee to Stop the Corruption, it was just a personal effort because I was asked to do it.”

As for the committee’s office space, he’s says it’s vacant. “I don’t think there’s a technical violation even, but if there is, we’ll fix it.

Scott Kohlhaas, a Libertarian who was one of the sponsors of the Committee to Stop the Corruptions’ ballot initiative, was identified in a recent KTUU story working with the Committee. In the story, he opposes the clean elections initiative.

Kohlhaas says the committee in inactive for now, and he was speaking on his own behalf.


  2     August 22, 2008 - 11:23pm | Gus_Davis

APOC

Allways Predict Out Come

  1     August 22, 2008 - 1:36pm | InJuneau

Kyle...

"They're ballot question..." Really? Please proofread; spellcheck doesn't always work... I expect better from staff, if not all posters...even if it is "only" a blog.

  August 22, 2008 - 3:02pm | Alaska_Politics

oops

Thought I'd fixed that.
Thanks.

-- Kyle

  August 22, 2008 - 3:45pm | InJuneau

Thank you!

Thank you!