Featured Archives - Alaska Politics and Elections https://www.apeonline.org/category/featured-headlines/ Wed, 28 Sep 2022 04:50:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/www.apeonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/cropped-APE-small.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Featured Archives - Alaska Politics and Elections https://www.apeonline.org/category/featured-headlines/ 32 32 174736357 Who’s negative and who’s not? https://www.apeonline.org/2022/09/27/whos-negative-and-whos-not/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=whos-negative-and-whos-not https://www.apeonline.org/2022/09/27/whos-negative-and-whos-not/#respond Wed, 28 Sep 2022 04:34:54 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9958 The post Who’s negative and who’s not? appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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Nick Begich’s true colors are shining through

By APE Editor

September 27, 2022

Alaska is in the heat of campaign season.

A contested race with growing national attention is for the federal House of Representatives. Mary Peltola, a rural Alaskan Democrat, won the special election to serve the remaining months of the late Congressman Don Young’s seat. November 8th’s General Election decides who gets to serve the full two-year term.

A notable facet of Alaska’s congressional race is that one Republican challenger suggests he’s being positive in his messaging to voters while accusing the fellow GOP candidate of being negative.

This is an easy one to compare and contrast. Their words speak for themselves.

Recently the following ads were scheduled on radio stations in Alaska.

Alaskan voters can be the judge of content and spirit. These ads are running on radio stations this week across the state.

Listen for yourself:

Which candidate is negative and attacks his opponent?

Which candidate urges voters to “Rank the Red” and stays positive in her ad?

Words and actions matter.

The “Negative Nick” moniker fits Mr. Begich snuggly.

Who's negative and who's not?

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Negative Nick (Begich) https://www.apeonline.org/2022/08/15/negative-nick-begich/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=negative-nick-begich https://www.apeonline.org/2022/08/15/negative-nick-begich/#comments Mon, 15 Aug 2022 22:48:35 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9948 The post Negative Nick (Begich) appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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The inconvenience of truth

By Frank Dahl

August 15, 2022

Facts matter.

At least, they should.

I heard congressional candidate Nick Begich’s latest radio ad today and could only shake my head in disbelief.

Begich is attacking former Governor Sarah Palin with disparagements.

I guess that’s the strategy used when you’re behind in an election or you have nothing substantive to say. Tearing down opponents is a growing, disappointing trend. I’m doubtful it resonates with hardworking Alaskans who simply want a better, stable life for their families.

The radio begins with these lines:

“Alaska. A big land. A land of big issues. Issues that impact thousands of lives. Fisheries; oil and gas; renewable energy; government; mining; timber; tourism; transportation. Alaska needs a congressman who understands these issues. A congressman who can fight – and win – the battles Alaska cannot afford to lose.”

Negative Nick (Begich)Admittedly, I assumed this was an ad for Sarah. It sums up her experience as a Wasilla councilmember and mayor, as an oil and gas policy administrator, and of course as the state’s elected governor. Sarah Palin has worked in all of these sectors as a local policymaker, local and state executive, and industry regulator.

But as I continued to listen, I realized the ad isn’t for Sarah despite essentially summarizing her credentials.

The ad is for Nick Begich, Mark Begich’s nephew, of all people.

The guy who challenged former Assemblymember Amy Demboski in Eagle River and lost by almost 20%.

As far as candidate Nick Begich is concerned, his latest radio ad is unbecoming of a wanna-be congressman because not only does it list attributes he doesn’t possess, but also the second half of the ad is highly disrespectful towards Sarah. The ad reeks of desperation.

Nick has very little experience in anything, from what I can gather. It’s laughable he highlights policy sectors in which he has zero experience. His ad is misleading to the public.

Then there’s the line about Alaska needing a fighter in Washington DC.

Ever met Nick Begich?

He’s a bureaucrat like the rest of his family. He’s certainly not a fighter because of a mailer with him holding a shotgun. I’ve owned some pretty rough-and-tumble bars in my day, like in Valdez during the Alaska Pipeline build. I’ve seen really tough people fight. I’ve also dropped my share of wild game as a longtime hunter.

To my knowledge, Nick Begich is neither a fighter (in the physical or policy-centric way) nor a hunter. Don’t let radio scripts and posed photos make you think any different. He’s a tech guy.

Further, Begich hasn’t protested the onslaught of negative diatribes from Americans for Prosperity against Sarah over the last three weeks. AFP has wasted so much money on mailers that are being tossed into the garbage and are unnecessary against a superior Republican (Sarah Palin) candidate to Nick. Who is deciding on this expensive and counter-productive AFP messaging in Alaska? They should be fired for incompetence and bias.

Ever heard of former President Ronald Reagan’s use of the “11th Commandment”?

Thou shall not speak ill of any fellow Republican.

I have to hand it to Sarah and her campaign manager, by the way. I haven’t seen any negative ads from the Palin team. Sure, a response to mudslinging, but otherwise 100% positive.

That’s a true Alaskan for you.

So tomorrow, Tuesday, August 16th, it’s Primary Election and I’m voting for Sarah Palin for Congress because, without question, she actually has the credentials, experience, aptitude, and tenacity to get the job done and move Alaska forward.

Sarah is the best fighter we have on the ballot for Alaska’s next U.S. Representative.

And when it comes to filling the titan Don Young’s shoes, do you want a poser – or the real deal?

Reject “Negative Nick” and vote your conscience for Congress.

For me, that’s Sarah Palin.

Frank Dahl has owned bars, restaurants and lodges throughout Alaska and in the Lower 48 for over five decades including Blues Central at the Chef’s Inn. As the founder of Anchorage CHARR and a former Board Member of Alaska CHARR, he has been active in hospitality and tourism industry policy development for years. He is a member of Rotary and a recipient of an Alaska Legislative citation for public service.

It's Time to Support the Hospitality Industry

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Moving the United States forward with collaboration https://www.apeonline.org/2022/04/08/moving-the-united-states-forward-with-collaboration/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=moving-the-united-states-forward-with-collaboration Sat, 09 Apr 2022 02:36:52 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9917 The post Moving the United States forward with collaboration appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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By APE Staff

April 8, 2022

Senator Joe Manchin praises Senator Lisa Murkowski on energy and Arctic policy leadership

 

As over 600 policymakers, advocates, dignitaries, and diplomats launch the 2022 Arctic Encounter Symposium in Anchorage, Alaska, at center-stage stand West Virginia U.S. Senator Joe Manchin and Alaska’s senior federal delegation member, U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski.

Particularly over the last decade, Arctic policy has gained the attention of the global community as sea ice melts and Democracy-hostile nations like China and Russia inch their way into the region with intent to assert jurisdiction claims. Along with Antarctica, deep space, and our oceans, Arctic ecosystems and geography are one of the few remaining frontiers of discovery. National defense concerns along with resource development opportunities, deep-water ports, and supply-chain routes are foundational topics on the Symposium agenda.

Alaska is the only Arctic state in the U.S. so its nexus to international policy is inextricable.

When asked about the importance of Arctic policy to the U.S. on the Tom Anderson Show, Senator Manchin noted the connection he has with Senator Murkowski. “I’m now Chairman of the Energy and Natural Resource Committee which Lisa has been the chair of quite a few times,” said Manchin. “She was the chair two years ago and I was the ranking member as a Democrat, and she was the Republican chair because they were the Majority. When the Democrats were the Majority, I became the chair. And together we have done so much and worked in a bi-partisan, unbelievable way, that got things accomplished.”

When asked about the importance of this year’s Arctic symposium, Murkowski noted the robust attendance as an indicator of the event’s impact. “All you need to do is look at what is happening at the Dena’ina Center this morning with the level of interest, not only around the country – this is not just a state event – this is an international event that is convening here (in Alaska), and the level of interest about the Arctic and all that is going on – this is something that I have been singing from the roof tops for years now,” she said.

Heather Reams, President of Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions (CRES), is a participant of the Symposium. Reams and her organization have been making the case for Republican leadership on clean and renewable energy, particularly in areas of critical mineral development, streamlining permitting, and efforts to pursue market-based innovation rather than top-down harmful policies that eliminate certain industries.

Moving the United States forward with collaboration“We’ll be talking about solutions to address a rapidly changing Arctic, and really how the Arctic region can be key to solving some of these very complex problems which is one of the reasons I’m here,” notes Reams. “(The Arctic) has the oil and gas, but it also has so much in terms of renewable energy. The minerals that are needed to fuel this energy transition, and also, just a fragile environment. If anyone thinks Alaskans don’t want to protect the environment, they’re dead wrong. I think this state is so sensitive to the balance that is needed to move forward the economy, make sure there’s energy independence, but also protecting the environment – and that’s one of the reasons why CRES loves Lisa Murkowski. She talks so much about this balance that’s been so well done in the state.”

While Arctic innovation is the week’s dialogue in Alaska, the carnage of the Russian-Ukrainian war in Europe weighs heavy on American policymakers’ minds. In response to a national call for sanctions against Russia, on March 3, 2022, Senators Murkowski and Manchin introduced S. 3757, the Ban Russian Energy Imports Act, to prohibit the importation of Russian crude oil, petroleum, petroleum products, liquefied natural gas, and coal. Their bill, which has 37 bipartisan cosponsors, is widely credited with prompting President Biden to issue an executive order to block Russian energy imports on March 8, 2022.

In a March 7th press release, Murkowski’s office highlighted the Senate’s passage of two measures to impose additional penalties on Russia. The first measure, H.R. 6968, imposes a legislative ban on Russian energy imports and contains language crafted in part by Murkowski to expedite its implementation. The second measure, H.R. 7108, suspends permanent normal trade relations (PNTR), a key benefit of World Trade Organization membership, for Russia and Belarus.

“Congress remains united in our support for Ukraine, and we will hold the Russian regime accountable for the devastation, atrocities, and war crimes it has committed. As part of that, I’m grateful to Chairman Wyden and Ranking Member Crapo of the Finance Committee for working with Senator Manchin and me to reinforce and tighten the language of the Russian energy import ban,” praised Murkowski. “Now, President Biden needs to step up and remove his Administration’s sanctions on resource projects in Alaska. There is no question that Alaska can and would do more to produce the energy and minerals that America and the world need, if only the administration would partner with us instead of blocking us at every turn. If there was ever a time for the President to look in the mirror and bring his policies back to reality, it is right now.”

In his interview on the Tom Anderson Show, when asked about his respect for Senator Murkowski, Senator Manchin sung high praises. “I’ve been there for 11 years now in the Senate. I was the Governor, a two-term Governor before. I was Secretary of State in my state before. I was a State Senator and in the House of Representatives, so I’ve been in all different aspects of the government. I’ve never had a colleague – as Lisa Murkowski has been with me – that’s willing to meet me in the middle every time. To find the middle, not to defend the position. Not to say, ‘Well this is my position, I’m sorry – you’re going to have to agree with me or we just can’t come to an agreement!’”

Manchin added, “I have never in my experience of over 40 years being in the political arena found anybody that would always say ‘Let’s see if we can make this work, Joe. Let’s see what we can find out. How do we make it better? Who all can we bring on board? And then basically let the facts take us where it goes.’ She’s the best of the best and I’m just saying, Alaska – and I mean this – Alaska is very, very fortunate to have a Lisa Murkowski with her knowledge, background, and her common-sense approach of working together for the betterment of our country.”

Moving the United States forward with collaboration

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Don’t change horses midstream. https://www.apeonline.org/2022/02/06/dont-change-horses-midstream/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dont-change-horses-midstream Sun, 06 Feb 2022 22:29:21 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9882 The post Don’t change horses midstream. appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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By Paulette Simpson

Sunday, February 6, 2021

President Lincoln, back in 1864, felt it “not best to swap horses while crossing the river”
when it came to his nomination for a second term as President.

 

He never suggested himself the epitome of greatness, but his efforts and notable management of the nation and command of the Union troops were skillsets that kept the North stable enough to ultimately win the Civil War.

Lincoln’s phrase is apropos today, as Alaskan Republicans face a looming shadow of Independent and Democratic candidate challengers, polemic political blogs and social media content undermining our goals, and a new electoral Non-Partisan Top-Four Primary and Ranked Choice Voting process that is both confusing and concerning.

Now, more than ever, our state’s GOP must prepare for 2022’s campaign battles with leadership intact and momentum unfettered.

It is no easy task to keep all of our “wings” flying in the same direction.

Ann Brown is the Alaska Republican Party’s Chairwoman.

Ann is not only getting the job done for our diverse membership, but she is also bringing together a formidable team of supporters and fundraising assets.

Admittedly, the first time Ann was a candidate for the Alaska Republican Party (ARP) chairmanship, I supported Tuckerman Babcock, who I knew for decades. Tuckerman later transitioned into Governor Dunleavy’s Cabinet, and Pastor Glenn Clary took over the ARP as Ann rose to Vice-Chair. During this time I observed her work ethic and organizational skills and realized Ann has both aptitude and intellect to help grow and protect our Party.

When Glenn moved to Virginia to help his mentor, Dr. Prevo, at Liberty University, Ann became the Party’s state chair.

And ever since, I remain impressed and pleased at her success.

Don’t change horses midstream.

Facts are facts. Results matter.

One of Ann’s most notable accomplishments has been to create a stable donor base to fund state GOP operations and get-out-to-vote (GOTV) efforts. She’s made sure supporters and campaign volunteers are trained to use GOTV tools while increasing the GOP’s state email recipient lists. She helped establish and increase digital fundraising while targeting a concerted effort to increase social media followers and engagement online. Ann helped establish the template for the election day operations hub, and most recently ramped up recruitment and training of poll watchers.

When I last spoke with Ann and asked her about her vision for 2022 and beyond, she expressed the goal being to make sure fellow Republicans have a shared sense of purpose and esprit de corps to carry out the Party’s two main purposes:

    1. Generating consistent fundraising streams for GOP messaging and voter communications.
    2. Ensuring Republican majorities are secured in federal, state, and local Alaskan elections.

At the end of last year, retired Alaska Lt. Governor and General Craig Campbell, Anchorage District Chairman Mike Robbins, and our new state Finance Chairman Jason Warfield forged a fundraising game plan to recruit a group of  GOP supporters committed to consistently donate to help cover GOP administrative costs. Ann championed the idea. These donors are in addition to the Freedom Club roster of monthly supporters. Our Party’s finances are stable now, and our bank account continues to build. Ann deserves credit for this, under her watch.

The list is long of Ann’s service above self and accomplishments to our cause, with no income or expectation of compensation.

Chairwoman Ann Brown puts the Alaska Republican Party and its members first, with courtesy, professionalism, and an intent to generate solidarity when it comes to the underlying reason we have a Republican organization in the first place: To elect Republicans!

I encourage GOP members planning to participate in the April 2022 Alaska GOP State Convention in Fairbanks to connect with Ann and get to know her. Consider her record of success.

This is not the time to change leadership as we cross the river.

Alaska’s GOP is moving in the right direction thanks to Ann Brown.

Don’t change horses midstream.Paulette Simpson lives in Juneau and has been active in the Alaska Republican Party for over 30 years.

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Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit https://www.apeonline.org/2021/12/19/alaskan-cops-spread-the-christmas-spirit/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=alaskan-cops-spread-the-christmas-spirit Sun, 19 Dec 2021 23:54:59 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9821 The post Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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December 19, 2021

Retired peace officers are still giving back to our communities

 

Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spiritMembers of the Mat-Su chapter of the Alaska Peace Officers Association (APOA) donated their time and effort to ring the Salvation Army’s red kettle bell in Wasilla this weekend.

Given the prevalent national and statewide news on heightening crime and the urgency for law enforcement recruitment, it’s heartening to see active and retired peace officers giving their weekends to support our communities and those in need of food and shelter.

APOA is a consistent shining star over the holidays as its members remain an integral part of community service.

“It’s endearing for me to see Alaskan peace officers step up and give back to our community year after year,” said Tom Anderson, an APOA member and retired Colonel with the Alaska State Troopers. “The homeless population and many neighbors you wouldn’t even realize are financially impacted from the economy, or are just suffering from hard times, really benefit from the Salvation Army’s program.”

On Saturday, Retired Alaska State Trooper Captain Simon Brown II, a Wasilla City Councilman and Brigadier General in command of the 49th Brigade, Alaska Defense Force; retired Alaska State Trooper Captain Jeff Laughlin who serves as the security chief for Conoco Phillips; Retired Anchorage Police Officer Justin Koles; Deputy Director Steve Adams of the Division of Alaska Wildlife Troopers; and retired Alaska State Trooper Colonel/Director Tom Anderson greeted Fred Meyer patrons and helped raise awareness for Salvation Army.

Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit
Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit
Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit
Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit

``The homeless population and many neighbors you wouldn't even realize are financially impacted from the economy, or are just suffering from hard times, really benefit from the Salvation Army's program.``

The Salvation Army website provides history on the Red Kettle noting: 

In 1891, Salvation Army Captain Joseph McFee was distraught because so many poor individuals in San Francisco were going hungry. During the holiday season, he resolved to provide a free Christmas dinner for the destitute and poverty-stricken. He only had one major hurdle to overcome — funding the project.
Where would the money come from, he wondered. He lay awake nights, worrying, thinking, praying about how he could find the funds to fulfill his commitment of feeding 1,000 of the city’s poorest individuals on Christmas Day. As he pondered the issue, his thoughts drifted back to his sailor days in Liverpool, England. He remembered how at Stage Landing, where the boats came in, there was a large, iron kettle called “Simpson’s Pot” into which passers-by tossed a coin or two to help the poor.

The next day Captain McFee placed a similar pot at the Oakland Ferry Landing at the foot of Market Street. Beside the pot, he placed a sign that read, “Keep the Pot Boiling.” He soon had the money to see that the needy people were properly fed at Christmas.

Six years later, the kettle idea spread from the west coast to the Boston area. That year, the combined effort nationwide resulted in 150,000 Christmas dinners for the needy. In 1901, kettle contributions in New York City provided funds for the first mammoth sit-down dinner in Madison Square Garden, a custom that continued for many years. Today in the U.S., The Salvation Army assists more than four-and-a-half million people during the Thanksgiving and Christmas time periods.

 

Captain McFee’s kettle idea launched a tradition that has spread not only throughout the United States but all across the world. Kettles are now used in such distant lands as Korea, Japan, Chile, and many European countries. Everywhere, public contributions to Salvation Army kettles enable the organization to continue its year-round efforts at helping those who would otherwise be forgotten.

Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit

The Alaska Peace Officers Association was formed in Anchorage in 1947 to promote fellowship and improve communications between law enforcement, correctional, and government agencies. This year is the non-profit’s 75th anniversary. The organization grew quickly in size and scope. By 2013, APOA transitioned from a 501(c)(6) non-profit to a 501(c)(3) charitable non-profit allowing for tax-deductible donations. APOA Alaskan chapters include Anchorage, Mat-Su, Juneau, Fairbanks, Unalaska-Aleutian Islands, Kenai Peninsula, and Wrangell. Members of the organization include active and retired police officers, corrections officers, prosecutors, security officers, and other government agency professionals.

Alaskan cops spread the Christmas spirit

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A Chill Bill Needing Concurrence https://www.apeonline.org/2021/12/17/a-chill-bill-needing-concurrence/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-chill-bill-needing-concurrence Sat, 18 Dec 2021 01:44:56 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9804 The post A Chill Bill Needing Concurrence appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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By Ben O'Rourke

December 17, 2021

Why U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan’s Arctic Focus Act is vital to maintain
America’s pole position in the region

 

In November 2021, more than 20 cargo ships were stuck in ice while trying to navigate Arctic Sea routes, according to The National. These paralyzed vessels included internationally owned bulk carriers and an oil tanker, notes the news publication, which blamed “unseasonably bad weather” with waters “frozen earlier than expected.”

20 ice-immobilized ships appear to be a record for a single month.

Cargo sent from the Bering Strait to the Barents Sea has risen dramatically, with more than 1.5 million tons of goods shipped by mid-October, according to Russian government statistics. That’s about 80% higher than 2020. But sea ice is becoming a big problem. Despite numerous claims the opposite is happening, sea ice is growing, according to Arctic Today’s website, and by late October, much of that Northern Sea Route was covered.

Over 2021, Russia gladly stepped up to the centerstage for accolades, deploying icebreakers to free the vessels and their crews, as getting stuck can lead to potentially disastrous supply shortages. Russia has dozens of icebreaking ships – many of them nuclear-powered – while the United States Coast Guard (USCG) has three and the “Polar Star” is the only operational heavy icebreaker in service, with three more VT Haltering Marine Polar Security Cutter design vessels expected in the mid to late-2020s, but already falling behind schedule.

A Chill Bill Needing ConcurrenceIt’s no surprise then that news stories about the USCG rescuing seamen trapped in ice are rare.

With Russia and China among the countries scrambling for resources in the region, U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan (R-AK) has responded to the communist countries’ presence by introducing the Arctic Focus Act.

The new law aims to ensure investment in the region while benefitting the United States by improving access in the Arctic. Expedited ingress and egress through the labyrinth of ice that limits transportation will also protect U.S. resources, and territory, from wandering adversaries.

“We are making significant investments in vessels, infrastructure, research, and personnel to expand America’s presence in the Arctic, yet the United States continues to trail Russia, and even China,” said Sullivan.

The United States, it seems, appears to have missed the boat when it comes to preparing itself for the current scramble for Arctic resources, choosing instead to pour billions of dollars into building expensive ships. The USS Gerald Ford (CVN-78) aircraft carrier is, at $13 billion, the world’s most expensive ship. Then there’s the almost-too-expensive-to-operate Zumwalt-class stealth destroyer, which is equipped with a rail gun that fires rounds costing $200,000 each. The U.S. has three of these juggernauts in operation.

The Arctic seems to have been off the radar in terms of strategic importance by successive governments. For several years, Senator Sullivan has been trying to resolve the problem and counter foreign aggressors.

“If we are to keep pace with our adversaries and realize our role as an Arctic nation, these historic investments need to be directed by policy and clearly defined objectives that advance America’s economic and national security interests in this important region,” added Sullivan. “I look forward to discussing the goals of the Arctic Focus Act with my colleagues as we work to protect America’s sovereignty in our Arctic and build upon the enormous progress we’ve made these past six years.”

A Chill Bill Needing ConcurrencePreviously, Sullivan spearheaded the Strategic Arctic Naval Focus Act in 2019. SANFA followed warnings because of Chinese and Russian movements in the region. Russia has been refurbishing dozens of military ports and airfields, while China unveiled plans for a polar “Silk Road.” Both nations continue to escalate drilling, commercial fishing, and exploration in the region, and in some instances, perilously close to Alaskan waters.

Head of the United States Strategic Command, General John Hyten (currently the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) said at the time of Sullivan’s first measure, the Arctic “is no longer a buffer zone” and “we need to have a presence there that we have not invested in in the same way that our adversaries.” Meanwhile, General Terrence O’Shaughnessy, Commander, United States Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command, insisted “defense of the homeland depends on our ability to detect and defeat threats operating both in the Arctic and passing through the Arctic,” pointing to Russia’s deployment of long-range cruise missiles.

Senator Sullivan’s Arctic Focus Act puts more power in the hands of the USCG, diverting money to Alaskan waters that would otherwise be spent far away on Antarctic operations as there are “not enough assets” for both regions. The Coast Guard will have to develop a plan for how it wants to move this forward and submit it to Congress as a condition of the Act.

The proposed bill also sets a 2030 deadline for enough icebreakers to keep the Northwest Passage open to trade, defense, rescue operations, and scientists. Sullivan wants “at least one major cutter on patrol in the Arctic” at all times for search-and-rescue operations, helping enforce fishing rules, and responding to pollution incidents. Supporting defense operations is also an aim of the icebreaker.

As the Arctic truly is one of our last frontiers, in concert with Antarctica, the deep sea, and outer space, the region’s connectivity and proximity to the 49th state is of particular concern to Senators Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski, as it should be.

Here’s hoping their congressional colleagues on both sides of the aisle concur.

A Chill Bill Needing ConcurrenceBen O’Rourke recently joined the Alaska Politics & Elections team. Ben has more than 25 years of media experience in radio, television, online, and newspapers working globally in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom. He accidentally landed into news journalism in 2003 and has been writing, reporting, and producing videos and nightly news programs for Hong Kong television and South China Morning Post ever since. He’s currently a freelance news editor at Fieldsports Britain, a popular hunting, shooting, and fishing channel on YouTube. Ben spent three weeks in Alaska filming a documentary and that time had a profound effect on him and it quickly became his favorite U.S. state.

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A New Cold War https://www.apeonline.org/2021/11/21/a-new-cold-war/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-new-cold-war Sun, 21 Nov 2021 21:49:41 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9780 The post A New Cold War appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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By Ben O'Rourke

November 21, 2021

Alaska’s role in safeguarding the Arctic’s (and America’s) future as the international search for resources heats up

 

As our readers know, the Arctic is a vast frozen landscape, and hiding below the ice and rock are billions of barrels worth of oil or natural gas, rare minerals, and lots of fish. Much of this region is classed as international territory, meaning anyone, including Australia and China which are nowhere near it, can go there and seemingly help themselves.

Besides the U.S. and Canada, the Arctic nations of Russia and Norway, and Greenland (the autonomous country within the Kingdom of Denmark) also lay claim to parts of the region. Norway announced this month it is splashing out more than a million Euros on research for resources.

Easy-to-find oil is becoming rare these days, sparking the move North.

People are desperate for oil. The U.S. is believed to have some of the largest untapped reserves in the world, although President Joe Biden doesn’t want Americans drilling into them, even at a time when pump prices are emptying our wallets. Meanwhile, things are very different in other parts of the globe.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin said in October “large-scale projects” on the Yamal Peninsula will play “a key role in developing Russia’s gas industry in the 21st century.” Gazprom’s reserves exceed 20 trillion cubic meters and at the largest field in Bovanenkovo, gas will be “produced here for many decades, for 100 years, maybe even longer,” Putin boasted, ignoring Western-led ideas that the planet should be carbon-neutral by the middle of the century to stop climate change.

The international scramble for resources involves allies and perceived foes of the United States. As we reported in September, the U.S. Coast Guard revealed that several Chinese ships were spotted conducting unexplained “military and surveillance operations” off the coast of Alaska. The same month, Russia held a 50-vessel exercise in the Arctic region.

People are desperate for oil.

“We are the state that makes America an Arctic nation, and our geostrategic location creates unparalleled possibilities available nowhere else,” says Murkowski. “Alaska is indeed the geostrategic crossroads of the world and the logical place for an Arctic Studies Center.”

These concerted movements appear to have the U.S. Department of Defense planning contingencies. With the Democrats pushing for the nation to expedite the transition to unreliable renewables, Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) has welcomed the move to put the new Ted Stevens Center for Arctic Security Studies on Alaskan soil. It makes complete sense, she says.

“We are the state that makes America an Arctic nation, and our geostrategic location creates unparalleled possibilities available nowhere else,” says Murkowski. “Alaska is indeed the geostrategic crossroads of the world and the logical place for an Arctic Studies Center.”

Named after late U.S. Senator Ted Stevens, the center will “support and strengthen advances…in the Arctic, using security cooperation, research and academia, and diplomacy,” notes the U.S. Department of Defense. The new center will address “full-spectrum security cooperation” and “collaborate against shared threats.”

“As a nexus for security cooperation, the center will soon play host to America’s global partners and allies along with a variety of federal and state authorities and academic institutions, also bringing economic benefit to the area,” adds Murkowski. “I appreciate that the Department of Defense took our advice and made the right choice to locate the Center in Alaska.”

Alaska’s complex will be the sixth regional center but the only one focused on the Arctic. The Pentagon listed “territorial security”, “transnational and asymmetric threats” and “defense sector governance” as priorities.

Senators Murkowski and Dan Sullivan (also R-AK) sponsored the planned Stevens Center and secured the $10 million price tag from the federal government.

“Our work to secure authorization and funding for the center was a huge accomplishment on its own, but now to know that the Center will officially be located in Alaska is incredibly welcomed news,” says Senator Murkowski. “I’m proud to have helped ensure the Ted Stevens Center continues to move forward from a mere concept to reality. As this project comes to fruition, we will all see the tremendous value it will provide as America pursues and defends our interests in the Arctic.”

As the new Arctic Center comes online, one added benefit is a strengthened relationship between Alaska (representing the U.S.) and the Arctic Council, the intergovernmental forum comprised of eight Arctic states (Canada, The Kingdom of Denmark [Greenland], Finland, Iceland, Norway, The Russian Federation, Sweden, and the U.S. [Alaska]) and six Indigenous Permanent Participant organizations, promoting “coordination, cooperation, and interaction” and now led (2021-2023) by Russian chairmanship.

A New Cold War

Similar moves towards collaboration and centers for study and natural resource policy development could eventually be seen in the Antarctic, where there are said to be sizable oil, coal, and mineral reserves. But, according to the British Antarctic Survey, extraction would be “very difficult, dangerous and expensive” because of the harsh environment. A ban on drilling for resources there comes under review in 2048.

A New Cold WarBen O’Rourke recently joined the Alaska Politics & Elections team. Ben has more than 25 years of media experience in radio, television, online, and newspapers working globally in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom. He accidentally landed into news journalism in 2003 and has been writing, reporting, and producing videos and nightly news programs for Hong Kong television and South China Morning Post ever since. He’s currently a freelance news editor at Fieldsports Britain, a popular hunting, shooting, and fishing channel on YouTube. Ben spent three weeks in Alaska filming a documentary and that time had a profound effect on him and it quickly became his favorite U.S. state.

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By Frank Dahl

November 12, 2021

Federal Infrastructure Bill is the first step

 

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act recently passed by Congress will open massive funding doors resulting in a windfall for Alaska and our diverse economy.The list of projects and industry sectors benefiting from the prospective funding is exhaustive and profound. The Anchorage Daily News provided detailed coverage of where our state will receive massive funding. ADN’s article is worth a read to consider and absorb the magnitude of federal dollars soon arriving.

Alaska needs more collaboration and cooperation between policymakers and less vitriolThe talk in Washington DC is the 13 Republican congress members who supported the legislation may be targeted for their “insubordination” to the Republican House leadership according to a New York Times article. But before you hop onto the retribution bandwagon, keep in mind beyond Alaska’s sole Congressman, Don Young – who happened to be one of those 13 Republican supporters, his colleagues across the aisle, Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski, also voted for the Infrastructure Act. Passage of the bill came in part from our federal congressional delegation trio’s three “Yea” votes.

This result reminds me of the days we celebrated deep friendship and collaboration between Senators Frank Murkowski and Ted Stevens, and Congressman Young. Their shared votes and cooperative efforts gave Alaskans hope.

If you read today’s headline on Anchorage Daily News, Senator Murkowski’s response is highlighted in an article. Lisa thinks the criticism of the Infrastructure bill is “petty.”  And I actually agree with her. I can’t help but tip my hat at her and Dan and Don for getting the job done, and not because of the leaderless vacuum in the White House, or because of any real diplomacy by Ms. Pelosi and Mr. Schumer, but because our delegation stepped up and ensured Alaska was taking care.

As a long-time businessman, mostly in the restaurant and bar industry, I’ve felt the gravity of fees and taxes, and regulations. As we inch slowly past the COVID pandemic, many of us – particularly business owners, still ache from the closures and mandates. Our employees and staff do, too. Remnants of those capricious rules still smolder today as we stay on guard and hold our ground to keep open and free of restrictions.

The infrastructure bill is a milestone. It’s also indicative of what’s possible when our policymakers confer and partner.

Alaska needs more collaboration and cooperation between policymakers and less vitriolWe don’t see this in the Anchorage Assembly. The Alaska Legislature remains in Majority-Minority gridlock that’s manifested into even further subdivisions of hard-right and hard-left to the point I actually look forward to some housecleaning with the reapportionment lines and incumbent pairings. A 4th Special Session with no results? #DoYourJob

Our lawmakers, business owners, and non-profit and civic leaders need to ramp up their cooperation game. Yes – maintain your ground on principles; hold firm to your faith and community sentiment; keep elected officials and our media professionals accountable.

But also give credit where it’s due and support rational-based team players.

As 2022 Primary and General Elections move closer, and Ranked Choice Voting becomes the new voting method for our state, I urge Alaskans to research candidates. Contact them and ask relevant questions. Then make sure – as you contour your litmus test on who to support, to add a checkmark by those who legitimately worked together and across the aisle (House/Senate and GOP/Democrat) to deliver on their campaign promises and for the betterment of our state and future generations.

Too many policymaking bodies in our state can’t get along with themselves or their executive (mayor/governor) counterparts to our suffering and detriment.

The less polarization and vitriol from political blog sites and pseudo-journalists, obnoxious social media-frenzied campaign staffers, and political party mouthpieces, the more room there will be for continued Infrastructure bills and an improved economy.

I’m a faith-based Republican conservative and I’m growing tired of the storm of anger. Results really do matter.

We can do better. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is a great start.

Alaska needs more collaboration and cooperation between policymakers and less vitriol

Frank Dahl

Frank Dahl has owned bars, restaurants, and lodges throughout Alaska and in the Lower 48 for over five decades including Blues Central at the Chef’s Inn. As founder of Anchorage CHARR and a former Director on Alaska CHARR’s Board, he has been active in hospitality and tourism industry policy development for years. He is a member of Rotary and recipient of an Alaska Legislative Citation for Public Service.

 

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Glasgow, UK-6 November,2021: Thousands of people taking part in a demonstration march
against climate change in Glasgow city centre during UN COP26 climate conference.

By Ben O'Rourke

November 11, 2021

“Carbon Neutral”

 

In September 1999, I drove from Haines to Whitehorse in Canada, then down to Skagway, Alaska to catch what we were led to believe was the last light plane out to Juneau before tourist season ended. It was a hectic trip made worse by an extreme hangover after wrapping filming on the Discovery Channel documentary we’d been making and not filling the car with fuel before leaving.

We wrongly assumed there would be a gas station not far across the border into Canada.

There wasn’t – and after driving for about two hours the full fuel gauge needle was well into the red. Luckily a small town appeared and we filled up in the nick of time.

The trip to Whitehorse is more than 240 miles and we needed to get there before the university library closed to film some old photos of the Gold Rush days. Had we had an electric car, we wouldn’t have made it as we would have been forced to stop for about an hour or so to recharge the battery. Even the more modern and expensive electric cars only have a range of approximately 230 miles.

My trip over the last week to the climate summit in Glasgow was about 400 miles there and back. No problem in my diesel SUV, which can cover nearly 600 miles on a full tank.

 

Eco-lunacy on a Grand Scale

It’s eco-lunacy on a grand scale, and yet in Alaska, the effort to attain an “energy mix” diversification with wind turbine projects on Fire Island next to Anchorage, near Healy, and near Delta Junction is praised by some as a remedy and offset to rising fuel prices. But these projects and this technology will not reduce our gas prices at the pump and they remain exorbitant and costly to maintain.

 

The question that comes to mind in the midst of all of the global warming and clean energy debate is what will happen in Britain when gas-driven vehicles are banned in 2030?

In the United States, the Democrats are likely to introduce a similar rule as in the United Kingdom. President Joe Biden is already shutting down pipelines at a time when our fuel prices are spiking. His attitude seems to be Americans will just have to deal with his party’s new planet-saving rules. At the COP26 meeting, Joe even insisted we’re in exigent times and “we only have a brief window before us.”

“At what point does it become too late?” asks Rick Whitbeck, Alaska State Director of Power the Future. “That voice has changed in the last three years. Greta: ‘We have 10 years’, A.O.C.: ‘We have 12 years’, John Kerry: ‘We’re past the point if we don’t do something in the next five years’. What’s the frikkin’ number??”

Kerry claimed in 2014 in Indonesia that “the window of time is still open for us to manage this threat.”  He added that “the window is closing.” The Indonesians completely ignored him and the nation is second, after China, on the list of those building coal power plants. 63 are under construction in Indonesia at the moment. China has more than 200 on the go. The rest of Asia is largely the same, with coal power stations sprouting across the map. Meanwhile, your hard-earned tax dollars are being spent on unreliable renewable energy projects, instead of coal and nuclear energies but for a few exceptions.

 

“I think if you stack it up against the economic impact of a too-fast transition away from fossil fuels, it’s more devastating,” notes Whitbeck, referring to the rapid push for so-called green energy that’s forcing the resource development sector’s workforce to take massive pay cuts as they’re nudged into the alternative energy sector.

Here in Scotland, the verdant green and pleasant lands have been tainted by thousands of turbines. While President Trump faced stiff opposition when planning the development of his picturesque golf course, there seemed little opposition to unsightly windmills blighting the landscape, especially south of Glasgow. The huge, loud, white rotating blades have the diameter of a soccer pitch yet contribute almost nothing to the national grid. Why are they so prevalent? Because private landowners are paid more than $50,000 USD per turbine, per year in government subsidies.

Where is all the money coming from? British taxpayers, of course.

A fair amount of turbines don’t even work and need non-renewable power to function. Huge areas of natural habitats and ecosystems for birds and other animals are destroyed so roads can be created (to get to the turbine installations). Birds are also killed by the blades, which they can’t see, while bees and other insects disappear into a blade-gauntlet when attempting to maneuver through the conflagration of wind farms. Sealife flees from the constant hum filtrating into the adjacent ocean waters which confuse whale and dolphin sonar. Massive amounts of energy are used to construct wind turbines, the instrumentality of which typically only lasts about 20 years after which time (when they malfunction) are dumped into huge pits because they’re too difficult and expensive to recycle.

It’s eco-lunacy on a grand scale, and yet in Alaska, the effort to attain an “energy mix” diversification with wind turbine projects on Fire Island next to Anchorage, near Healy, and near Delta Junction is praised by some as a remedy and offset to rising fuel prices. But these projects and this technology will not reduce our gas prices at the pump and they remain exorbitant and costly to maintain.

As I write, details of the Glasgow summit’s conclusion are being leaked, and go figure… Eco-leaders, protestors, professional advocates, and the indelible lobbyist contingencies are demanding more of the same. “Carbon dioxide-cutting targets by the end of 2022,” says the BBC headline.

Meanwhile in Russia and parts of Asia, business and development continue, uninhibited by punitive planet-saving laws.

Alaskan leadership at the city, borough, state, federal levels should be on guard and informed of what’s to come. COP26 is just a glimpse.

COP26: How the quest to become carbon neutral is destroying the West's development efforts while Alaska gets stuck in the crosshairsBen O’Rourke recently joined the Alaska Politics & Elections team. Ben has more than 25 years of media experience in radio, television, online, and newspapers working globally in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom. He accidentally landed into news journalism in 2003 and has been writing, reporting, and producing videos and nightly news programs for Hong Kong television and South China Morning Post ever since. He’s currently a freelance news editor at Fieldsports Britain, a popular hunting, shooting, and fishing channel on YouTube. Ben spent three weeks in Alaska filming a documentary and that time had a profound effect on him and it quickly became his favorite U.S. state.

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By Ben O'Rourke

November 6, 2021

It’s that time of year again when world leaders, celebrities, and truant student Greta Thunberg gather to remind Earthlings they’re killing the planet.

 

COP26 Report: How Western governments are ‘saving’ climate victims with bundles of cash from U.S. taxes as Alaska gets pummeled by the Biden AdministrationI’m here in Glasgow at the COP26 (UKCOP26.org) because it’s that time of year again when world leaders, celebrities, and truant student Greta Thunberg gather to remind Earthlings they’re killing the planet and must give up more liberties to save it. They, and influential billionaires, are jetting into Glasgow, Scotland, to deliver this message. How dare anyone challenges them?

President Joe Biden is one of those aforementioned as he demands Americans pay more tax, stop using planes, and shell out more dollars for gas and unreliable renewable energy.

Here in Alaska, the loss of thousands of jobs has been the carnage after Biden canceled President Trump’s oil drilling licensure plan.

There’s no debate Earth’s temperature is changing, otherwise, we’d still be in an Ice Age. But the cause is not entirely human. One tangible effect, however, is Western democracies throwing cash at ‘climate victims’ in developing nations as taxpayers foot the bill.

The good news remains, the end of our world is nigh.

Let’s have a look at an example of how that’s played out so far.

In October 2009, President of the Maldives at the time, Mohamed Nasheed, held a high-profile cabinet meeting underwater to highlight the plight of nations like his supposedly threatened by rising sea levels caused by man-made global warming. The world had to get ready for millions of forthcoming ‘climate refugees’ for whom global media served as the harbinger.

At the same time, Nasheed’s government was in negotiations with a Hong Kong architecture firm, Indian builders, and British structural engineers on plans for a new $200 million USD airport. It was named ‘Future Project of the Year’ at the World Architecture Festival 2011. E-architect website gushed that “the building has 50% of its area outdoor on decking for passengers to witness the rich marine life at sea level”. Yes, ‘at sea level.’

I asked the Hong Kong firm – Integrated Design Associates – why the Maldivians wanted to build such an expensive airport while complaining their islands were sinking. Was it part of an exotic escape plan? The company said it wasn’t (sinking) and rising sea levels were not a threat to the airport, which was to be about four feet above the ocean. Drawing up concept plans was as far as the company got.

Nasheed’s underwater stunt was a success, gaining island nations like his considerable sympathy and huge amounts of real and pledged cash at climate change summits from the United States and other Western countries weakened by climate-guilt complexes. The influx of bundles of ‘free’ foreign cash probably led to Nasheed being ousted in a coup in 2012.

A year later, the Hong Kong Observatory told me the sea level had risen less than two millimeters since 1998, the year fear-mongering-about anthropomorphic global warming influencers kicked off their diatribes. At that rate, it would be 9,000 years before the new – relatively speaking – Maldives airport needed to get out the sandbags.

Naheed has been here at COP26 for a few days, peddling the same line about his island sinking and Western countries apathetic about his plight.

“I think 1.5C must be asked for again and restated and never left,” he said in an interview with The Guardian. “Anything above 1.5C and the Maldives will not be there. We cannot sign a suicide pact.”

Nasheed insisted the Maldives had lost a whole island so far.

“We are losing ground. We are losing people. We are losing our livelihood. We are losing our culture,” he told the newspaper. “This is happening now. It is upon us.”

COP26 Report: How Western governments are ‘saving’ climate victims with bundles of cash from U.S. taxes as Alaska gets pummeled by the Biden AdministrationAs the leader of the Climate Vulnerable Forum, Nasheed speaks for other tiny island nations. They are asking for $100 billion USD every year from 2020 to 2024 for “adaptation and mitigation” against climate change.

The real questions remain how much of that money will be actually spent on new airports, and why wouldn’t that funding be directed to U.S. projects rather than a small foreign cluster of (ethically) questionable bureaucracies?

Meanwhile, Alaska’s Governor Mike Dunleavy battles and defends against Biden Administration policy strangleholds from ANWR to the Tongass while Biden, here in Glasgow, placates, if not outright acquiesces to nonsensical narratives like those from the Maldivian government.

Indeed, COP26 may be an ocean away from Alaska, but the spirit and subterfuge surfacing from its conference speeches and work sessions will undoubtedly cause a ripple effect, if not a tsunami, of continued restrictions and natural resource development barriers splashing onto Alaskan shores if not checked by Senators Sullivan and Murkowski, and by engaged voters.

COP26 Report: How Western governments are ‘saving’ climate victims with bundles of cash from U.S. taxes as Alaska gets pummeled by the Biden AdministrationBen O’Rourke recently joined the Alaska Politics & Elections team. Ben has more than 25 years of media experience in radio, television, online, and newspapers working globally in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom. He accidentally landed into news journalism in 2003 and has been writing, reporting, and producing videos and nightly news programs for Hong Kong television and South China Morning Post ever since. He’s currently a freelance news editor at Fieldsports Britain, a popular hunting, shooting, and fishing channel on YouTube. Ben spent three weeks in Alaska filming a documentary and that time had a profound effect on him and it quickly became his favorite U.S. state.

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