This is the weakest argument ever made to justify the expansion of government by creating a new state ag department: “Look at the bottom of our state seal and you’ll see a farmer,” says Gov. Mike Dunleavy.
Read MoreWhile Sen. Lisa Murkowski recognizes the real danger created by Trump chaos, Sen. Dan Sullivan and Rep. Nick Begich the Third are blindly cheering every dumb and reckless move by the Musk/Trump regime as brilliant and inspired.
Read MoreThe oil industry has already cued its publicity people to recite text from the Fear and Loathing Anti-Tax Playbook handed down by oil company employees since the discovery of Prudhoe Bay: Any tax increase, no matter how small, will kill investment and ruin the industry, the Fear and Loathing playbook says.
These bills will not kill investment, though there will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth, along with the fear and loathing.
Read MoreThe challenge of finding ways to pay for an increase in education funding is not the impossible dream that Republicans in Juneau claim.
Compromises to establish a reasonable dividend and raise taxes would put the state on a stable footing, ending the era when a governor can introduce a budget with a $1.5 billion deficit and abandon his responsibilities.
Read MoreRepublican legislators are hiding behind the Dunleavy Knows Best fraud, refusing to admit that the real reform Alaska needs is to decrease class sizes. The only way to decrease class sizes is to hire and retain qualified teachers. That requires more funding from the Legislature and governor.
Read MoreAnyone who issues a press release saying a Bible parable offers a valuable lesson for government is not separating the spiritual from the secular, but combining the two.
Read More‘The Bible’s parable of the talents offers a valuable lesson for government, as it does for spiritual life. The good and faithful servant is the one who takes his employer’s money and increases it, while the unfaithful one simply buries it in the ground. When it comes to America’s abundant natural wealth, we face a similar choice,” Gov. Mike Dunleavy said in a press release printed by the Wall Street Journal.
The state sermon does not say anything about saving for the next generation or the generation after that. Or that the good and faithful servant could be a foreign mining company hoping to make a killing from public resources.
The reverend governor also didn’t mention the long-term value of leaving wealth in the ground that belongs not just to those alive now, but to all future Americans.
Read MoreSen. Dan Sullivan is running for reelection in 2026. Holding him accountable means that his statements and actions, especially those in which he reverses his so-called positions to avoid offending Musk and Trump, need to be monitored and understood.
Read MorePresident Trump wants to take over the U.S. Postal Service and fire the bipartisan postal review board, the Washington Post reported Thursday night.
Alaska has more to lose than anywhere else in the country if this happens because the bypass mail subsidy program, a central element in Alaska commerce, would certainly be at risk of elimination once again.
Read MoreRep. Nick Begich the Third doesn’t get it. The DOGE boys are not under attack because some of them are young.
This is not about the age. It’s about incompetence and lies. Nick the Third has become a regular conduit for those lies.
Read MoreSen. Dan Sullivan took a strong stand this week to support the U.S. troops who fought and died on Iwo Jima. No one in Congress will oppose the resolution he co-sponsored with about 20 other senators.
Trump is using Putin talking points. He has abandoned Ukraine.
Sullivan has either flipped his position to side with Musk/Trump or he is afraid to cross his leaders about the betrayal of Ukraine.
Read MoreRep. Nick Begich the Third, who claims to be a technology whiz, is mechanically repeating the lies of co-president Elon Musk.
One of the latest is Begich promoting the Musk lie that millions of people over 100 are collecting Social Security.
Read MoreThis week the Dunleavy administration is going to officially abandon the effort to give AIDEA—which has plenty of cash reserves—the $50 million, Randy Ruaro, the head of AIDEA, told the Senate Finance Committee Monday.
The reality of this situation is that there was no chance the Legislature was ever going to approve the $50 million request from Dunleavy because AIDEA has hundreds of millions it can draw upon. AIDEA is led by a former Dunleavy employee and a board of Dunleavy supporters.
Read MoreWhile the $250,000 has already been spent, AIDEA is now promising to pay for additional “time and expenses” to revise the “independent” study by Northern Economics in ways to suit AIDEA.
This is no longer an “independent” analysis, based on the latest amendment. AIDEA is deciding what “areas to highlight.”
Read MoreSen. Dan Sullivan, chairman of the International Republican Institute, should have a lot to say about Elon Musk shutting down most of the institute’s operations, but he doesn’t.
Read MoreThe Permanent Fund claimed at first that all information about the investments made by McKinley and Barings were secret, including the names of the companies. The state claimed that it would be entirely up to the two financial management companies to decide what Alaskans would be allowed to know.
As I wrote here on December 6., 2021: “The real danger is that secrecy can be a tool to hide public investments from the public to avoid controversy and public discussion. It can also be a tool that allows political influence to decide who gets the benefit of state money.”
Read MoreQuestioned on CNBC if he was trying to dream up ways to defend outlandish schemes from Trump, economic adviser Kevin Hassett claimed that making Canada the 51st state is not outlandish at all.
Hassett didn’t sound like a guy with a doctorate in economics from the University of Pennsylvania. He sounded like a dropout from Trump University.
No one believes that Canada is going to become the 51st state, but the price that supplicants pay to pacify and please the playground bully is to tell him he is always right about everything and call him “Sir.”
Read MoreThe job of saying no to $50 million for the Alaska Industrial Development & Export Authority has gotten a lot easier than anyone expected.
Read MoreThe state secretly ordered the contractor—after its report was finished last summer—to revise the work it had done and set salaries at the 50 percentile for many employees. Lowering the benchmark would lower the cost and widen the gap between state workers and other employees..
This deception, for that is what it is, goes against the letter and spirit of the state law requiring government transparency.
Rep. Nick Begich the Third didn’t tell Alaskans the full story when he praised himself for getting the House of Representatives to pass two bills on February 4.
The Begich bills were copied word for word from bills introduced by former Rep. Mary Peltola.
The hearings on both took place in November, before Begich took office, and they won unanimous backing from the Republican-controlled resources committee.
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