Participants at the 2026 Alaska Republican Party State Convention at the Soldotna Field House in Soldotna on Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Iris Samuels/ADN)
SOLDOTNA — Alaska Republican Party leaders on Saturday reelected Carmela Warfield to continue serving as chair, two years after she was first chosen for the role.
The vote took place during a statewide convention in Soldotna, where more than 200 delegates from across the state gathered under garlands of Alaska and U.S. flags to update the party platform and hobnob with both elected officials and candidates.
Warfield was challenged for the chairmanship by Zackary Gottshall, who called on Alaska GOP leaders to do more to oppose elected Alaska Republicans who work across the political aisle.
Warfield beat Gottshall in a 165-45 vote, after Gottshall accused Warfield of appearing “more focused on building personal political visibility and securing endorsements for another term than organizing a serious effort to replace the seven Republican legislators caucusing with Democrats or challenge Sen. Lisa Murkowski.”
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Warfield, ahead of Saturday’s vote, said “the Alaska Republican Party is stronger when we focus on what unites us instead of what divides us.”
Alaska Republican Party leaders on Saturday reelected Carmela Warfield to continue serving as chair. (Iris Samuels/ADN)
Warfield now enters her third year at the helm of Alaska’s largest political organization. She has tightly controlled the party’s public image, declining numerous interview requests from the Daily News during her tenure.
In a departure from the norm, Warfield allowed reporters to attend only five hours out of the two-day convention, denying reporters access to debates on the party rules and a forum featuring several gubernatorial candidates.
Cheerful party staffers were stationed at the entrance to the Soldotna Field House to ensure no reporters had access to the building beyond the allotted window.
But during a brief window of access, divisions over the GOP’s direction and operations were on full display. Delegates spent roughly an hour debating whether to add a sentence to the party platform supporting “granting personhood of the unborn at conception.” The motion ultimately failed 89-109.
Factions of the Alaska GOP have long been critical of elected party members who work with Democrats or deviate from the party platform, which already formally opposes same-sex marriage and abortion access, and supports teaching “the historical Judeo-Christian foundation” of the U.S. in schools.
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The party has a long history of attempting to keep its elected members in line and punishing those who stray.
Party leaders in 2021 censured Murkowski, a Republican who has served in the U.S. Senate since 2002, after she voted to impeach President Donald Trump. They also voted in 2021 to censure Republican Eagle River state lawmaker Kelly Merrick after she supported a bipartisan coalition in the Alaska House. But after both Murkowski and Merrick won reelection in 2022, defeating party-backed challengers from the right, party leaders promised to turn away from censuring GOP candidates for a period of at least two years.
Since then, the number of Republicans in the Legislature joining bipartisan legislative coalitions has grown, despite party leaders’ consternation.
In the Alaska Senate, a 14-member bipartisan majority includes five Republicans. In the House, the 21-member majority includes two Republicans. Republican leaders of the bipartisan coalitions did not attend the Saturday convention.
Under Warfield’s leadership, the Alaska Republican Party has aligned itself closely with Trump, who in turn has endorsed Warfield, along with U.S. Rep. Nick Begich and U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, who are running for reelection this year.
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Trump has also voiced support for the repeal of Alaska’s open primary and ranked choice voting system, which has weakened the party’s tight control over candidate selection.
Both opponents and supporters of Alaska’s voting system, which was adopted by Alaskans in 2020 and withstood a repeal effort in 2024, say it had aided moderate political candidates who are willing to work across the political aisle, ensuring they can more easily withstand challengers from the right.
The Alaska GOP has made repealing the voting system a key tenet of its efforts in the 2026 election. A successful repeal would enable the party to again assert more control over the Republican primary process,
Party leaders on Saturday also elected Jason Perry, a Baptist pastor, as the new Alaska GOP vice chair. Perry received 161 votes in a three-way race against Paul Bauer Jr., a former Anchorage Assembly member who received 23 votes, and Jeanne Reveal, a party district chair on the Kenai Peninsula who received 22 votes.
Voting on party leaders and resolutions was almost derailed — again — by party leaders’ concerns over using an online system to tally the votes of more than 220 delegates.
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Several party members said they wanted to use paper ballots instead of “clickers” that allow delegates to cast votes in real time. A similar motion was made during the 2024 convention.
But the idea this year was met with exasperation and outright derision from some longtime party members. Brett Huber — state director for Alaska’s chapter of Americans for Prosperity, a conservative advocacy group — openly chided some of the delegates.
“Everybody agrees on God and country. Everybody. And then we forget that and fight amongst ourselves,” said Huber.
“If we remember what brought us here — God and country — and we quit misbehaving, we may win,” he added.
The Clums Fire (#184) is burning about 66 miles northeast of Fairbanks on June 13, 2026. Photo by Alaska Smokejumpers
A strong U.S. Wildland Fire Service initial attack was launched on a rapidly growing, lightning‑caused wildfire located about 66 miles northeast of Fairbanks. The Clums Fire (#184) was reported around 8:30 a.m. Saturday and is estimated at 75 acres, burning primarily in tundra with pockets of black spruce. Earlier air support — including four single engine water scoopers and two Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection air tankers —assisted initial suppression efforts. Eight smokejumpers remain on the ground and continue to work the fire with support from a helicopter conducting bucket drops. The air tankers were released while the water scoopers are standing by in case they’re needed to reengage.
The water scoopers first pulled water from the float pond at Fairbanks International Airport before moving to Medicine Lake, which is closer to the fire and near Circle Hot Springs.
The fire is burning on BLM‑managed land within the Steese National Conservation Area, roughly 20 miles east of the end of Chena Hot Springs Road.
This fire follows thunderstorms that moved across Interior Alaska Friday. More than 500 lightning strikes were recorded statewide, with the highest concentration in the Fairbanks North Star Borough and north into the Yukon Flats. Warm, dry, and windy conditions have followed these storms, raising concern for additional holdover fires.
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The National Weather Service has issued a Red Flag Warning for the Yukon Flats from noon to 8 p.m. Sunday. Conditions are expected to become increasingly critical through the afternoon and early evening. Forecasts call for southeast winds of 10–15 mph with gusts up to 25 mph, humidity dropping to around 25%, and temperatures in the lower 80s. These factors, combined with dry fuels, create an environment where any new or existing fire could spread quickly.
Lightning often ignites wildfires immediately, but not always. Holdover fires can smolder unnoticed below the surface for days until warmer temperatures, drying vegetation, or gusty winds cause them to flare up. To stay ahead of these potential starts, fire managers conduct detection flights in the days following significant lightning activity to locate any sleeper fires before they grow.
Contact Public Affairs Specialist Beth Ipsen at Elizabeth_ipsen@ios.doi.gov or (907)356-5510 for more information.
The Clums Fire is burning about 66 miles northeast of Fairbanks.
-USWFS-
U.S. Wildland Fire Service, P.O. Box 35005 1541 Gaffney Road, Fort Wainwright, Ak 99703
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‹ Red Flag Warning issued for eastern Kuskokwim Valley and Lime Village
Categories: Active Wildland Fire, US Wildland Fire Service
This hand-drawn table helped the column’s authors create a probability map, which was included in the original publication in 1976. (Photo by Alanna Greenwell)
Editor’s note: This Alaska Science Forum “time capsule” article was originally published on May 1, 1976. While employed at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, John M. Miller was the Alaska SAR Facility’s technical director, and T. Neil Davis, professor of geophysics, founded the Alaska Science Forum 50 years ago. This time capsule is typical of the early columns, which were always tied to newsworthy events and often lighthearted, if not gently self-deprecating.
The Mather Library in UAF’s Akasofu Building houses many original supporting materials of this long-running column. At a time when one can use any number of online tools to help you select a date and time to win the next Nenana Ice Classic, the longtime betting game on when the Tanana River will break up, paging through hand-drawn graphs and typewritten drafts is true time travel.
• • •
One sure way to win the Nenana Ice Classic is to invest $100,800 to buy 50,400 tickets, one on each minute from about April 18 to May 22. Someone else probably will win, too, so you will probably lose money.
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If you believe in statistics at all (and who does?), you can use the accompanying diagram to estimate the probability of having a winning ticket. This probability map is compiled on the basis of the actual breakup times from 1917 to 1975; the hour and day of each is shown on the map.
From these times, a bell-shaped curve was calculated to show the probability of breakup on any specified date. Calculation of the probability of breakups during a particular hour was accomplished by manually smoothing the data, since it appeared that the actual breakups did not, in the parlance of statisticians, follow a normal distribution.
Geophysical Institute communications coordinator Sara Wilbur holds the original, handwritten “How to win the ice pool” column in the Mather Library archives. (Photo by Alanna Greenwell)
Although a breakup has never occurred during the noon hour of May 6, the probability map says this is the best guess. In principle, such a ticket has 9.6 chances in 100,000 of winning. A ticket falling on the contour line labeled “1” has one chance in 100,000 of winning; one on the “0.1” line has only a chance in a million.
If you choose to ignore the probability contours, which is not a bad idea, you can still glean information from the numbers showing times of actual breakups.
One technique for picking a winning ticket combines both mathematics and skill. Hang the probability map on the wall then throw a dart at it aiming for the top of the “probability hill.” If you miss altogether, try another method.
Column author John M. Miller, right, looks on as Jeff Hilland symbolically opens the Alaska Synthetic Aperture Radar Facility — now called the Alaska Satellite Facility — by cutting a ribbon on the steps up to the antenna on the roof of the Elvey Building in 1991. (Photo by Evelyn Trabant) Column author T. Neil Davis, former deputy director of the Geophysical Institute, observes data acquisition in the Poker Flat Research Range blockhouse during a rocket flight in the early 1970s. (Photo courtesy of the Geophysical Institute)
By Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protectionon
Burn Permits will be suspended effective tomorrow Saturday, June 13th, in the Fairbanks and Delta Fire Prevention Area. This suspension is due to the warm weather, lack of significant wetting rain, high winds and a Red Flag Warning in Delta. Burning of debris piles, lawns, or utilizing a burn barrel is prohibited. Please note that cooking and warming fires are still allowed, but extreme caution must be used due to elevated wildfire potential. Even a small ember, an unattended fire, or a fire that is not fully extinguished can quickly lead to a wildfire.
This suspension will remain in place until conditions change. Permit holders need to be aware of changing conditions and are required to call the area’s Permit Hotline for the current status. Fairbanks (907) 451-2631 and Delta (907) 895-5483
State law requires those wanting to conduct any open burning on state, private and municipal lands from April 1 through Aug. 31 to get burn permits from the Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection either online or at your local Forestry office. This includes burning brush piles, using burn barrels, agricultural burning and burning of maintained lawns. Burn permits are NOT required for camping, cooking or warming fires less than three feet in diameter with flame lengths less than two feet high. However, it’s not suggested during windy days or when and where there are red flag warnings.
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You can also find more information about the Forestry Burn Permit program and suspensions at https://dnr.alaska.gov/burn
For current information on DFFP Burn Permits, call the hotline at DFFP Area Offices:
Burn Permits are suspended for the Fairbanks and Delta Fire Prevention Areas. Permit holders need to be aware of changing conditions and are required to call the area’s Permit Hotline for the current status.
‹ Six U.S. Wildland Fire Service Smokejumpers, Two Water Scoopers Halt Fire’s Spread Near Circle
Categories: Alaska DNR – Division of Forestry & Fire Protection (DFFP), burn permit suspension, Fire Restrictions
Tags: 2026 Alaska Fire Season, burn permit suspension, Delta Fire Prevention Area, DFFP Northern Region