JUNEAU — Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom denounced election misinformation this week in her first sit-down interview with information media since taking workplace.
Dahlstrom, a Republican elected to the lieutenant governor’s workplace in November as Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s operating mate, addressed election-related points Tuesday for the primary time since her November victory, saying that overseeing elections was her high precedence however refraining from committing to advance particular reforms. Dahlstrom had declined to discuss her coverage views previous to the election.
On the primary day of the legislative session, Dahlstrom was tasked with overseeing each the Home and Senate till they elected a speaker and president, respectively. As of Wednesday afternoon, each leaders have been chosen by members of the our bodies, liberating Dahlstrom to take up election-related issues — one of many high duties of Alaska’s lieutenant governor.
Whereas some Republican lawmakers have already filed payments to eradicate ranked selection voting, Dahlstrom stated she wouldn’t take an energetic place for or in opposition to the brand new voting methodology first used final 12 months, which appeared to assist extra average candidates get elected on the expense of conservative Republicans.
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Dahlstrom echoed among the messages championed by her predecessor — Lt. Gov. Kevin Meyer, who introduced final 12 months he wouldn’t run for reelection — concerning the integrity of the 2020 presidential election, which has been questioned by members of her personal get together, and concerning the challenges created by election misinformation promoted by some Republicans aligned with former President Donald Trump, who has refused to acknowledge his 2020 loss.
“Folks have been saying issues have been corrupt earlier than we even voted, earlier than voting cubicles have been even arrange,” Dahlstrom stated, referring to the 2022 election, when former Gov. Sarah Palin repeatedly made unfounded claims about Alaska’s new voting system throughout her unsuccessful marketing campaign for U.S. Home.
“I admire the truth that folks have severe considerations and so they need it to be stuffed with integrity. I do, too. I completely do. However I don’t admire the very fact when folks put worry into others or make them really feel like, ‘Why even vote? It doesn’t even matter.’ And that’s what I noticed. I noticed folks simply being disenfranchised,” Dahlstrom stated.
Requested concerning the 2020 presidential election, Dahlstrom stated she believed that Alaska’s election was “an election of integrity,” however declined to touch upon the election as an entire, saying she doesn’t have “any info aside from media stuff.”
‘Smaller chunks’
Over the past legislative session, the governor’s workplace put ahead a number of election reform measures in a big omnibus invoice that by no means made it into legislation. Dahlstrom stated among the provisions in these payments — which included ending automated voter registration, creating a way to trace absentee ballots, periodically auditing the registered voter record, buying voter signature verification software program and making a poll curing course of that may enable voters to repair errors on their poll after it has been submitted — could also be reintroduced this 12 months. Sens. Scott Kawasaki, D-Fairbanks, and Mike Bathe, R-Wasilla, have already launched payments that embody some comparable election-related measures.
“What we noticed the final time was a pair payments that have been very large-sized payments, and I believe I might hope that one of many issues we’ve realized is — let’s take it at some smaller chunks as an alternative of an ideal huge factor,” Dahlstrom stated.
Nonetheless, Dahlstrom stated she didn’t but know which items of laws she would prioritize and whether or not any of the proposals superior final 12 months could be nixed.
“I’m not even ready to offer you matters proper now,” Dahlstrom stated. She later stated that among the many points she would take into account addressing could be altering the state’s automated voter registration, which provides Alaska residents to the voter rolls once they apply for the Everlasting Fund dividend except they select in any other case.
“Now we have so many distinctive alternatives and challenges on this state with places and climate and transportation points and communication points, and simply attempting to have a look at all that. In a super world, we wouldn’t need to cope with all these points, however we do, so I’m attempting to have a look at the entire image,” she stated. “What have we carried out nicely? What can we modify up a bit? What do we have to change? And who inside the state — what different companions inside our state, businesses — may help us with that?”
Dahlstrom stated she is contemplating options to handle challenges impeding elections in rural elements of the state. Final 12 months, some polling locations in predominantly Alaska Native rural communities didn’t open on time on Election Day as a result of beforehand chosen ballot employees didn’t present as much as work. In different places, ballots weren’t absolutely counted as a result of they weren’t delivered in time to the Division of Elections.
“I’m taking a look at other ways we might probably have all of the ballots picked up that night. I’m taking a look at totally different communication strategies. I’m taking a look at methods we might have groups which can be despatched to each single location in order that if one thing occurs and native employees are in poor health or for regardless of the motive — the ability goes out, they don’t get up — that we’ve got folks there. I’m taking a look at all these potentialities and attempting to provide you with something we will do that may be a stopgap in order that there’s nothing that may cease anyone from with the ability to vote in the course of the marketed polling hour,” Dahlstrom stated.
The Division of Elections can be going through a lawsuit for failing to supply a poll curing course of, after hundreds of ballots have been rejected final 12 months in areas of the state the place English shouldn’t be the first language spoken, together with predominantly Alaska Native communities and lower-income neighborhoods of Anchorage.
“What I see as vital is acknowledging that we do have these totally different language conditions and a few of them could be a barrier in some areas and for some folks,” stated Dahlstrom, including that the Division of Elections might must develop on the work already carried out by an Alaska Native languages knowledgeable.
‘The fitting particular person’
The long-standing director of the Division of Elections who oversaw the state’s first ranked selection elections, Gail Fenumiai, retired final month. That place shouldn’t be but stuffed, with Michaela Thompson, the division’s administrative operations supervisor, serving as interim director. Dahlstrom stated she continues to be reviewing functions for the place and has not but settled on a everlasting director.
“There’s an inventory of individuals, and I don’t have an announcement but,” Dahlstrom stated. “The vital factor is that it’s the fitting particular person.”
Dahlstrom stated she is looking for a candidate with “belief and integrity and talent to learn legal guidelines and statutes and willingness to work and take a look at methods we will change and enhance.”
“There’s simply so many issues to contemplate, however we’ve got a whole lot of certified gifted folks within the state,” she stated.
Within the meantime, Dahlstom stated she is impressed with the work of Division of Elections employees however continues to be analyzing methods the division can enhance.
“We will at all times do higher with no matter it’s that we’re doing and that’s going to be the aim,” stated Dahlstrom, including that by being extra clear, the division might “make the general public really feel a bit of bit safer concerning the course of.”
Anchorage Every day Information reporter Sean Maguire contributed to this story.