Alaska

Peltola targets Natives to reverse slipping support

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Rep. Mary Peltola

Just as Vice President Kamala Harris has been assigned to shore up the black vote for President Joe Biden by headlining events for African-American voters, Alaska Rep. Mary Peltola was stumping for the Native vote on her most recent trip back home to Alaska, in an effort to shore up support.

Flanked by her chief of staff Anton McParland, who also serves as her campaign manager, she appeared at a campaign event over the weekend in Anchorage that targeted Natives, where she has started to see wearing support. According to her slide presentation, the goal is to register more Native voters and “get them set up with absentee ballots” in August, when the Alaska primary election is held.

She doesn’t actually need cash from Alaska Natives because her campaign treasury has millions of dollars from donors primarily outside Alaska. She has over $2.5 million in available campaign cash.

But she does need to invigorate and motivate her base. According to the Alaska Federation of Natives, “Our people make up approximately 20% of the state’s general population. If we vote early (in-person or by mail) or on Election Day, we can determine the direction of Alaska.” AFN believes Natives vote as block.

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According to left-leaning polling group Data for Progress, Peltola is slipping with Native voters, thus her focus on using her Native affiliation to restore confidence. In the latest poll, conservative candidate Nick Begich is actually doing better with Native voters than Peltola, although overall, the two are in a 50-50 tie in the March poll among all Alaskans, in a ranked choice match up, with Nancy Dahlstrom eliminated in the first round.

According to the Peltola campaign, “door to door activity is the most fundamental aspect of this plan” to get Natives reengaged, including the strategy to “push youth in their households to vote with them and have more civically engaged youth assist elders in their households.”

In addition to her campaign account, Peltola has a launched political action committee called the “Cache PAC,” which has raised $100,000 so far to support her campaign. Major donors to Peltola’s Cache PAC include people like John Arnold of Texas, whose foundation was one of the main donors to the ballot initiative that brought ranked-choice voting to Alaska. Also donating to the Cache PAC is Melinda Gates, former wife of billionaire Bill Gates. Top Cache PAC donors include:

STALLINGS, NANCY
ANCHORAGE, AK 99507
NOT EMPLOYED $5,000
STALLINGS, MICHAEL
ANCHORAGE, AK 99507
UAA $5,000
WOMER, ROD
NEWBURY PARK, CA 91320
Not Employed $5,000
KARPLUS, BARBARA
NEWBURY PARK, CA 91320
Tax Practitioner $5,000
ARNOLD, JOHN
HOUSTON, TX 77019
Not Employed $5,000
PUYALLUP TRIBE OF INDIANS
TACOMA, WA 98404
$5,000
DUNCAN, RONALD
ANCHORAGE, AK 99503
GCI $5,000
CHAPADOS, GREGORY
ANCHORAGE, AK 99501
GCI $5,000
FRENCH GATES, MELINDA
REDMOND, WA 98052
Pivotal Ventures $1,000
PAWLOWSKI, MICHAEL
ANCHORAGE, AK 99504
NOT EMPLOYED $500
HALL, JOELLE
EAGLE RIVER, AK 99577
NOT EMPLOYED $500
CARTER, PATRICK
ANCHORAGE, AK 99515
CONSULTANT $500
JOULE, REGINALD
KOTZEBUE, AK 99752
J AND H CONSULTING $500

The Cache PAC is funding a lot of the campaign airline travel and on-the-ground fundraising expenses, according to FEC reports. Some of Cache’s donated funds went to the Treasure Island Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. United Airlines, American Airlines, and the Alaska Democratic Party were the biggest recipients of the Cache PAC payments since the leadership PAC was launched.

Peltola has also received over $20,000 from the Fair Shot PAC, an East Coast political action committee that supports congressional Democrats exclusively. Some of the major donors to that PAC include John Donahue of Arabella Advisors, one of the dark money groups that has been changing the political landscape of Alaska, and billionaire Bill Gates.



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