Alaska
Potential shift in balance of power in Alaska legislature debated by lawmakers
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The outcome of several competitive races in November across the state could disrupt the balance of power in the House and Senate next legislative session.
Education funding and outcomes, defined benefits, and the size of the PFD are just some of the items that — based on the November results — could change in the next session.
One race that could impact the power in the South Anchorage House seat is the District 9 race, which includes the Hillside.
Nonpartisan candidate Ky Holland is leading a heavily Republican field now down to two candidates. The seat was vacated by House majority Republican Laddie Shaw, who announced his retirement earlier this year.
Another competitive race is for the District 15 seat — which includes the Bayshore/Klatt neighborhoods — vacated by House majority member Tom McKay.
In that race, Republican Mia Costello and Democrat Denny Wells are separated by less than 150 votes.
Other Republican incumbents facing tight races are Rep. Julie Coulombe and Rep. Stanley Wright.
With the potential to pick up seats, House minority leader Rep. Calvin Schrage, I-Anchorage, said Tuesday he would like to see a new House majority for the legislature centered around issues including a different way to fund education.
“I see candidates that are doing very well, specifically those candidates that are pro-education and pro-coalition,” Schrage said. “Now, certainly, there are those that are unhappy with candidates or legislators that work together in a bipartisan fashion, and so we see them run against these incumbents. However, in my experience, voters at the end of the day are going to support the candidate that’s willing to solve issues for Alaskan.”
On the Senate side, a three-member, conservative-leaning, non-caucusing Senate minority is looking to build its numbers and challenge the bipartisan Senate majority.
Senate majority members Jesse Bjorkman, Scott Kawaski, and Kelly Merrick all find themselves in competitive races against conservative-leaning candidates.
House majority member Mike Cronk is also looking to win a Senate seat, previously held by Senate Majority member Click Bishop.
Senate minority member Shelley Hughes said she believes Alaskans would like to see a state legislature that is more center-right.
“Voters have been speaking for a number of years by voting a majority of Republicans in both the House and Senate that the state overall would like to see a right-of-center legislature — not far right, but right of center,” Hughes said.
In an email, Sen. Scott Kawasaki said far-right Republicans are desperate to break apart the bipartisan Senate.
Eagle River Republican Senate challenger Jared Goecker, who has said if he beats Merrick, he would not be interested in joining the bipartisan Senate majority the way it is currently configured, calling it not conservative enough.
Copyright 2024 KTUU. All rights reserved.
Alaska
Senators express skepticism about passing Alaska LNG bill before session’s end
Facing pressure from Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy to quickly finalize a bill to support the Alaska LNG megaproject, key members of the Senate on Tuesday expressed skepticism that they’ll finish the task before the session ends later this month.
Senate President Gary Stevens told reporters that he doesn’t think the lawmakers can finalize a bill by May 20, which could open the door to an immediate special session, or whenever the governor chooses to call one.
Senators are being asked to move quickly, creating the possibility of unexpected outcomes if a bill is passed now, said Stevens, a Kodiak Republican.
“There’s a lot of work yet to do, and I think you’re seeing the concern around this table of the mistakes we could easily make,” he said during a press conference alongside other leaders of the Senate Majority.
The concerns came one day after Dunleavy urged lawmakers in both chambers to quickly pass a bill to give the LNG developer Glenfarne a substantial property tax break, so North Slope gas can be delivered to Southcentral Alaska and overseas to large Asian buyers.
The governor argued Alaska LNG will generate billions of dollars in production taxes, gas royalties and other revenues, create thousands of jobs, lower energy costs and resolve a looming shortage of locally produced gas.
Dunleavy indicated that the Senate and House resources committees burdened the bill he introduced in March with excessive costs that would block the project. Although Dunleavy floated the idea of introducing his bill early in the session, he didn’t formally introduce it until March.
Those committee substitutes would sharply increase the alternative volumetric tax the governor had proposed to tax natural gas shipments in order to bring in more state revenue. That new “alternative volumetric tax” would replace the state’s property tax for the project.
Dunleavy said he will only support a bill that allows the project to receive financing to move forward. He said he would call a special session if a bill he doesn’t think makes the project workable fails to pass the Legislature.
Members of the Senate Resources Committee said Tuesday they lack a clear picture of the important financial details they need to determine what size of tax break the project should receive, if any.
Some of the missing pieces, they say, include a recent update to the project’s $46 billion price tag, a figure that’s been around for more than a decade, and a better understanding of the estimated cost of gas to Alaska ratepayers.
Before the project can receive a tax reduction, the developer needs “to help us with this bill, giving us actual numbers so that we can credibly set a realistic AVT, alternative volumetric tax,” said Sen. Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage and chair of Senate Resources.
Adam Prestidge, with project developer Glenfarne, told Senate Resources on Tuesday morning the company can share financial details with lawmakers if the state takes a stake in the project, under confidentiality agreements or confidential executive sessions.
He said that publicly releasing the project’s cost estimate would put the project at a competitive disadvantage at a time when it’s negotiating agreements with contractors for work, and purchase agreements with entities that would buy and sell the gas, he said.
In such cases, he’s seen the “counterparty try to back calculate what they think the cost of the product is that we’re selling, using what they’ve seen as public information, and it creates a real challenge for being able to commercialize the product,” he said.
Giessel said confidential agreements are problem for lawmakers.
“Confidential executive sessions put us at a real disadvantage because now we have to craft a bill based on what you’ve told us privately, and yet we can’t tell the public what those numbers are,” she said. “It doesn’t work very well.”
Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, and vice chair of Senate Resources, said he won’t vote on a bill that could remove potentially $1 billion in annual property tax revenue — referring to Dunleavy’s original version — without having solid numbers on the project.
“From my perspective, this bill should not go to the floor because, me personally, I don’t want to commit generations of Alaskans to billions of dollars in tax breaks without firm numbers,” he said.
Tim Fitzpatrick, a spokesperson with Glenfarne, said in a statement Tuesday that “the state, along with other potential investors, will have the information needed to make an informed investment decision.”
“The state has no financial risk in Alaska LNG and as testimony has made clear, publicly releasing sensitive cost information harms the project’s competitive position and ability to deliver reliable, low-cost energy for Alaskans,” he said.
“Alaska is rapidly running out of reliable, affordable energy, and state and local policymakers and the legislature’s own consultants have highlighted the need for tax reform for over a decade, during which no project has progressed,” he said.
Alaska
Alaska National Guard to deploy 25 service members to Washington DC
Alaska will deploy 25 National Guard soldiers and airmen to Washington D.C. this month, according to a Friday update from the Alaska Department of Military and Veteran Affairs.
The deployment is part of a response to President Trump’s August declaration of a “crime emergency” in the nation’s capital. In the nine months since, 2,500 troops remain, according to NBC4 Washington. Guard members have assisted with medical emergencies, arrests and beautification projects, as well as snow removal.
The division announcement said the Alaska service members will be focused on public safety: “Guard members provide support functions such as crowd management, perimeter security, and logistical and communications support.”
Alaska National Guard members will deploy for 60 days, according to the division, as part of a joint task force with the Metropolitan Police Department and federal law enforcement partners.
Gov. Mike Dunleavy approved a verbal request in November from the U.S. Secretary of the Army for Alaska to deploy 100 service members, following a national directive by the Pentagon to all 50 states to prepare National Guard service members to train for “civil disturbance operations.”
A spokesperson for Dunleavy’s office did not respond to a request for comment on the smaller deployment, the purpose and timing of the mission on Monday.
Lawmakers had raised concerns about the Pentagon’s national directive for an estimated 20,000 National Guard service members to be trained and prepared to deploy in U.S. cities within 24 hours. Alaska was initially charged with preparing 350 service members as part of a “quick reaction force” by Jan. 1.
Rep. Andrew Gray, D-Anchorage, co-chair of the Alaska Joint Armed Services Committee, and a veteran of the Alaska National Guard, was among those who had raised concerns.
On Monday, Gray said the smaller deployment for 60 days is less of an issue.
“I don’t think it’s in the best interest of the American taxpayer to be flying service members from Alaska to D.C. to do what I don’t believe is of grave consequence,” he said.
“At the end of the day, to me, it’s sort of a nothing burger. I do think that it shows that the Dunleavy administration and General (Torrence) Saxe are in alignment with Trump. They’re showing that they support Trump’s agenda. But again, this is just not that big of a deal, in my opinion.”
Alaska
Missing and Murdered Indigenous People Awareness Day 2026 – Mike Dunleavy
WHEREAS, all Alaskans have the right to safety and justice, and the rates of missing and murdered Indigenous persons (MMIP) represent a crisis that is actively being addressed; and
WHEREAS, Alaska Native women are overrepresented in the domestic violence victim population by 250 percent, and although Alaska Natives comprise 19 percent of Alaska’s population, they represent 47 percent of the State’s reported rape victims; and
WHEREAS, the call for a greater response to the MMIP led to increased communication between tribal communities and State agencies in an effort to better understand the scope of the issue; and
WHEREAS, the State of Alaska now has four MMIP investigators, two tribal liaisons, and dedicates significant resources to address these cases and work with the family members of missing and murdered persons; and
WHEREAS, in 2024 I signed legislation that further moves Alaska’s response forward with mandatory entry of missing persons into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, and requires that the State employ MMIP investigators, and requires that all current and future Alaska law enforcement officers attend cultural diversity training with an emphasis on MMIP; and
WHEREAS, the State of Alaska is committed to continuing its efforts to work with Alaska Tribes in combatting this crisis and offering support to communities and families.
NOW THEREFORE, I, Mike Dunleavy, GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF ALASKA, do hereby proclaim May 5, 2026, as:
Missing and Murdered Indigenous People Awareness Day
in Alaska and encourage all Alaskans to recognize the elevated rates of missing and murdered Indigenous persons and support law enforcement, victim advocacy, and the efforts of Alaska Native Tribes to work with State, local, and other entities working together toward solutions.
Dated: May 5, 2026
-
Colorado4 minutes agoColorado anglers fear drought will make it ‘hard to keep fish alive’ this summer
-
Connecticut10 minutes ago
Percy Steinhart, Creator of the $1,000-Velvet-Slipper Brand Stubbs & Wootton, Restored This Connecticut Home
-
Delaware16 minutes agoMotorcyclist dies in Ogletown crash as traffic deaths surge in Delaware
-
Florida22 minutes agoVoting underway for HGTV Smart Home in Florida. When the contest ends
-
Georgia28 minutes agoTracking storm line headed to North Georgia
-
Hawaii34 minutes agoThis Hawaii Flight Emergency Looks Different Over The Pacific
-
Idaho40 minutes agoDuck powered parks: Idaho Falls celebrates new shelters at Heritage Park – East Idaho News
-
Illinois46 minutes agoNew Illinois proposal aims to lower property taxes for homeowners | ChicagoLIVE