Native Alaskan Democrat Mary Peltola Defeats Sarah Palin In Special U.S. House Election

This is why we need ranked choice voting.

The Anchorage Daliy News reports Democrat Mary Peltola wins special U.S. House election, will be first Alaska Native elected to Congress:

Advertisement

Democrat Mary Peltola was the apparent winner of Alaska’s special U.S. House race and is set to become the first Alaska Native in Congress, after votes were tabulated Wednesday in the state’s first ranked choice election.

Peltola led Republican former [half-term] Gov. Sarah Palin [aka “Caribou Barbie,” the “Quitta from Wasilla”] after ballots were tallied and votes for third-place GOP candidate Nick Begich III were redistributed to his supporters’ second choices. Peltola, a Yup’ik former state lawmaker who calls Bethel home, is now slated to be the first woman to hold Alaska’s lone U.S. House seat.

If results are confirmed as expected by the state review board later this week, she will succeed U.S. Rep. Don Young, the Republican who held the office for nearly five decades — since before Peltola was born. The special election was triggered by Young’s death in March.

“I feel like I need to catch my breath for a minute,” Peltola said in the moment after results were announced in a live video by state election officials in Juneau. Peltola was surrounded by family and campaign staff at an Anchorage office.

“What’s most important is that I’m an Alaskan being sent to represent all Alaskans. Yes, being Alaska Native is part of my ethnicity, but I’m much more than my ethnicity,” she said.

It is an outcome largely seen as an upset. Peltola would be the first Democrat to join Alaska’s three-person congressional delegation since U.S. Sen. Mark Begich lost reelection in 2014. And she defeated two Republicans to do so. Combined, Palin and Nick Begich III, nephew of Mark Begich and grandson of former U.S. Rep. Nick Begich, commanded nearly 60% of first-place votes.

Begich was the first candidate eliminated, after no other candidate exceeded the 50% threshold needed to win under Alaska’s ranked choice voting system. The second-place votes of Begich’s supporters were then tallied in what is called an instant runoff. Only half of Begich’s voters ranked Palin second — not enough for her to overtake Peltola.

Peltola had 39.7% of the first-place votes to Palin’s 30.9%. In the instant runoff, Peltola ended up with 91,206 votes to Palin’s 85,987, or 51.47% to 48.53%. A small number of additional ballots have not yet been counted by election officials, likely not enough to change results.

Peltola ran a largely positive campaign as Begich and Palin traded barbs in the final weeks before the Aug. 16 special election, emerging as the victor with a platform that highlighted her position as the only candidate on the ballot who supports abortion access — an issue that has become important to voters with the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision removing federal protections for access to the procedure (the procedure remains protected under the Alaska Constitution).

Peltola has also said she is “pro-fish” and emphasized her plans to protect subsistence fisheries in Alaska as salmon stocks decline in the region where she has fished throughout her life.

Peltola was raised in rural villages and calls Bethel home. She served in the state House between 1999 and 2009, representing the Bethel region. During her time in the Legislature, she led the Bush Caucus, bringing together lawmakers representing communities in Alaska off the road system and building a reputation as someone who can work across party lines.

While in the Legislature, Peltola’s path overlapped with Palin’s as governor. Both politicians were pregnant while in office. They traded friendly text messages on election day earlier this month.

[A]fter leaving the state House, Peltola worked in community relations for Donlin Gold, a mining project on the Kuskokwim River. Before announcing her congressional bid, she worked on fisheries management and rural food security as executive director of the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. Peltola, a mother of four and grandmother of two, turned 49 on Wednesday.

Peltola emerged as the winner from an original field of 48 primary race candidates, which included several sitting and former lawmakers, Alaska Native leaders and Santa Claus.

Peltola is now set to head to Washington for just four months, serving out the rest of Young’s term. Peltola, Palin and Begich are set to advance to the November election that will determine who will hold the seat for the full two-year term that will begin in January.

Peltola said she is still focused on November and winning the two-year seat. She said she would prioritize setting up constituent services for Alaska’s lone U.S. House seat that were discontinued in recent weeks, reaching out to future colleagues in the House, and to Alaska Republican Senators Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan. She said she did not yet have an itinerary for traveling to the nation’s Capitol.

Political observers say that the outcome of the special election will shape the November race. After just a few weeks to prove her legislative might in Washington, Peltola will enter the November election as the incumbent, with the associated fundraising advantages and visibility. Republicans will likely be galvanized to hone their messaging under the ranked choice voting system — which was narrowly approved by voters through a 2020 ballot measure — and encourage their supporters to rank both red candidates on the ballot.

Sarah Eckman Ward, a political consultant who ran a campaign to encourage Republicans to “rank the red” — meaning all Republican candidates on the ballot — said the results could be “a big wake-up call to Republicans.”

* * *

Palin, who ran with an endorsement from former President Donald Trump and spent some of her campaign in the Lower 48, has consistently attacked ranked choice voting as a “whack system” that “must be changed.” Begich had the support of many Alaska Republican Party insiders, and attacked Palin for her decision to quit as governor in 2009. Palin responded by calling into question Begich’s Republican bona fides, pointing to his support for his Democratic uncle’s Senate campaigns in 2008 and 2014.

The animus between Palin and Begich was on full display in the candidate forum held just before results were announced. Begich attacked Palin for a policy she advanced as governor that increased taxes on oil companies. Palin called him “Negative Nick” and said he’s “what’s wrong with politics today.”

Polling before the election showed Palin to be a polarizing figure; three in five Alaskans had a negative view of her, according to more than one poll. [Nah, really?] But her fame, name recognition and harnessing of Republican messaging on oil drilling propelled Palin ahead of Begich, who was running his first statewide campaign for public office after building a career in private business.

More than a quarter of Begich voters ranked Peltola second, crossing party lines. One fifth of his voters did not rank any candidate as their second choice.

Some ballots from rural communities remain uncounted as of Wednesday. They will be counted when they reach the Division of Elections’ Juneau office, spokesperson Tiffany Montemayor said. The Alaska Board of Elections is scheduled to certify the results on Friday, but that could get delayed if rural precinct ballots remain uncounted.

“Those precincts not arriving in time for the board to certify is something we’ll have to address if that happens,” Montemayor said by email.

A recount can be requested by a candidate or group of voters up to five days after results are certified. A lawsuit challenging the results can be filed up to 10 days after certification.





Advertisement

Discover more from Blog for Arizona

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

4 thoughts on “Native Alaskan Democrat Mary Peltola Defeats Sarah Palin In Special U.S. House Election”

    • What is more disturbing was her “not quite a concession” speech: Palin slammed the concept of ranked-choice voting, which is what Alaska uses in their elections, and noted that she intends to keep fighting to stay in politics. “Alaskans know I’m the last one who’ll ever retreat,” she wrote. “Instead, I’m going to reload…” for the November general election.

      First, she is the Quitta from Wasilla who quit her governorship half-way through her one and only term for the more financially lucrative grifting off of stupid Republicans, and a godawful reality TV series, sort of a modern, twisted version of the Beverly Hillbillies. Right-wing celebrity grifting is where the money is at.

      Second, is her use of “reload” – always with the gun culture metaphors. This is the kind of language that drew criticism years ago when she “targeted” Democrats in a campaign ad using crosshairs, including Rep. Gsabrille Giffords, who only months later was targeted by an assassin. Note: there is no evidence the shooter was motivated by Palin’s ad.

      But in the current environment after a violent isurrection on our nation’s capitol, it can be taken as incitement by MAGA/QAnon nuts who are targeting FBI agents and IRS auditors, amd a judge after Trump’s legal troubles. “Online violent extremist rhetoric soars after Mar-a-Lago search”, https://www.cbsnews.com/news/online-violent-extremist-rhetoric-soars-after-mar-a-lago-search/

      [V]iolent extremist content flooding far-right message boards and social media platforms in the wake of the FBI’s search of the Mar-a-Lago resort. Phrases including “civil war” and “lock and load” trended across Telegram channels, Gab, Reddit and TheDonald, a popular forum among Trump supporters. Also rising are antisemitic slurs threatening the Florida magistrate judge who signed the search warrant enabling the FBI to search for and remove boxes and documents of potentially classified material from the former president’s home.

      The threats ranged from attacks on the FBI and those involved in the case to calls for Trump supporters to take up arms against the government.

      “Ballot box, soap box, jury box, and ammo box … options are getting limited,” wrote one user. “Time to bear arms and take down the FBI,” wrote another.

      “There was just an explosion of angry rhetoric across right-wing media, across right-wing social media accounts,” Jessica Reaves, the editorial director of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center for Extremism, told CBS News. “What is most notable to us is the uniformity of the calls for civil war across, quote, unquote, extremist and … ‘mainstream’ platforms and from people on, you know, across the board, in the right wing space.”

      -This is the audience to whom Sarah Palin is speaking when she says she will “reload.” She engages in “stochastic terrorism”: the use of mass public communication, usually against a particular individual or group, which incites or inspires acts of terrorism which are statistically probable but happen seemingly at random.

      And which cannot be causally traced to her statements. “I never said to do that” (wink, wink).

    • Palin was for the bridge before she wasn’t and she lied about it.

      She’s insecure and combative about her lack of intelligence and her incurious mind, so at least some self awareness, overly tight clothes notwithstanding.

      Since leaving office, the hard drinking fist fighting Palin’s have been involved in a few actual drunken brawls, something that did not surprise her fellow Wassiliains.

      She’s been a member of a Pentecostal church and has spoken in tongues, but maybe that was actually just another drunken episode.

      Been there! But I was trying to order another drink, not trying to connect with SkyDaddy.

      She’s example number 124,569,223 of “family values” conservatives who are divorced.

      I do wonder how Republicans call Hillary shrill and never mention that Palin screech.

      Oh, yeah, and so far, nothing about her loss in Steve Schmidt’s twitter feed. Too bad, I find his long winded apologies for subjecting America to this seaward amusing.

  1. I guess it’s typical Palin nonsense but she seems to be critical of the ranked choice election system used in Alaska while having gained ground on Peltola after the second round. In the first round Palin was behind by almost 10 percentage points but after the second round she closed the gap to about 3 points. A demonstration of stupidity!

Comments are closed.