The Anchorage Daily News editorial board, led by company CEO Ryan Binkley, is wrong on all of this except for the statement that the Dunleavy administration will fight the recall effort all the way.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy wants to cut Medicaid spending by $700 million over a couple of years. He has been unable to define the level of reduced services this would require or which Alaska health care institutions might survive the bloodletting.
Read MoreThe 2017 Republican tax law, which Congress approved without a hearing, was going to include a provision to collect about $70 million a year from cruise ship companies that don’t pay federal taxes. But Sen. Dan Sullivan led the charge to sink the ship tax.
Read MoreAIDEA Executive Director Tom Boutin told the governor’s press secretary to pretend that he did not know about the no-bid contract with Clark Penney, valued at up to $441,000. Was this to divert attention from the obvious questions about whether this contract was a political gift for the oversized role that Bob Penney played in helping Dunleavy win the election?
Read MoreWhat we know is that an unnamed person or persons in the Dunleavy administration bestowed a no-bid contract on Clark Penney, the grandson of a major Dunleavy donor, and prevented competitive bids on a contract worth up to $441,000.
Read MoreThe state would be better off if the governor focused on improvements to education, both K-12 and the university, to try to better prepare young Alaskans to compete for the demanding jobs of the future, which won’t be in gun factories or casinos.
Read MoreAttorney General Kevin Clarkson will try to assemble a case against the recall of Gov. Mike Dunleavy. He will be tempted to reject or ignore the work of his predecessors in analyzing election law, which would be a mistake.
Read MoreThe recall campaign has proven to be the most effective way to capture Dunleavy's attention, the healthy start of a statewide conversation about Alaska’s future.
Read MoreTuckerman Babcock had a lot to do with the mistakes and bad policy calls that created a growing statewide recall campaign aimed at ending the Dunleavy administration. It’s not clear how much the recall had to do with Babcock’s removal as chief of staff or his “retirement” letter three weeks later.
Read MoreDr. Al Gross, an independent challenging Sen. Dan Sullivan, says his campaign staff will be unionized, a first for a statewide campaign in Alaska.
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