I thought of Mike Doogan while listening to a recording of the speech Gov. Mike Dunleavy gave to the Alaska State Home Builders Association Thursday in Homer.
Read MoreTo a greater degree than many politicians, Dunleavy changes his message depending upon his audience. He did it as a candidate. He does it as governor.
In announcing his newfound commitment to the Power Cost Equalization endowment, Gov. Mike Dunleavy did not admit that he was the one who tried to do away with the PCE endowment.
Read MoreEveryone at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention in Fairbanks should have a chance to see the distorted portrayal Gov. Mike Dunleavy is giving right-wing media outlets Outside about the reasons for the recall campaign against him.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy told a national radio audience that if he is recalled, the lieutenant governor would serve as a placeholder until a special election is held. That’s not what the Alaska Constitution says would happen.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy is trying to generate national opposition to the recall campaign by appearing on right-wing talk shows and giving interviews to sympathetic websites, portraying himself as a victim of the same forces opposing President Trump.
Read MoreIn the history of Alaska scams, Elizabeth Pierce, 55, deserves a chapter of her own, having raised $270 million from investors based on a series of forged contracts from Alaska companies to buy $1 billion worth of telecommunications services.
Read MoreAttorney General Kevin Clarkson decided to hire President Donald Trump’s attorney at $600 an hour to pursue a case against Alaska state workers, but it’s likely to cost a great deal more than the $50,000 that the department claimed in August.
Read MoreThe most sensational claim about the leaky lagoon is that a former North Pole refinery supervisor fired a high-powered rifle at a piece of the plastic liner that floated to the surface in the lagoon. The employees referred to these plastic bubbles that rose above the water as “belugas.”
Read Moreit twists the “public record” law beyond recognition to claim it allows the Permanent Fund corporation to keep secret how much McKinley Capital Management of Anchorage and Barings, an international firm, will earn for investing $200 million in Alaska.
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