The recall appeal to the Alaska Supreme Court doesn’t have to be a drawn-out process, though the attorney general and the Dunleavy support group will try to make it so.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy did not say how much the new Alaska General would cost or why the lieutenants of the Dunleavy administration are not already identifying careless and fraudulent spending. No-bid contracts with relatives of donors come to mind.
Read MoreIf the state pays the dividend Gov. Mike Dunleavy wants, we’ll see a deficit of close to $2 billion. Something has to give. And Dunleavy is happy to be a bystander. That was the message from his State of the State speech.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy should read the state reports that show why no one should assume that a decrease in the Alaska unemployment percentage is a positive sign. The drop in the size of the labor force makes the jobless percentage misleading.
Read MoreThe debate about creation stories and state jobs for legislators should have been settled a decade ago when Rep. Nancy Dahlstrom quit the Legislature to take an executive branch job, only to trigger constitutional questions that led to her resignation.
Read MoreTammie Wilson’s new job was created while Wilson is serving as a legislator. The Alaska Constitution prohibits legislators from accepting a job created under these conditions for at least a year.
Read MoreThe Dunleavy wing of the Legislature, a minority group, got some bad information about Alaska school districts and ran with it. The wing members didn’t hesitate to repeat a false claim that schools have $500 million in extra cash.
Read MoreRather than tell the truth, the leaders of the executive branch chose to lie about the “I’m going to run right now” press conference in December. Now there is proof that Gov. Mike Dunleavy did not split to attend an urgent meeting.
Read MoreMany legislators will oppose the Dunleavy plan to flunk third-graders who are not doing well in reading. The bill may be amended to strip this language and make flunking subject to parental approval.
Read MoreHe portrays himself as an innocent bystander, waiting for Alaskans and the Legislature to decide what he should do next. But neither the Legislature nor the public will ever speak with a single voice on the complicated public policy choices that must be faced immediately.
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