Meet the star witness in the effort to stop Dunleavy's campaign of funding private schools with public money—Dunleavy

If the Alaska Supreme Court listens to what Sen. Mike Dunleavy claimed a decade ago, then Gov. Mike Dunleavy will lose his effort to funnel public funds to private schools and the Alaska Superior Court decision will be upheld.

On April 10, 2013 Sen. Mike Dunleavy said he knew it was illegal to allow public funds be used to pay tuition to allow a student to take even a single course in a private school.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Dunleavy keeps paying Outside publicist, whose husband attacks legal immigration, claiming Christian motives

This is a reminder that Gov. Mike Dunleavy continues to pay Virginia publicist Mary Vought $5,000 a month for public relations work in Washington, D.C. under a questionable no-bid contract that has been extended or amended eight times without public justification or discussion.

Her husband is former federal bureaucrat Russell Vought, a Christian nationalist radical who is central to the Trump 2025 drive to remake the federal government and cater to Trump’s dictatorial whims. “Post-constitutional” is the euphemism in which Russell cloaks his scheme.

In a speech that didn’t get enough attention last year, Russell attacked legal immigrants to the United States, claiming that they refuse to assimilate. I suspect his real targets are not all legal immigrants, just those from what Trump calls “shithole countries.”

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Dermot Cole Comments
‘Does Gov. Dunleavy hate kids?’ Gov. Dunleavys asks in state-funded ad campaign for fake ‘petitions’

The Dunleavy administration is trying a new tactic on its state-funded data mining operation to promote non-existent “petitions” to boost Dunleavy’s efforts to direct more public money to private schools.

In 2019, Dunleavy claimed he was gathering signatures on a petition to submit to legislators to support a Permanent Fund Dividend of $3,000. He also claimed he had a petition to cap government spending. And a petition to pay back PFDs.

But there were no petitions. He was simply collecting names and addresses of people who could be called upon for political support, disguising the nature of the exercise by calling them “petitions.”

He’s doing the same thing again.

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Fairbanks math teacher provides essential charter school analysis the Dunleavy administration has studiously avoided

A Fairbanks high school math teacher and mother of two has begun to fill in the gap for those who have asked for analysis of the recent charter school study touted endlessly by Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Education Commissioner Deena Bishop and many Republican legislators.

West Valley High School teacher Beth Zirbes, who has master’s degrees in math and statistics from UAF, makes a clear case that the situation is far more complex than the simplistic portrayal by Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Education Commissioner Deena Bishop and many Republican legislators.

I commend Zirbes for devoting many hours of her own time to try and put this study in context, showing its strengths and weaknesses and why more work needs to be done. This should not be the end of the analysis, but the beginning.

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Statehood Defense Coordinator Craig Richards inks another dubious no-bid state contract

Anchorage attorney Craig Richards, who helped defend Gov. Mike Dunleavy against the recall, has been getting $12,000 a month from the state for the past year as “statehood defense coordinator.”

As I’ve written here before, the no-bid contract the Dunleavy administration created for Richards violated numerous procurement regulations.

Now he has a new contract, which again makes a mockery of the state procurement laws. Richards has basically become a part-time political employee of Dunleavy.

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Fairbanks right-wing group searches for school library books to ban

Fairbanks volunteers who have joined Moms for Liberty are looking for books to ban in local school libraries, including books they have not read.

It’s no surprise that they have found plenty of objectionable words and want to read them out loud at school board meetings.

Members of the club, including Ruth Ewig, Gail McBride, and Cynthia Wozniak, want their opinions about acceptable books and objectionable words to become the law of the land. McBride and Wozniak made that clear in testimony to the school board this week.

They denounced “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, with McBride and Wozniak saying it should be immediately removed from school library shelves. Lots of other books should be pulled as well, they said.

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State selects right-wing Texas lawyers to help argue landmark school case

“As the nation’s largest non-profit legal firm solely dedicated to religious liberty, our legal services are always provided at no charge to you,” the Texas-based First Liberty Institute says.

The Dunleavy administration has chosen three lawyers of the First Liberty Institute to help defend the practice of using state funds for private schools, contrary to the language of the Alaska Constitution.

The Alaska Constitution says, “No money shall be paid from public funds for the direct benefit of any religious or private educational institution.”

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Sullivan never speaks up to contradict Trump

Wall Street Journal reporter Molly Ball wrote: “Sen. Dan Sullivan stood beside the newly elected Taiwanese vice president in an orchid-draped room of the island’s presidential palace, making a promise that wasn’t wholly within his power to keep.”

“This is the message our bipartisan delegation wants to send to the people of Taiwan: ‘You can count on the United States of America,’ said the silver-haired Alaska Republican, a recently retired Marine.”

There is nothing “wholly” about this.

Sullivan never questions the brilliance of the convicted felon. And Sullivan cannot keep any promises to Taiwan if Trump wins because a Trump promise is as good as a degree from Trump University.

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