Alaska Democratic Party

The Alaska Democratic Party is the affiliate of the Democratic Party in Alaska, headquartered in Anchorage.

Alaska Democratic Party
ChairpersonCasey Steinau
Vice ChairBrent Watkins
Speaker of the HouseBryce Edgmon (in coalition with Republicans and Independents)
House Majority LeaderSteve M. Thompson (in coalition with Republicans and Independents)
Senate Minority LeaderTom Begich
Headquarters2602 Fairbanks St.,
Anchorage, Alaska 99503-2428
IdeologyCentrism
Conservatism
Modern liberalism
Populism
Political positionCenter
National affiliation Democratic Party
ColorsBlue
Seats in the U.S. Senate
0 / 2
Seats in the U.S. House of Representatives
0 / 1
Statewide Executive Offices
0 / 2
Seats in the State Senate
7 / 20
[lower-alpha 1]
Seats in the State House of Representatives
15 / 40
Website
www.alaskademocrats.org

It is one of the two major parties in Alaska, alongside the Republicans. The party holds no statewide offices. In the state legislature, Democrats hold seven of the 20 seats in the state senate and 15 of the 40 seats in the state house. It controls the state house by forming a coalition with independents and some Republicans.[1] As of 2020, there are over 75,000 registered members of the Alaska Democratic Party.[2]

History

In 1949, the Young Democrats of Alaska was established as a group.[3] Except in U.S. presidential elections, the Alaska Democratic Party was very successful in the early days of statehood and the late territory days (pre-1959), featuring such characters as territorial governor and later national senator Ernest Gruening. Gruening was one of only two senators to vote against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which authorized an expansion of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Bob Bartlett, also a Democrat, and erstwhile secretary of the territory, was the first senator from Alaska, and remained a senator until his death in 1968. William A. Egan, also of the Alaska Democratic Party, was elected the first governor of the State of Alaska. Until the election of governor Bill Walker, he was the only governor of Alaska of either party to have been born in Alaska. In the U.S. House meanwhile, Democrat Ralph J. Rivers was the state's first representative from statehood until 1967.

In the aftermath of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Ted Kennedy, representing Senator Robert Kennedy (of New York), in the presence of Senator Gruening, gave a historic speech on the island-community of Sitka, Alaska.[4][5] Democrat Mike Gravel was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1968 and served for two terms until his defeat in the Democratic primary in 1980 (Republicans ultimately picked up the seat in the general). By the end of 1973, Gravel was the only Alaska Democrat remaining in federal office, as the state's House seat and other Senate seat had switched hands to Republicans. After Gravel left office, Democrats would not hold any seats in Alaska's congressional delegation again for almost three decades.

1972 U.S. House election

On October 16, 1972, Alaska's incumbent Democratic congressman Nick Begich went missing in a plane crash along with House Majority Leader Hale Boggs en route to Juneau from Anchorage. In spite of this, three weeks later, Begich won re-election to his seat. However, he was later declared dead on December 29 of that year after an intensive search effort.[6] Neither Begich's body nor the plane he flew on were ever found. Begich is currently the most recent Democrat to serve Alaska in the U.S. House. In a special election held shortly thereafter in 1973, Republican Don Young (who had previously lost to the late Begich) won election to the seat and has held it ever since.

Recent history

The most recent Democrat to serve as Governor of Alaska was Tony Knowles, who served from 1995 to 2003.

Democrat Barack Obama won the 2008 Democratic caucuses in Alaska by a margin of more than three to one over Hillary Clinton, a higher percentage than any state except Idaho. He then received 37.89 percent of the total statewide vote in the general election, losing the state to Republican John McCain, who had selected then-Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his vice-presidential running mate. In the same election year, Democrat Mark Begich narrowly won election to the U.S. Senate over longtime Republican incumbent Ted Stevens. Begich lost re-election in 2014,[7] the same year that Democratic-endorsed independent Bill Walker defeated incumbent Republican Sean Parnell for Governor.[8]

In 2012, President Obama lost the state to Republican Mitt Romney but increased his percentage of the statewide vote to 40.81%. This was later used as evidence in a high-profile New York Times article detailing the complexity of Alaska politics and the difficulty in predicting the electability of Democrats in the state.[9] In 2016, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump carried the state by around fifteen percentage points over Hillary Clinton. No Democrat has carried Alaska in presidential elections since 1964 when Lyndon B. Johnson had his landslide victory over Barry Goldwater.

Since Byron Mallott resigned as Lieutenant Governor in 2018 after a scandal,[10] Democrats have held no statewide office in Alaska. Democrats currently control the Alaska House of Representatives in a coalition with independent Republicans,[11] while Republicans hold a supermajority in the Alaska State Senate with one independent Democrat caucusing with them.

Party organization

Party leadership

The executive committee of the Alaska Democratic Party consists of the following individuals:[12]

  • Chair - Casey Steinau
  • Secretary - Katherine Pfeiffer
  • Treasurer - Carolyn Covingston
  • Vice Chair Interior Female - Diane Fleeks
  • Vice Chair Interior Male - Luke Hopkins
  • Vice Chair Matsu Male - Mark Bailey
  • Vice Chair Matsu Female (1st Vice Chair) - Patrica Chesbro
  • Vice Chair Southeast Male - Will Kronick
  • Vice Chair Southeast Female - Cindy Spanyers
  • Vice Chair Rural Male - Charles Degnan
  • Vice Chair Rural Female - Lynette Pham
  • Vice Chair Anchorage Female - Anita Thorne
  • Vice Chair Anchorage Female - Laura Herman
  • Vice Chair Anchorage Male - Will Hurr
  • Vice Chair Anchorage Male - Erik Gunderson
  • Vice Chair North Gulf - Ron Meehan
  • Vice Chair North Gulf - Liz Diament
  • Immediate Past Chair - Michael Wenstrup
  • National Committeewoman - Sheila Selkregg
  • National Committeeman - Ed Wesley
  • Finance Committee Chair - Anita Thorne
  • State House Representative - Chris Tuck
  • State Senate Representative Scott Kawasaki
  • Executive Committee At-Large - Willie Anderson
  • Young Democrats President - Genevieve Mina
  • Senate Democratic Campaign Committee (SDCC) Co-Chair -
  • House Democratic Campaign Committee (HDCC) Co-Chairs -

Party functions

The Alaska Democratic Party performs many functions, all with the aim of helping Democrats to win elected office within the state.

These functions include:[2]

  • The organization and recruitment of citizens to go door to door for the party and promote the party issues and candidates.
  • The coordination of statewide campaigns for the general election every two years.
  • Working to get articles into newspapers, letters to the editors written, and callers on talk radio stations.
  • Operating the official Alaska Democratic Party website.
  • Sending out email announcements to Democrats regarding party activities.
  • Operating a state Voter File.

Ideology

From the Alaska Democratic Party Platform, Nome, Alaska 2014:[13]

"Platform Summary Energy, Education, and Alaska Values:

ENERGY:

Resource development:

Alaska's Constitution requires that we obtain the "maximum benefit" from resource development. Alaska Democrats support the bipartisan concept of the Owner State and will work to control our own resources.

Affordable Energy:

Delivering affordable energy to all Alaskans must be a top priority for the legislature.

Short Term:

Restore an oil production tax structure that rewards development and maximizes returns to Alaskans Support energy efficiency investments that pay for themselves; Prioritize energy investments.

Long Term:

Get natural gas to market and maximize the benefit for Alaskans; Expand renewable/alternative energy production.

EDUCATION:

Human capital is our most valuable natural resource. Investing non-renewable resource profits in our children will pay sustained dividends for Alaska.

Short Term:

Finish University of Alaska engineering facilities; Ensure classroom funding keeps pace with inflation.

Long Term:

Establish universal voluntary Pre-K; Reduce class sizes; Ensure vocational and technical training opportunities are available for all Alaska job seekers; Expand research capacity of the University of Alaska;

ALASKA VALUES:

The state legislature should support Alaska values of self-reliance, subsistence, personal privacy, government restraint, and balanced budgets.

Short Term:

Support Medicaid Expansion; Protect the Permanent Fund Dividend; Protect Alaskans' right to self-reliance; Defend Alaskans' Right to Privacy; Protect Alaskans' property from government seizure; Support active duty and veteran service members; Re-establish the Alaska Commission on the Status of Women; Protect Alaska's Constitutional language prohibiting use of public funding for private schools;

Long Term:

Expand Denali Kid Care; Equality of Voting Access for rural and urban areas; Support active duty and veteran service members; Equal pay for equal work; Expand child care assistance for working families; Support local food production; Protect Alaskans' retirement savings."

See also

Notes

  1. One Democratic Senator, Lyman Hoffman, caucuses with the Alaska Republican Party

References

  1. "Partisan composition of state houses". Ballotpedia.
  2. "Alaska Democrats - What We Do". Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  3. "Senator Kennedy talks to the Alaska Democratic Party about civil rights". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-10-24.
  4. "AMRC. Steve McCutcheon Collection". vilda.alaska.edu.
  5. "The Mysterious disappearance of Cessna N1812H". Retrieved 2019-09-26.
  6. "AP: Sullivan beats Begich in Alaska". POLITICO.
  7. Jaime Fuller (19 November 2014). "A bipartisan 'unity ticket' actually won this year. That's rare". Washington Post.
  8. "Alaska Might Be More Friendly to Democrats Than It Appears". The New York Times. 21 August 2014.
  9. "The plot thickens on Mallott resignation". mustreadalaska.com. Retrieved 2019-09-26.
  10. "Multi-partisan House Majority takes shape". alaskapublic.org. Retrieved 2019-09-26.
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-01-25. Retrieved 2011-11-08.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. "Party platform" (PDF). static1.squarespace.com. Retrieved 2021-01-16.
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