San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. House candidate Palin advances to general election

- By Becky Bohrer Becky Bohrer is an Associated Press writer.

JUNEAU, Alaska — Republican former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Republican Nick Begich and independen­t Al Gross have advanced to the August special election for the state’s only U.S. House seat.

Palin, Begich and Gross, an orthopedic surgeon, were among 48 candidates in last Saturday’s special primary for the seat, which was left vacant following the death in March of Republican Rep. Don Young. Young had held the seat for 49 years.

The top four votegetter­s in the special primary advance to a special election, set for Aug. 16, in which ranked choice voting will be used.

The winner of that race will serve the remainder of Young’s term, which ends in January.

State elections officials were releasing vote counts on Wednesday, the first day since the special primary in which counts were held. Counts also are planned for Friday and Tuesday.

With 132,730 votes counted, Palin had 28.3%, followed by Begich with 19.3% and Gross with 12.8%.

The election was unusual in that it was conducted primarily by mail. It also was the first election under a system approved by voters in 2020 that ends party primaries and institutes ranked voting for general elections.

The election went on as scheduled following a legal fight over ballot access issues, with the state defending itself against accusation­s that the manner in which the election was held discrimina­ted against voters with visual impairment­s.

Palin, the 2008 Republican vice presidenti­al nominee, held significan­t name recognitio­n in a field that also included current and former state legislator­s and a North Pole city council member whose name is Santa Claus. Many of the candidates were relative unknowns.

Begich comes from a family of prominent Democrats, including uncles Mark Begich and Tom Begich, who have both held elected office. Gross unsuccessf­ully ran for U.S. Senate in 2020 with the endorsemen­t of state Democrats. Alaska Democratic party leaders in this race urged voters to pick a Democrat.

Palin said she would remain positive and would “never play … the politics of personal destructio­n because I’ve been on the receiving end of that, and I wouldn’t want that to happen to my worst enemy.”

The campaigns of Begich and Gross have reminded voters Palin resigned as governor and questioned her motives in running for the House.

Palin “quit on Alaska,” Gross said. Palin, making her first bid for elected office since resigning as governor partway through her term in 2009, attributed her resignatio­n to an onslaught of records requests and ethics complaints she said were frivolous and had become distractio­ns.

 ?? Mark Thiesssen / Associated Press ?? Ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is making her first bid for elected office since resigning as governor in 2009.
Mark Thiesssen / Associated Press Ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is making her first bid for elected office since resigning as governor in 2009.

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