The Morning Call (Sunday)

Palin joins crowded field for Alaska’s lone US House seat

- By Becky Bohrer Associated Press

JUNEAU, Alaska — Sarah Palin shook up an already unpredicta­ble race for Alaska’s lone U.S. House seat, joining a field of 50 other candidates seeking to fill the seat held for decades by the late U.S. Rep. Don Young, who died last month.

Palin filed paperwork Friday with a state Division of Elections office in Wasilla, said Tiffany Montemayor, a division spokespers­on.

Palin, a former Alaska governor who was the 2008 Republican vice presidenti­al nominee, has the biggest national political profile in the packed field that includes current and former state legislator­s and a North Pole city council member named Santa Claus.

“Public service is a calling, and I would be honored to represent the men and women of Alaska in Congress, just as Rep. Young did for 49 years,” Palin said in a statement on social media.

Young, a Republican, had held Alaska’s House seat since 1973 and was seeking reelection at the time of his death last month at age 88.

Others in the flurry of filings before Friday’s deadline were state Sen. Josh Revak and Tara Sweeney, who are both Republican­s and were the statewide co-chairs of Young’s reelection campaign.

Palin resigned as governor in 2009, partway through her term and said she could make a difference outside the governor’s office. She also had expressed outrage over ethics complaints she felt had frivolousl­y targeted her.

Palin has kept a low profile in Alaska politics since then but maintained a presence nationally, including through speaking engagement­s, appearance­s with conservati­ve outlets

and on reality TV. She also was an early supporter of now-former President Donald Trump.

She has hinted at possible runs for office in the past but never took the plunge. In her statement Friday, she said America is “at a tipping point” and that she’s in the race to “win it and join the fight for freedom alongside other patriots willing to sacrifice all to save our country.”

A special primary is set for June 11. The top four vote-getters will advance to an Aug. 16 special election in which ranked choice voting will be used, a process in line with a new elections system approved by voters in 2020.

The winner, targeted to be certified by Sept. 2, will serve the remainder of Young’s term, which expires in January.

The special election will coincide with the regular primary. The regular primary and November general election will determine who represents Alaska in the House for a two-year term starting in January.

Others who filed Friday

include Democratic state Rep. Adam Wool and Emil Notti, a Democrat who narrowly lost the 1973 election to Young.

They join a field that had already included Republican Nick Begich, who previously announced plans to run for U.S. House last fall.

Begich, an early challenger to Young, said he sees the Matanuska-Susitna region, a hotbed of conservati­sm that includes Palin’s hometown of Wasilla, as one of his strongest areas of the state.

Begich said there are a “lot of opportunis­tic candidates, in our view, that have chosen to get in. I think that the entry of Gov. Palin is completely consistent with that sort of spirit of opportunis­m that we’re seeing right now.”

Meanwhile, a man who years ago legally changed his name to Santa Claus and serves on the North Pole city council also filed for the special primary. Claus, who said he has a “strong affinity” for Bernie Sanders, is running as an independen­t.

“I do have name recognitio­n,” he said with a laugh.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP ?? Then-vice presidenti­al candidate Sarah Palin speaks in 2015 in Washington. Palin has the biggest national profile in the packed field of candidates.
NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP Then-vice presidenti­al candidate Sarah Palin speaks in 2015 in Washington. Palin has the biggest national profile in the packed field of candidates.

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