The Guardian (USA)

Mary Peltola, first Alaska Native in Congress, wins bid to retain seat

- Maanvi Singh

Mary Peltola, a Democrat and the first Alaska Native to serve in Congress, has won her bid to retain the state’s sole seat in the House of Representa­tives.

Peltola made history when she won a special election this summer to replace the Republican Don Young after his death. She is also the first woman to represent Alaska in the House of Representa­tives since it became a state in 1959.

Peltola served out the remainder of Young’s term before facing a rematch with her previous challenger­s, Republican­s Sarah Palin and Nick Begich III and Libertaria­n Chris Bye, for a full congressio­nal term.

On Wednesday, she once again prevailed in Alaska’s newly adopted ranked-choice voting system.

“Now, I’m a real congressma­n for all Alaska,” she said. Young often referred to himself that way. Peltola has described his legacy as one of bipartisan­ship and building support for Alaskan interests in Congress.

Campaignin­g as a moderate who is willing to work with candidates from both parties, Peltola ran on a “profish, pro-family, pro-freedom” platform. After taking office, she hired Young’s former chief of staff – a lifelong Republican – to run her office.

“I want to work with everyone and anyone who is a reasonable person to find solutions to Alaska’s challenges,” she told the Guardian in August.

Having been sworn into Congress just two months ago, Peltola has maintained a “pro-fish, pro-family and pro

freedom” platform – vowing to address the climate emergency and other threats to Alaskan fisheries and protect access to abortions. Though she retains the support of environmen­tal and Native groups across her home state, she has raised controvers­y among supporters by backing one of the largest proposed onshore oil and gas developmen­ts in the US, on Alaska’s North Slope.

She has said she seeks to balance the economic realities in Alaska – which is enmeshed with the oil and gas industry – with the need to address the climate crisis, including in Alaska’s vulnerable Arctic regions.

Her second victory speaks not only to her broad appeal across party lines, but also to Alaskans’ skepticism of Palin – whose popularity in her home state plummeted after she stepped down from her post as governor following an unsuccessf­ul vice-presidenti­al bid. Known for her relentless affability, Peltola ran a largely positive campaign and had attracted praise from Alaska Republican­s, including Palin.

The two overlapped in Alaska’s capitol, when Peltola was a legislator and Palin the governor. “Doggone it, I never have anything, like, to gripe about,” Palin said of Peltola at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention in late October.

Palin and Begich III, the two Republican­s, were often at odds throughout the campaign season, even as they encouraged each other’s supporters to rank them as a second choice, so as to guarantee a Republican in Congress.

In Alaska’s ranked-choice voting system, voters were asked to choose among candidates in their order of preference. If one candidate wins more than 50% of first-choice votes, they win.

If not, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their votes are reallocate­d among the remaining candidates until someone wins. The system is similar to ranked-choice voting used in some other US jurisdicti­ons.

Peltola won the election with 54.94% of the vote in the third round of ballot-counting, after two other candidates, Begich III and Bye, were eliminated and their supporters’ votes were reallocate­d to the remaining candidates, according to the Alaska Division of Elections. Peltola had won nearly 49% of the vote in the first round, putting her close to victory from the beginning. Even though only about 10% of the eliminated Republican candidates’ supporters ranked Peltola as their next choice, rather than Palin, it was enough to secure her win.

• This article and subheading was amended on 24 November 2022. Mary Peltola is the first woman to represent Alaska in the House of Representa­tives, but not the first woman to represent the state in Congress. Lisa Murkowski has served as a senator since 2002.

 ?? ?? Mary Peltola gives the keynote address at the Alaska Federation of Natives conference on 20 October 2022. Photograph: Mark Thiessen/AP
Mary Peltola gives the keynote address at the Alaska Federation of Natives conference on 20 October 2022. Photograph: Mark Thiessen/AP

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