A few words from Alaska 
 with permission from the author:
 
Winds of Change in Alaska - and Sarah Palin's questionable political future....
 
As the election campaign has dwindled down to its end, political writers and 
news reports have been focusing on the future of Sarah Palin. Is she 
considering a presidential bid for 2012? Is she the new star of the Republican 
Party? What can she make of her place in the national spotlight? Is she 
distancing herself from John McCain in the event of a loss at the polls? All 
these questionsleft aside one very important fact. If Sarah Palin returns to 
govern Alaska, how successful will she be in the remainder of her term and how 
will that effect her political future? Most sories have shown and ignorance of 
Alaska and omitted any real information about our issues. In the media, Palin 
was ridiculed in ways that were insulting to many of us - such as being made 
fun of for knowing how to field dress a moose, or praised in ways that 
oversimplified the role she has played as Alaska's governor. Now pundits have 
failed to notice that while Palin has been campaigning,
 Alaska has been experiencing notable shifts.
 
Much has been made of Palin's popularity in Alaska, but is she as popular as a 
vice presidential candidate? In Anchorage, between September 13th and October 
4th, three events; the Anti-Palin protest, the Alaskans for Truth protest, and 
the Obama rally, were all attended by unusually large crowds by Alaska 
standards. When Palin came back for a visit in September, her send-off rally 
was attended by 800 to 1,000 people. Later the same day an anti-Palin rally, 
subtitled "Sarah Palin Doesn't Speak for Me" organized by a few local women was 
attended by 1,200 to 1,500 protestors. This event inspired Alaskans for Truth, 
a group angry about the interference of McCain campaign staffers in the state's 
investigation of 'Troopergate'. Their protest brought together crowd of at 
least 1,300 people. The next weekend the Anchorage Obama office sponsored an 
Obama rally outdoors in the chilly autumn air. The rally lasted for three hours 
and was attended by close to 3,000
 people. Rally attenders wrote 1,700 postcards to voters across the country 
asking them to vote for Obama. At the same time, a McCain/Palin rally held 
indoors in the city's biggest and newest facility was attended by 300 (that's 
right, three hundred) people. On October 25th a local woman organized a 
'surprise event' for Obama that involved 400 people wearing colored ponchos 
lining up to create an American flag and then an Obama logo. The resulting 
video is now up on YouTube. As a consequence of all this activity, it would 
appear that many like-minded people in the traditionally Republican state of 
Alaska have found each other, and are having lots of fun in the process. It 
remains to be seen how this newly energized connections will effect Alaska's 
politics. On the day Palin's name was announced, the Obama office had a run on 
yard signs and a small flood of new volunteers and though McCain is expected to 
carry Alaska, his poll numbers are considerably
 lower than Bush's were in the last two presidential elections. 
 
Secondly, there is the overall impact of her behavior on the campaign trail. 
As the reports of the tone and content of Palin's comments and speeches have 
come back to Alaska, Palin has alienated former supporters. Many Alaskans that 
were happy with her as a governor are uncomfortable with her campaign rhetoric. 
And in the state legislature, where Palin has had support in the past from both 
sides of the aisle, her partisan attacks have damaged established relationships 
that helped her attain the goals of her administration. On a lighter, but still 
troubling note, Alaskans are wondering who that strange woman is that is 
speaking across the country. Where did that accent come from, anyway? Those of 
us that have heard Sarah Palin speak through the local media are puzzled by the 
winks, the 'you betchas', and other linguistic oddities. Previous to her 
performances on the McCain campaign, Sarah Palin was capable of speaking in 
coherent sentences. 
 
Many of her quotes in the national media are fraught with disconnected phrases 
strung together in an almost incomprehensible fashion. If this is a Republican 
strategy for communication with the masses, it isn't communicating well with a 
number of Alaskans.
 
The change that is most significant and tragic is presently taking place in 
rural Alaska. A sudden and unprecedented migration of Alaska Natives is taking 
place as village residents are moving out of their traditional homes and into 
the cities. The villages have sky-high energy costs, problems with limited 
public safety services and few economic opportunities. The Alaska Federation of 
Natives (AFN), the Mayor of Anchorage and the Superintendent of Anchorage 
schools have all appealed to the Palin administration to take immediate steps 
to help rural villages, to no avail. 
 
She has formed a rural subcabinet, but the Mayor and AFN have voiced strong 
displeasure with the governor's response. The Anchorage School District has 
added more than 400 students to its enrollment and hired over 30 more staff 
members to meet the increased need. Other concerns are affordable housing, 
services and employment to name just a few. Some believe that Palin's energy 
rebate, along with a larger than usual PFD payment (the annual payout to all 
Alaska residents, funded by investments from oil profits) prompted the 
out-migration by providing funds for families to move, while doing nothing to 
address the long-term concerns about energy costs in the rural communities. The 
mayor, the superintendent of schools and AFN are all concerned that the 
migration is a death knell to the goals of vibrant village communities and 
cultural preservation. In the midst of the crisis in the villages, Palin's 
Rural Advisor resigned, effective in late October, saying
 that an Alaska Native, someone who has actual personal experience with rural 
Alaska, should hold her position.
 
The Rural Advisor's departure brings us to another issue that has been 
highlighted by Palin's move to the national stage. The Alaska Native and the 
African-American communities both have had issues with Palin's unresponsiveness 
to requests of adequate minority representation oin her administration. She has 
appointed markedly fewer minorities to commissions and other posts than 
previous administrations. Alaska Native organizations have made some headway on 
this front, relying on their statewide organization and political clout. 
 
If the limited number of minority appointees is not a direct sign of 
discriminiation, it is certainly consistent with an overall pattern of 
non-responsiveness. John Cyr, Executive Director of Public Safety Employees 
Association stated that when he tried repeatedly to meet with the governor 
about budget cuts that affected, among other things, public safety in the 
villages, he was ignored. A recent press release about high school students 
researching the possible impacts of a proposed mining project close to their 
home, states "On September 17, 2007, a letter was sent to Gov. Palin inquiring 
what she planned to do about uranium mining at Boulder Creek which is located 
north of their community. She has yet to respond to this letter." The phrase, 
'she has yet to respond' seems to be a consistent refrain, even before the 
governor went on the road with the Straight Talk Express.
 
And last, but not least - we are looking at big changes in the political 
landscape. Alaska's one House seat and one of the Senate seats are being hotly 
contested. It is almost certain that the Democrats will succeed against one or 
both of the old-guard Republicans who have held these offices for decades. In 
the race for the House seat, Ethan Berkowitz is ahead in the polls against 
Representative Don Young. Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich is in a close race with 
Senator Ted Stevens and has gained significantly in the polls since Stevens was 
found guilty of not reporting gifts in his highly publicized trial. Palin's 
call for Steven's resignation may play well nationally, but in Alaska it shows 
a lack of respect for an elder statesman who still has many friends in the 
state. Most of these friends are among the folks most prone to agree with Palin 
on other issues. Stevens is still fighting for his office and plans to appeal. 
The Alaska GOP is holding steady in
 its support for Stevens in his bid for reelection, indicating an increasingly 
fractured relationship between Palin and other Alaska Republicans. 
 
Add to all these factors the still unresolved ethics questions that have 
surfaced in Palin's administration before and after her rise to national 
prominence and her promising future doesn't seem all that certain. All in all, 
when Alaska is taken into account, there are more questions than answers. 
Before the rest of the country gets to decide, this great big state, with its 
tiny population, may have the final say after all.
 
To top off some unexpected developments, the local newspaper, the Anchorage 
Daily News endorsed Obama and a few days later, with great reverence to 
Stevens' years of service and contributions to Alaska, they broke from 
tradition and endorsed Democrat Mark Begich for Senate. So far, they are 
holding off on an endorsement for the House. 

Neva Reece
 
Writing from Alaska 
http://freerangewriting.blogspot.com 

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