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Read previewThe US does not have enough icebreaker ships to compete in the Arctic the way Russia can with its much larger fleet, a US military commander warned. Russia has deployed nuclear-powered icebreakers called Arktika and Sibir, which have been characterized as the largest and strongest icebreaker ships in the world. "We need to make sure that we are trying to close a very very significant icebreaker gap, Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan said at the time. For more than 20 years, the Coast Guard has been asking for funds for the Arctic, but those requests have been deferred, US Coast Guard Vice Admiral Peter W. Gautier said last year. AdvertisementWith growing threats in this region, the US military has been increasingly looking at Arctic training.
Persons: , Gregory M, Guillot, Maine Sen, Angus King, Alaska Sen, Dan Sullivan, Peter W, Gautier Organizations: Service, US Air Force, Northern Command, North American Aerospace Defense Command, Business, Coast Guard, Services, USCGC Polar Star, US Coast Guard, US Navy, Army Locations: Russia, Maine, Sibir, Alaska, China
Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Days ahead of the Super Tuesday presidential primaries, former South Carolina governor and Republican candidate Nikki Haley said in an interview Sunday she will continue in the race for the GOP nomination as long as she remains competitive. "As long as we are competitive, as long as we are showing that there is a place for us, I'm going to continue to fight," Haley said. After primary losses in Iowa, South Carolina and New Hampshire, Haley trails Trump in delegates with just 27 to his 247 so far. However, Haley said those primaries only partially represent who Americans will vote for on Super Tuesday.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Michael Haley, NBC's, Haley, Donald Trump, Alaska Sen, Lisa Murkowski, Murkowski, Trump, Biden Organizations: U.S, United, South Carolina National Guard, Clemson University, Greenville ONE, Republican, Super, Press, Trump, NBC, Republican National Committee, GOP Locations: Greenville , South Carolina, U.S, Carolina, Iowa , South Carolina, New Hampshire, Alaska
CNN —An Alaska man was arrested on Monday after allegedly sending a threatening message to a US senator, writing that he planned to hunt down and physically harm the senator, according to court documents. Arther Charles Graham is charged with making interstate threats to kidnap and injure a current US senator, according to a statement from the Department of Justice. Court documents do not identify the senator, only referring to “she” and “her.” Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski is the only current female Alaska senator. Graham wrote that he was facing eviction and said that he had “nowhere else to live,” according to court documents. US Capitol Police are investigating with the FBI Anchorage Field Office, Kenai Police Department and Alaska State Troopers, according to the Justice Department.
Persons: Arther Charles Graham, Republican Sen, Lisa Murkowski, Graham, Graham “ Organizations: CNN, Department of Justice, Congressional, US Capitol Police, Republican, FBI, U.S . Capitol Police, Justice Department, Office, Kenai Police Department, Alaska State Troopers Locations: An Alaska, Washington, DC, Alaska, FBI Anchorage
Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska has some thoughts about Mitt Romney's salmon preparation. Murkowski wrote on Twitter with a highlighted screenshot of an excerpt from the senator's forthcoming biography. Lisa Murkowski (@lisamurkowski) September 14, 2023In the book, journalist McKay Coppins recounts how Romney eats dinner alone most nights in his Washington home. I love hot dog," Romney gushed in July on National Hot Dog Day. AdvertisementAdvertisementIn the video, Romney was wielding a hot dog with a healthy amount of ketchup.
Persons: Sen, Lisa Murkowski, Murkowski, Romney, Republican dealmaker, Mitt Romney, — Sen, McKay Coppins, Coppins, Donald Trump, Trump, Romney gushed Organizations: Twitter, Republican, Service, @SenatorRomney, Utah Republican, Republican Party Locations: Alaska, Wall, Silicon, Sen, Washington, Utah, Romney
House Republicans have begun to make January 6 security camera footage publicly available. I watched as lawmakers fled for safety — and banded together — while rioters besieged the Capitol. AdvertisementAdvertisementRoger Stone in front of the O’Neill House Office Building, where the January 6 security camera footage can be viewed, in December 2021. Upstairs, I focused on a lone security camera in front of the House chamber. On another security camera in Longworth House Office Building, I watched lawmakers of both parties gathering near the secure location where they sheltered for the duration of the riot.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Tucker Carlson, Roger Stone, Anna Moneymaker, I'd, , Cori Bush, Bush, Steny Hoyer —, Madison Cawthorn, Eric Swalwell, Mike Pence —, Pence, Republican Sen, John Boozman, Democratic Sen, Dianne Feinstein, Lisa Murkowski, Dan Sullivan, Kevin Cramer, Sen, Jim Inhofe, Sheldon Whitehouse, Ashli Babbitt, there's, Barry Loudermilk Organizations: Republicans, Capitol, Service, House Republicans, Fox News, Administration, O'Neill, US Capitol Police, United States Capitol Police, Cannon House, Democratic, Rayburn House, Lawmakers, Republican, Democrat, Capitol Police, Republican Rep Locations: Wall, Silicon, O’Neill, Hart, Hart , Alaska Sens
Interior Department on Wednesday said it would cancel oil and gas leases in a federal wildlife refuge that were bought by an Alaska state development agency in the final days of former President Donald Trump's administration. Environmentalists and an Alaska indigenous group praised the move while a Republican Senator from Alaska slammed it. A Republican-passed tax bill in 2017 opened the area to oil and gas leasing and directed Interior to hold two lease sales by December 2024. The oil and gas industry largely failed to embrace the 2021 lease sale, which generated just $14 million in high bids, mostly from AIDEA. “We commend Secretary Haaland for canceling unlawfully issued oil-and-gas leases in the Arctic Refuge,” Abigail Dillen, president of environmental group Earthjustice, said in a statement.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Joe Biden, Biden, Deb Haaland, AIDEA, , ” Abigail Dillen, Dan Sullivan, Interior's, Jarrett Renshaw, Nichola Groom, Chizu Nomiyama, David Gregorio, Mark Porter Organizations: U.S . Fish, Wildlife Service, Library, Fish, REUTERS, Conocophillips, U.S . Interior Department, Alaska Industrial Development, Export Authority, Wildlife, Democrat, National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska Natives, Trump, ConocoPhillips, United Nations, ALASKA Trump's Interior Department, Republican, Biden, Thomson Locations: Beaufort, Wildlife Service Alaska, U.S, Alaska, United States, ALASKA Trump's, ANWR, Washington, Los Angeles
Sinema’s interests are no longer necessarily the Democrats’ best interests in the next Congress, and the 2024 Senate map became even more complicated for Democrats with Sinema’s decision. The Democrats who run against independent Sen. Angus King in Maine have not gained traction in recent elections. Having two people in the race who are going to caucus with the Democratic Party likely makes it more difficult for the Democrats to win. All that said, the Democrats already have a difficult map heading into 2024. With Sinema’s break from the Democratic party, the road is, if nothing else, curvier for Democrats.
Trump is calling allies and encouraging them to blame McConnell for the GOP's midterm results, CNN said. Trump has criticized McConnell for spending too much on Alaska while neglecting other competitive races. Trump is rallying opposition to McConnell ahead of leadership elections next week. "He isn't making explicit asks, but he wants to see more Republicans holding Mitch accountable," a person close to Trump told the outlet. If elected as leader for another two years, McConnell will become the longest-serving Senate party leader in US history.
The Alaska Senate race is headed to a ranked choice runoff, as no candidate on the ballot, including the top two vote-getters, GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski and GOP challenger Kelly Tshibaka, will reach 50%, according to NBC News. In ranked-choice elections, voters identify first choices on their ballots, then rank the other candidates in order of preference. If no candidate receives a majority of first-choice votes on the first count, the election moves to an instant runoff. In 2020, Alaska voters approved a move to nonpartisan primaries that send the top four vote-getters to ranked choice general elections. ET): A previous version of this article misstated when Alaska voters approved a move to nonpartisan primaries and ranked choice general elections.
A Republican is going to win the Alaska Senate race, but that hasn’t stopped Mitch McConnell from plowing millions of dollars into the deep-red state. Herschel Walker, the Senate candidate in Georgia backed by both Trump and McConnell, also says he would back McConnell. Apart from Tshibaka, Senate Republican candidate Don Bolduc in New Hampshire has said he would vote against McConnell for leader. (The Republican senator who requested anonymity voiced surprise at McConnell’s prediction and thought it betrayed some nervousness on his part. Although he voted to acquit Trump, McConnell called him “practically and morally responsible” for the assault on the Capitol.
NOME, Alaska—To former President Donald Trump, Sen. Lisa Murkowski is a turncoat RINO—“Republican in Name Only”—who so infuriated him that he vowed to campaign for anyone with a pulse who could defeat her. To the mayor of Nome, John Handeland, Ms. Murkowski is a powerful ally in Washington with the pull to funnel $250 million in federal funds for an expansion of his city’s port, 200 miles south of the Arctic Circle. The long-sought project will make Nome home to the remote region’s lone deep-draft port and enable it to shelter ships during fierce storms such as one earlier this month.
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