U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola has been elected to a full term in the House, months after the Alaska Democrat won a special election to the seat following the death earlier this year of longtime Republican Rep. Don Young.
Peltola defeated Republicans Sarah Palin and Nick Begich, as well as Libertarian Chris Bye in the Nov. 8 election. Results of the ranked choice election were announced Wednesday. Palin and Begich also were candidates in the special election.
“It’s a two-year contract,” Peltola told the Anchorage Daily News after her victory — a 55%-45% margin over Palin in the final tabulation round — was announced. “I will be happy to work for Alaskans again, as long as they’ll have me.”
Peltola, who is Yup’ik, with her win in August became the first Alaska Native to serve in Congress and the first woman to hold Alaska’s House seat. The win also buoyed her fundraising, outpacing those of her rivals in the lead-up to this month’s election.
Messages were sent to Palin’s campaign Wednesday.
Begich congratulated Peltola in a statement, adding:
“Our nation faces a number of challenges in the coming years, and our representatives will need wisdom and discernment as they work to put America on a more sound path. My message to Alaskans is to continue to be involved and engaged.”
Peltola embraced Young’s legacy as she sought the two-year term and was endorsed by his daughters, one of whom presented her with a bolo tie of Young’s at an Alaska Federation of Natives conference where Peltola was treated like a rock star. Young held the seat for 49 years.
“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 Alaska interests in Congress.
Peltola was a state lawmaker from the small rural hub community of Bethel for 10 years, ending in 2009. She surprised many with her fourth place finish in the June special primary, in which she emerged from a field of 48 candidates that included current state and local officeholders. That finish was enough to send her to the special election.
During the campaign, she cast herself as a coalition builder, emphasized a desire for more civility in politics and sought to stay out of the sniping between Palin and Begich. Peltola, who most recently worked for a commission whose goal is to rebuild salmon in Alaska’s Kuskokwim River, raised concerns with ocean productivity and cited a need to preserve struggling fisheries.
She also stressed her support of abortion rights.
During a speech in October, she talked about the need for unity and lamented what she said have become pervasive messages in politics “about hate and fear and self-pity. And yes, those resonate, those are compelling motivators. But they’re destructive, they’re acidic, they tear us down.”
She said her priorities for the new term included committee assignments and
“working very hard on getting our inflation rates down, our shipping costs down, getting costs down for working families and all Alaskan households.”
Who is Mary Peltola, the Democrat congresswoman who defeated Sarah Palin in Alaska?
Mary Peltola has reaffirmed her place as Alaska’s sole representative to the House of Representatives by overcoming Republican veteran Sarah Palin for the second time in three months.
Peltola, 49, is of Yup’ik descent on her mother’s side. She entered politics in 1999 started a ten-year stint as a Democratic legislator in the Alaska House of Representatives. She has a reputation for working across the aisle, almost an inevitability for a Democrat lawmaker in the state due to it normally being a Republican centre. She and Palin became friends when serving together at the Statehouse.
Peltola ran on a “pro-fish, pro-family, pro-freedom” platform. After taking office, she hired from Rep. Don Young’s former chief of staff, a 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.
She ran an upbeat campaign speaking about progressive issues like support for abortion rights by enshrining them in law and putting in place some gun control measures such as universal background checks. When it comes to developing the state’s vast resources, Peltola sees balancing it with preserving the environment and ensuring access to local communities.
Peltola won the election with 54.94% of the vote in the third round of ballot-counting, after two other candidates, Nick Begich III and Libertarian Chris Bye, were eliminated earlier in the process.
What were the other results in the Alaskan elections?
Senator Lisa Murkowski, the incumbent moderate Republican Congresswoman, has also won re-election. Murkowski was facing a challenge from Trump-backed Kelly Tshibaka. Murkowski is somewhat of an old-school GOP politician in that she rejects a lot of the beliefs of the Trumpian-wing of the party. She voted to confirm Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson in April, one of only three Republicans to do so, as well as voted to impeach the former president.