
There’s an old adage, that evil triumphs when good men do nothing. But in modern politics, especially here in Alaska, evil often triumphs because incompetent men and women occupy the seats of public trust and do nothing well. The danger is not just what they fail to do, it’s what they enable by failing.
The Alaska Legislature is a perfect case study. Sixty elected officials, all sworn to uphold the Constitution and act in the public interest, preside over some of the most consequential decisions affecting our lives, from energy policy to education funding, health care, and beyond. Yet when we follow the money, by examining Alaska Public Offices Commission (APOC) reports, we find that many of these officials are financially tethered to special interests who routinely write the very bills these legislators sponsor.
This is not representation. This is outsourcing – moral, intellectual, and democratic outsourcing.
Instead of engaging deeply with the challenges facing their districts, our legislators are rubber-stamping prepackaged bills crafted by lobbyists, political action committees, national nonprofits, and public-sector unions. The legislative process becomes a theater of deliberation while the real decisions are made elsewhere – behind closed doors, at luncheons, or in carefully curated donor roundtables. Competence is neither required nor rewarded.
Incompetence may be forgivable in a rookie. But when that incompetence becomes a mask for power serving everything but the public good, it becomes something far darker.
This is not just laziness. It is a systemic betrayal. When you are elected to serve the people but act on behalf of those who funded your campaign, you are no longer simply incompetent. You are participating in a moral inversion. You are facilitating harm through negligence and cloaking it in the procedural rituals of democracy.
And the consequences are real. We get laws that expand bureaucracy rather than reduce it. We get educational mandates that serve unions, not students. We get Medicaid policies that reward monopolies, not patients. Most disturbing, we get a citizenry that begins to believe corruption is normal and competence is impossible.
Some will say this is just how politics works. But that’s a coward’s answer. It is precisely this mindset – the passive acceptance of systemic failure – that allows evil to metastasize in the body of government.
If we are to rescue Alaska from this descent, we must restore legislative sovereignty and competence. Every bill should come with a transparency tag disclosing its true authorship and affiliations. Campaign contributions must be viewable in real time as floor votes happen. Legislative leadership should be earned through demonstrated integrity and expertise, not partisan loyalty or donor clout. And perhaps most importantly, we must build local drafting capacity – allowing legislators and their constituents to shape laws rooted in lived experience, not distant ideology.
We cannot afford a legislature that governs by submission. Alaska is too vast, too rich in potential, and too vulnerable to waste another decade on political caretakers unwilling to think for themselves.
Incompetence may be forgivable in a rookie. But when that incompetence becomes a mask for power serving everything but the public good, it becomes something far darker.
It becomes evil.
If Alaska is to survive the next ten years with what spirit and sovereignty it still has intact, we must end this fusion of cowardice and capture.
A Decade of Evil Through Incompetence: Year-by-Year Breakdown
2015 – Walker’s Unilateral Medicaid Expansion: The legislature fails to stop a constitutionally questionable executive overreach. The long-term financial liability is silently transferred to future Alaskans, and Indian Health Service obligations are quietly absorbed into the state bureaucracy.
2016 – Education Budget Bloat: Lawmakers increase the Base Student Allocation with no performance accountability, while rural schools collapse under administrative weight. No structural reform is proposed or passed.
2017 – Oil and Gas Tax Credit Flip-Flop: Legislators cave to lobbyist pressures and reverse course on needed reforms, bleeding the treasury to subsidize corporate risk with no long-term strategy for reinvestment or ownership.
2018 – PFD Cuts Institutionalized: After the initial raid, the legislature fails to restore the statutory Permanent Fund Dividend, solidifying a precedent of using citizens’ money to fund government waste.
2019 – Criminal Justice Chaos: House Bill 49, rushed under public panic, replaces SB 91 without proper analysis or local input, increasing incarceration without solving root causes.
2020 – COVID Spending with No Oversight: Billions in CARES Act funds are disbursed with minimal legislative oversight. The legislature recesses rather than taking charge of the emergency budget process.
2021 – Federal Dependency Deepens: Lawmakers eagerly accept American Rescue Plan funds without considering the long-term regulatory strings, further tying Alaska’s sovereignty to Washington.
2022 – Education Industry Capture: Despite abysmal test scores, the legislature gives more money to a failing system without opening it to competition or performance-based reform. Unions write the talking points.
2023 – Ranked-Choice Voting and Voter Confusion: No serious effort is made to reform or repeal a voting system passed by a narrow margin and riddled with confusion. Legislators stay silent to avoid donor retaliation.
2024 – Statehood Undermined in Silence: Legislators fail to act meaningfully against federal land lockup, IHS delegation, or ESG regulatory creep—allowing Alaska’s autonomy to shrink year after year.
ALASKA WATCHMAN DIRECT TO YOUR INBOX
2025 – Aggressive Leftward Shift Without Accountability:
— Plans to expand the Base Student Allocation move forward without any performance metrics or student outcome requirements.
— Defined benefit pensions return, exposing future taxpayers to unsustainable financial obligations once abandoned for their risk.
— A suite of “progressive” election reforms – including softened recount procedures, synthetic media loopholes, and ambiguous definitions of “election interference” – are rushed through under the guise of modernization.
— Energy legislation championed by special interests threatens to raise home heating and utility costs, especially for working families in Alaska’s coldest regions.
— And once again, the statutory Permanent Fund Dividend is gutted, diverting wealth from individual Alaskans to a bloated government apparatus that refuses to shrink, reform, or justify its cost.
Conclusion
This is not just a list of legislative missteps. It is a chronology of dereliction. These failures weren’t inevitable; they were chosen. Or worse, they were tolerated.
If Alaska is to survive the next ten years with what spirit and sovereignty it still has intact, we must end this fusion of cowardice and capture. We must demand competence as a moral imperative, not just a political convenience.
Because evil doesn’t always arrive with malice. Sometimes, it walks dressed as indifference and makes itself at home.
The views expressed here are those of the author.
17 Comments
The legislature never does anything with a thought of their moral obligation for any resident of Alaska. Why would this session be any different?
she works approximately 20 hours every week. i can not accept as true with how easy it become as soon as i tried it out.
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Very well written!!!!
Remember a few years back when a representative was convicted of accepting bribes and sent to prison with a five year sentence?? Perhaps more looking into the guys in Juneau is needed. A thief is a thief. Enough is enough……! Of course, if the capitol was in Anchorage the guys “from Juneau” would be more hesitant to screw everyone over……..Seems as though getting themselves a substantial pay raise is easy enough to do.
I WISH THIS ARTICLE WERE READ FROM THE PULPIT THIS MORNING! VERY VERY WELL DONE!
I WANT MY MONEY YOU STOLE,,MY PFD ALL THE WAY BACK TO CROOKED WALKER…YOU ARE THE DEMOCRATS OF DC..DOGE ` DEPT. OF GOV. EFF IS NEEDED HERE…DO AWAY WITH THESE CROOKS!!!!
I am in agreement with you Dave, Michael T has it spot on ! Liberty Ed Martin
We can add going lock-stop with Dunleavy’s carbon sequestration scam.
Or violating their Oath of Office regarding SB 189 — the requirement of single-subject bills.
Or doing NOTHING regarding the constitutional overthrow by the judiciary over: abortion, vetoes, veto-overrides, privacy rights and grand jury rights. The supposedly true conservatives outside of the Democrat-led coalition were silent over all of this. Sure, any resolution or bill would have died, but so what? Show us you are willing to fight! But they did not because they are afraid of being “Eastmanized”. The true fear is not the liberal press. It is the ETHICS COMMITTEE, which can financially ruin those who rock the boat!
Move theses legislators to the road system. Some of the problems solved.
reat
cat
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Thank you for taking the time to sum up the chaos we are experiencing in our government. We would like to add a few items to this summation. (1)On two different occasions voters voted for the Juneau capital to be moved to the mainland so that we citizens, not just special interests and lobbyists could access our legislators. The legislature would not fund for it even though the voters expected it. (2) the corrupt judicial branch did not follow the original Constitution. The pro-life bills would have made it through the process. These judges were probably paid to block pro-lifers; these judges have been legislating from the bench instead of the Executive Braanch.. These judges allowed ballot measures to pass that had three or more subjects. 4) The Governor is the sheriff, not the corrupt judicial branch Dunleavy tried to cancel their funds but they just put them back. These judges allowed ranked choice to pass even tho’ there are still problems with its Constitutionality. (5) Soros foundation and others have dominated our politics and created the environment that caused the plan for a Constitutional convention to fail; (6) No legislator should be allowed to run for office unless they prove they can balance a checkbook, and understand the need to reduce our government.and (7) All of government workers need to understand that they work for us. We The PEOPLE are the bosses of the Executive, Legislative and Judiciary branches. ,(8) no Lt. Gov. has cleaned up the voter roles, yet they still get paid and want to move up in politics. Why are we rewarding failures?. They should be working for us, not us hoping and begging them to do the right thing. Keep praying for integrity and principles to return to our state government. Someone suggested we have a DOGE to clean house and create accountability.
The level of corruption and incompetence in Alaska is breathtaking.