By AlaskaWatchman.com

The strength of any political party is measured not by its words, but by its ability to act with discipline, integrity and purpose. Today, many Alaskans who identify with conservative values are asking a hard question: Why are those values not consistently reflected in governance? The answer lies not in the voters, but in the structure and function of the party itself. The Alaska Republican Party has reached a point where internal reform is no longer optional – it is necessary to restore trust, accountability and effective leadership.

Alaska Republicans don’t have a messaging problem anymore. They have an execution problem.

Over the last two years, the Alaska Republican Party (ARP) has made visible progress in one area: branding. The optics improved. The tone softened. The image stabilized after a period of internal turbulence. That was the easy part. What has not happened – and what is now costing Republicans control of this state – is the transition from branding to operational capability.

WE ARE LOSING WHERE IT MATTERS

Let’s be direct. The Alaska Legislature is no longer reliably Republican in function – even when Republicans are elected.

Republican candidates run on the party brand, receive its support, and then govern with Democrats once in office. There are no consequences for this behavior.

This is not ideological drift. This is organizational failure. When elected officials feel they can act with impunity, it is because the institution that supported them lacks enforcement mechanisms. The ARP has no real system to hold its own candidates accountable. No structured discipline. No operational leverage. And the results are visible.

ANCHORAGE WAS THE WARNING SHOT

The loss of Anchorage, the state’s largest population center, was not an isolated event. It was a strategic failure. Control shifted to leadership that is now advancing expanded government spending, increased tax burdens, growth of bureaucratic programs and NGO influence, and policies that risk worsening homelessness rather than solving it

You don’t have to agree with every policy outcome to recognize the pattern: when Republicans fail to organize, Democrats fill the vacuum.

RANKED CHOICE VOTING ISN’T THE ROOT PROBLEM

Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) is often blamed, and it is a factor. But RCV did not weaken the Republican Party’s internal structure. The harder truth is this: A strong, disciplined, operational party can compete under any election system. Right now, the ARP is not that party.

REBRANDING WITHOUT STRUCTURE IS AN ILLUSION

The current leadership inherited a difficult situation and stabilized the party’s image. That matters. But stabilization without organizational doctrine, operational systems, and an accountability framework is not victory.

Rebranding becomes a cosmetic fix on a structural failure. The party today still operates largely on a single governing document: its rules. Rules define structure – but they do not create capability.

WHAT AN OPERATIONAL PARTY ACTUALLY REQUIRES

If the Alaska Republican Party intends to compete and win, it must evolve into a functioning political organization, not just a political identity. This will require building and institutionalization:

Operational Doctrine: A clear framework for how the party executes campaigns, messaging, and political strategy statewide.

Candidate Management System: Vetting, performance expectations, accountability standards, and consequences for deviation.

Communications & Message Control: Coordinated, disciplined messaging supported by research, not fragmented individual efforts.

Training & Leadership Development: Preparing candidates and party leaders to operate effectively – not learning on the fly.

Financial Management & Resource Allocation: Strategic investment in infrastructure and messaging, not reactive spending.

Data & Technology Infrastructure: Voter data, analytics, and targeting systems that actually inform decisions.

Legal, Ethics, and Compliance Frameworks: Protecting the party while enabling decisive action.

Right now, these systems are either weak, fragmented, or nonexistent.

THE REAL BATTLEFIELD: INTERNAL DYSFUNCTION

The most dangerous threat to the Alaska Republican Party is not the Democratic Party. It is internal politics within the party itself. Factionalism. Lack of delegation. Poor communication. No accountability. No transparency. A party consumed by internal conflict cannot execute externally. Silence is a measurement of conflict. Without operational discipline, internal friction becomes organizational paralysis.

DELEGATES HOLD THE LINE IN MAY

The May 7-9 ARP Convention is not routine. It is a decision point. Delegates must decide whether the party continues as a rebranded but ineffective organization or transitions into an operational, disciplined political force. This is not about personalities. It is about capability. Leadership must be evaluated on ability to execute, willingness to enforce standards, and capacity to build systems – not just deliver speeches and show yourself everywhere. If change in leadership is required to achieve that, then so be it.

STOP COMPLAINING. START OPERATING

There is a culture problem that must also be addressed. Too many within the party recognize the problems, but default to frustration instead of action. As the saying goes: “Complaining is like sitting in a rocking chair; you feel like you’re doing something, but you’re not going anywhere.” If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude. Don’t complain. Complaining consumes energy. Action produces results. Real progress requires ownership, accountability, and execution.

A FINAL REALITY CHECK

The Democratic Party has a long-term strategy to expand influence across the West Coast: California, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii. Alaska is not immune. If Republicans fail to act, Alaska will follow – not because of ideology alone, but because one side is organized and the other is not.

THE PATH FORWARD

The Alaska Republican Party does not need more slogans. We need structure, discipline, systems, and leadership willing to operate, not just represent. This is the moment to move from branding to operational reality. If that transition does not happen now, there may not be another opportunity to make it.

The views expressed here are those of the author.

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OPINION: Alaska failing GOP must pivot from cosmetic branding to structured discipline

Paul Bauer
The author is Alaska Republican Party chairman for District 20 in Anchorage. He has run several campaigns for local office and served one term on the Anchorage Assembly (2005-08). He is 36 year Alaska resident and military retiree who is currently seeking to be a Lieutenant Governor running mate and Vice Chair of the Alaska Republican Party.


17 Comments

  • Michael Tavoliero says:

    Leadership from the front is essential to GOP survival in Alaska. A Republican gubernatorial field of 12 or more is not a sign of strength. It is a sign of disorder. While the left fights to hold legislative power, Republicans are wasting time, money, and voter attention on an overcrowded primary that weakens everyone involved. A wiser group (can that really exist) would have chosen its strongest candidate, a champion, early, united behind that person, and focused the rest of its money and energy on winning State House and State Senate seats. That is where governing power is secured. A governor without a legislative majority is often reduced to vetoes, speeches, and stalemate. The real mistake is not just too many candidates. It is confusing competition with strategy. Republicans do not need a parade of egos. They need one candidate for governor and a disciplined campaign to win the Legislature. A party that cannot govern itself before the primary will not govern Alaska after the election.

  • Proud Alaskan says:

    No it’s the Conservative voters who don’t inform themself and get out to vote. And yes these,
    loser republicans who don’t have a back bone, that side with the left.

  • Tina says:

    Please do not waste your energy running for lt Governor. It’s vanity for you and waste of your time.
    I’m not sure if you be all that good at if you were chair if AkGOP since you are sitting next to the current chairwoman whose leadership is the failure you presented here. It’s awkward of you to be writing this piece that goes against her leadership as Chair instead of telling her face to face.
    Either personalities as Michael Tavoliero or fmr lance pruitt be better as vice chairs or chair

  • McKinley formerly Denali says:

    How about they work on getting the voters to get out and vote. Ak’s voters turn out is dismal, look at the mess they have let Anchorage turn into

  • Elizabeth Henry says:

    Good over view of the problem and what needs to be done. What do we do also with the lazy apathetic voters? Voting is an important civic responsibility yet so few get off the sofa to fulfill that important duty.

  • Jon says:

    The GOP is dying everywhere under Trump. People are turning away from his bullying, war mongering and lies. Good luck in AK.

    • John H Slone says:

      Keep your comments and yourself in California where you and your TDS buddied can vote for Newsom!!

  • Dave Maxwell says:

    I’m not complaining anymore I’m quitting!

  • Proud Alaskan says:

    No it’s the Conservative voters who don’t inform themself and get out to vote. And yes these, loser republicans who don’t have a back bone, that side with the left.

  • Casey says:

    There are tools within the Party Rules, Art 7 & 6, to deal with the traitors in Juneau who caucus with the Democrats.

  • judy says:

    It is interesting that people like Paul want to criticize the party leadership. He has been a district chair for a long time and I would like to know what he has done to help elect someone in his district for any office. It is so easy to sit at your desk and criticize someone working every day to better this party. It is also delusional to think the Party Chair has the power to tell someone not to run for an office. I know for a fact we all try to get people out of a race and it is very difficult. We lost the hillside assembly seats because one woman’s ego would not let her step down for a stronger candidate. As I stated, Paul, how much money have you raised in your district or effort to ensure a Republican serves in your district?

  • J. Daniel says:

    None of you are conservative. You are MAGA. Big difference. Republicans lose because you are lame. Last democratic president to start a war? Last president to balance the budget? Republicans are why there is no longer antitrust enforcement, leading to the wealth and power consolidation we see today. Biggest Medicare fraud? Rick Scott republican. Republicans are delusional. Republicans spit state sponsored propaganda continually, making it hard to take any of you seriously. You are all programmed by Fox News. SOFT!!! Find a way to fix real problems because “male n Balets” is not something that needs to be corrected. You need to hate and judge less, come up with proposals that don’t fill your pockets at the expense of our youth. You have been conned. They used guns, religion and gay hate to get you vote away the things that actually make your life better. And if the MVP of the Epstein files, the orange stain, has not make you see the light, don’t know what to tell you other than enjoy all the winning!

  • Jon and Ruth Ewig says:

    Many are missing the elephant in the room. 10 years ago WE THE VOTERS voted to move the legislature to the mainland and plans were made to use to Willow. Why was the will of voters unregarded? The unelected union leaders run the legislature and governorship. The Courts are legislating from the Bench. We the People do not have access to these branches of government. Then, Murkowski comes to the legislature, another unelected “leader lacking integrity and a need to cheat to retain her unelected Senate seat. Where is the character, honor and truthfulness in these role models? Many of the candidates who won go down to the island and vote according to the biggest bully and hide under their desks so we do not see their betrayal. They do not want to do the right thing. Like social justice warriors, they just do not want to have accountability or consequences. These are crooks and liars in public office who want the control as per the union expectations (NEA in leadership.) The solution is to admit their wrongdoing and a change of heart to help Alaskans – not to steal us blind without accountability each session. Legislators need humility, not pride and arrogance.