The Green Papers: Alaska 2023 General Election |
Alaska
Elections for Statewide offices and Congress |
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Any voter may participate in the Alaska Democratic Party, Alaska Libertarian Party, and Alaskan Independence Party primary. All candidates, party members and independents, participate in a non-partisan Primary. The top four vote getters, regardless of party affiliation, advance to the General Election. The General Election uses an instant-runoff where voters rank their choices (for all offices including President). Should no candidate win a majority (50% + 1), the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. Voters who voted for the lowest vote-getter as their 1st choice have their votes redistributed to their 2nd choice. The process continues until one candidate receives a majority. 2024 PRIMARY ELECTION from the Alaska Division of Elections. |
U.S. Senate 6 year term. No Term Limit. 118th Senate Senate Electoral Classes | |||||
Class 2 | Republican | Senator Dan Sullivan First elected: 2014; re-elected: 2020. Seat up for regular election: Tuesday 3 November 2026 |
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Candidate list (1) | |||||
Republican | Senator Dan Sullivan FEC S4AK00214 |
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Class 3 | Republican | Senator Lisa Murkowski Appointed by Governor Frank H. Murkowski (Republican) on 20 December 2002, to fill vacancy left by the resignation of her father, the same Frank H. Murkowski, when he resigned to become Governor of the State on 2 December 2002. First elected: 2004; relected: 2010 (as a write-in), 2016, 2022. Seat up for regular election: Tuesday 7 November 2028 |
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Governor 4 year term, Election Cycle: 2022, 2026. Term Limit: 2 consecutive 4-year terms, All Governors | |||||
Republican | Governor Mike J. Dunleavy First elected: 2018; re-elected: 2022. Chair up for regular election: Tuesday 3 November 2026 The current Governor is affected by a term limit and cannot run for re-election. Open Chair |
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Lieutenant Governor 4 year term, Election Cycle: 2022, 2026. Elected on a ticket with (but nominated separately from) the Governor | |||||
Republican | Lieutenant Governor Nancy Dahlstrom First elected: 2022 Seat up for regular election: Tuesday 3 November 2026 14 November 2023: Candidate for the U.S. House in 2024. |
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118th U.S. House of Representatives 2-year term. Election Cycle 2024, 2026. No Term Limit. 118th House | |||||
Partisan Composition (primary disposition): 1 Democratic (1 Undetermined) | |||||
Incumbent - 118th Congress | |||||
At-Large | Democratic | Member of Congress Mary Sattler Peltola First elected: 16 August 2023 in a Special Election re: the passing of Member of Congress Donald E. "Don" Young (Republican); first elected: 2022. Seat up for regular election: Tuesday 5 November 2024 |
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Candidate list (5) - 119th Congress | |||||
Republican | Nicholas "Nick" Begich, III FEC H2AK01083; 30 Sep 23; Tot $265,792; Dsb $78,828 |
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Republican | Lieutenant Governor Nancy Dahlstrom FEC H4AK00156 |
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Nonpartisan | Lady Donna Dutchess | ||||
No Labels | Richard Grayson Resident of Arizona. Running for Alaska House At-Large (No Labels), Arizona US Senate (Death to No Labels), Arizona House CD 9 (Democratic), Idaho CD 2 (Democratic), North Dakota House At-Large (No Labels). |
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Democratic | Member of Congress Mary Sattler Peltola FEC H2AK01158; 30 Sep 23; Tot $1,776,156; Dsb $1,415,653 |
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12 September 2023: The husband of Member of Congress Mary Sattler Peltola (Democratic), Eugene "Buzzy" Peltola, Jr., was killed in a Piper PA 18-150 Super Cub plane crash in southwest Alaska, about 64 miles from St. Mary's. |
Political Parties Parties appear in parenthesis and italics when a candidate receives the endorsement of a given Party and/or official sources indicate a candidate's association with a particular Party but only where the Party in question does not appear on the actual ballot as such. |
Major Parties Those parties which received electoral votes through winning a plurality of a state's [or the District of Columbia's] popular vote in any presidential election between 1984 and 2016. See Classification of Political parties. | |
Democratic (affiliates): 1 incumbent, 1 candidate | |
Republican: 4 incumbents, 3 candidates | |
Other Third Parties | |
No Labels: 1 candidate | |
Independents | |
Nonpartisan: 1 candidate | |
Candidates running under the banner of more than one party are counted towards each party's total. A candidate who has lost a primary or is apparently no longer a candidate is not counted. |
Notes |
Candidates for office appear on this page in italics where 'The Green Papers' does not yet have independent confirmation from a legal election authority that the person has been officially certified to appear on the ballot. |
Primary dates marked "presumably" and polling times marked "reportedly" are based on unofficial or estimated data (especially as regards local variations from a jurisdictionwide statutory and/or regulatory standard) and are, thereby, subject to change. |
"FEC" indicates the Federal Election Commission (FEC) Campaign Finance Summary. When available, we post each candidate's FEC identification number, the date of their most recently filed Report of Receipts and Disbursements, their "Tot" [Total Receipts (contributions received or what came in: FEC Form 3, Line 16, Column B)] and their "Dsb" [Total Disbursements (expenditures or what was spent: FEC Form 3, Line 23, Column B)]. A link is provided to the Federal Election Commission's Summary Report for those who might wish to explore the details. If a candidate raises or spends $5,000 or less, he or she is not subject to FEC reporting requirements. |
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