{"id":37259,"date":"2018-10-21T15:20:00","date_gmt":"2018-10-21T23:20:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/galvin-campaign-comes-to-juneau-on-eve-of-early-voting\/"},"modified":"2018-10-21T15:20:00","modified_gmt":"2018-10-21T23:20:00","slug":"galvin-campaign-comes-to-juneau-on-eve-of-early-voting","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/galvin-campaign-comes-to-juneau-on-eve-of-early-voting\/","title":{"rendered":"Galvin campaign comes to Juneau on eve of early voting"},"content":{"rendered":"
Before the start of her town hall meeting, Alyse Galvin led her audience in a team-building exercise.<\/p>\n
“I’m going to need everyone to move about a foot forward,” she said, encouraging attendees to make space for more chairs in Centennial Hall’s Hammond Room.<\/p>\n
“What a great problem to have,” she said. <\/p>\n
About 80 people gathered Sunday to listen as the independent candidate answered questions from Juneauites and explained her attitudes toward health care, the environment and education, among other topics.<\/p>\n
Galvin arrived in Juneau for a one-day campaign swing on the eve of early voting, which begins Monday. Galvin is attempting to unseat incumbent Republican Rep. Don Young, who has been in office since 1973 and has earned the title “Dean of the House” for being the longest-serving currently active member of the House of Representatives.<\/p>\n
Polls indicate Young is favored to win re-election<\/a>, but those same polls also show a tightening race between Young and a woman who was eight years old when he was first elected to Congress. In the latest Alaska Survey Research poll<\/a>, which had a four-point margin of error, Galvin trailed Young by just two points among likely voters. Galvin raised more money than Young<\/a> during the most recent Federal Election Commission reporting period, a measure of grassroots support.<\/p>\n “When I said we could be making history here, you know I wasn’t kidding,” Galvin told the audience after referring to her polling.<\/p>\n Attendees were asked to write their questions on slips of paper, which were read by a campaign volunteer.<\/p>\n Asked about her health care plans, Galvin discussed the need for access to cheaper medications. She said she supports allowing the federal government to negotiate prices with drug companies and said she supports allowing Americans to buy drugs where they are cheaper, such as in Canada or the European Union.<\/p>\n Galvin criticized Young for his actions to repeal the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.<\/p>\n “ACA has been peeled apart. In fact, our current representative voted to take away health care, particularly for pre-existing conditions, 56 times, without any sense of what to replace it with,” she said.<\/p>\n