{"id":38481,"date":"2018-11-13T15:07:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-14T00:07:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/democrats-now-lead-in-critical-fairbanks-races\/"},"modified":"2018-11-14T12:34:30","modified_gmt":"2018-11-14T21:34:30","slug":"democrats-now-lead-in-critical-fairbanks-races","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/democrats-now-lead-in-critical-fairbanks-races\/","title":{"rendered":"Democrats now lead in critical Fairbanks races"},"content":{"rendered":"
Correction: The previous version of this article included a reference to Kathryn Dodge when it should have referred to Bart LeBon in possible electoral outcomes. That error has been corrected.<\/em><\/p>\n Democratic candidates lead two Fairbanks elections considered key for control of the Alaska House and Senate after additional ballots were counted Tuesday.<\/p>\n Figures released by the Alaska Division of Elections show Kathryn Dodge, the Democratic candidate for House District 1, leading Republican Bart LeBon by 10 votes after remaining early and question ballots were counted. Scott Kawasaki, the Democratic candidate for Senate District A, leads Republican Senate President Pete Kelly by 152 votes.<\/p>\n Entering Tuesday, LeBon led Dodge by 67 votes and Kelly led Kawasaki by 11 votes.<\/p>\n “I guess I lost my lead,” LeBon said by phone Tuesday evening. “At this point, not much would surprise me, given that the initial vote.”<\/p>\n On the opposite side of the election, Dodge wrote by text message that she is “relieved to be in the lead” but is “back on pins and needles as we move on to count absentee ballots Friday.”<\/p>\n According to figures from the Alaska Division of Elections, 241 fully accepted absentee ballots remain to be counted in House District 1 as of the end of the day Tuesday. In House District 2 (both House districts make up the Senate district) 158 fully accepted absentee ballots remain to be counted. Some absentee ballots were not completely accepted by the division, but it is not clear what their impact on the races will be.<\/p>\n Those votes and any additional absentee ballots will be counted Friday, with the final tally scheduled for next Wednesday. Absentee ballots counted thus far have favored the Republicans.<\/p>\n That might be the case, Kawasaki said, but “the numbers that we have won by so far, I think the senator (Pete Kelly) would have to get an alarmingly large percentage that he didn’t receive yet.”<\/p>\n