{"id":64874,"date":"2020-11-01T21:30:00","date_gmt":"2020-11-02T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/senate-campaigns-make-last-push-for-votes-in-alaska\/"},"modified":"2020-11-01T21:30:00","modified_gmt":"2020-11-02T06:30:00","slug":"senate-campaigns-make-last-push-for-votes-in-alaska","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/senate-campaigns-make-last-push-for-votes-in-alaska\/","title":{"rendered":"Senate campaigns make last push for votes in Alaska"},"content":{"rendered":"
By BECKY BOHRER<\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n Associated Press<\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n The major candidates in Alaska’s U.S. Senate race are making their last push for votes ahead of Tuesday’s election, with the campaigns calling Alaskans and knocking on doors and the candidates holding last-minute rallies and stops.<\/p>\n Republican U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan and independent Al Gross, who is running as the Democratic nominee, planned to wave signs Monday in Alaska’s largest city, Anchorage. Gross also planned an evening rally with volunteers via video conference. Both have attended events around the state in recent days to shore up support and fire up enthusiasm.<\/p>\n “There is so much on the line with this election, and we know it’s going to be very, very close,” Gross told supporters in his hometown and former place of residence, Juneau, on a “gnarly” Saturday, as rain fell and winds howled through an open-air pavilion.<\/p>\n “We feel very confident in where we stand with the Alaskan voters,” Sullivan campaign manager Matt Shuckerow said in an interview, citing internal polling numbers. But he said the numbers are only as good as people backing them up with votes.<\/p>\n As of early Monday, more than 150,000 voters had cast their ballots, most by absentee, according to the state Division of Elections. About 321,000 total votes were cast in Alaska during the 2016 presidential election, according to division statistics.<\/p>\n The division plans to begin counting absentee ballots a week after the election, spokesperson Tiffany Montemayor said.<\/p>\n Gross said his campaign has encouraged people to vote absentee. Shuckerow said the Sullivan campaign has tried to emphasize “every means possible” for Alaskans to vote.<\/p>\n The campaigns are calling, texting and knocking on doors, to the annoyance of some Alaskans tired of the messages and ads. Money has flowed into the state from third-party groups, with control of the Senate up for grabs.<\/p>\n “It will all be over very soon,” Gross campaign spokesperson Matt Lehner said, noting other groups also are contacting voters. “We try to be as respectful as we can.”<\/p>\n Native Peoples Action Community Fund sent mailers with voting information to more than 30,000 rural addresses as part of its broader get-out-the-vote effort. It also contacted tribes, which in some cases resulted in sending personal protective gear, stamps or additional absentee ballot applications, executive director Kendra Kloster said. The group’s efforts have been nonpartisan, she said.<\/p>\n She is among those who sent a letter Monday to Lt. Gov. Kevin Meyer, who oversees elections, citing concerns with a lack of poll workers in some communities, absentee ballots that some individuals say they still haven’t received, and “severely inadequate” information on voting options particularly in rural areas where COVID-19 cases are rising.<\/p>\n