{"id":84980,"date":"2022-04-21T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-04-22T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/former-state-lawmaker-john-coghill-says-congress-needs-his-experience\/"},"modified":"2022-04-21T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-04-22T06:30:00","slug":"former-state-lawmaker-john-coghill-says-congress-needs-his-experience","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/former-state-lawmaker-john-coghill-says-congress-needs-his-experience\/","title":{"rendered":"Former state lawmaker John Coghill says Congress needs his experience"},"content":{"rendered":"
Not long after Don Young’s death, several people reached out to John Coghill asking if he’d be interested in running for Alaska’s lone seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.<\/p>\n
“At first, I thought it was a crazy idea,” Coghill said Friday in an interview with the Empire. “I’m a praying man. I went to pray on the Sunday after he died. I fasted and prayed all day Monday and Tuesday, and the conclusion I came to is, it’s a daunting task, No. 1, but if I don’t do it, could I really live with myself, knowing what I know about Alaska.”<\/p>\n
Coghill served in the Alaska State Legislature from 1999 until he lost the Republican primary election in 2020 to now-state Sen. Robert Myers Jr., R-North Pole. His father was longtime Alaska politician Jack Coghill, a delegate in the 1958 constitutional convention and who served in both the territorial and state legislatures and was lieutenant governor in the early 1990s.<\/p>\n
Born in the territory of Alaska, Coghill started in the state House of Representatives before becoming a senator in 2009 where he at times served as both Senate majority and minority leader. Coghill defines himself as a conservative, a constitutionalist but also a pragmatist. He said his time in the Legislature demonstrated a record of bipartisanship and his long experience in the state has made his name well known.<\/p>\n
The state’s new ranked-choice voting system factored into his decision to run.<\/p>\n
“In the ranked-choice voting, the votes are going to go up, so in my mind, the more conservatives you have in that rank those votes will go up to somebody, hopefully me,” Coghill said. “But if not me, then hopefully, the people who would vote me as second choice would go up to another conservative person, which in my view would be the best thing for Alaska.”<\/p>\n