{"id":89498,"date":"2022-07-31T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-08-01T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/3-house-candidates-debate-in-juneau\/"},"modified":"2022-07-31T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-08-01T06:30:00","slug":"3-house-candidates-debate-in-juneau","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/3-house-candidates-debate-in-juneau\/","title":{"rendered":"3 House candidates debate in Juneau"},"content":{"rendered":"
The three candidates seeking Alaska’s U.S. House seat in the Aug. 16 special election squeezed into the close quarters of a Juneau radio station studio for a forum<\/a> during the noon hour Monday. But their positions politically were often far from close in a discussion dominated by economic issues including inflation, energy costs and resource development.<\/p>\n Republicans Nick Begich III and Sarah Palin were unsurprisingly more aligned with each other than with Democrat Mary Peltola in terms of board policy. But all differed on specifics such as the biggest single issue facing the country and Southeast Alaska, and when they did agree on problems there were often differences about their causes and solutions.<\/p>\n Each lived up to their stereotypes to a degree — Begich as the establishment Republican (despite a family with a diverse history in state politics), Palin as the Donald Trump-backed rebel, and Peltola as the relatively liberal and longtime Alaska Native village state lawmaker. Each also had at least one “off” moment, but no “gaffes” likely to show up in national headlines or viral Tweets.<\/p>\n Biggest national concern<\/strong><\/p>\n Palin cited inflation as the biggest national issue and, while avoiding the “drill, baby drill” slogan she’s revived from her 2008 speech as a vice-presidential nominee during her current campaign, did say “all we have to do is turn on the spigot in Alaska” to resolve its economic woes by “developing our God-given resources.”<\/p>\n Begich, stating Alaska is the second most federally dependent state in the U.S., said the rising threat of deficit spending is his top concern. As with Palin, he agreed increasing production of energy resources is important, but emphasized other industries as well and said “we have got to add more legs to the stool for the state of Alaska to make sure we are prosperous and can create the generational wealth Alaska does have the potential to create.”<\/p>\n Peltola, while agreeing with Palin that inflation is the top national issue of concern, took a markedly different stance on solutions. She praised the Inflation Reduction Act currently being debated by Congress — which among other things would allow Medicare’s new abilities to negotiate drug prices, penalize drug companies for increasing prices faster than inflation, and impose a 15% minimum tax on certain corporations — and “lastly we’ve got to increase the minimum wage and (keep) increasing it according to the cost of living in Alaska.”<\/p>\n Biggest Southeast Alaska concern<\/strong><\/p>\n Inflation was also Palin’s top concern when asked specifically about Southeast issues, but she pivoted to her time as governor between 2006 and 2009 when the state was engulfed in a political corruption scandal<\/a> involving various lawmakers, oil industry executives and others.<\/p>\n “When the government is cleaning up corruption I still hear a lot of concern about crony capitalism, to make sure we are conducting business and developing resources fairly and ethically,” she said, adding “I have none of those special interests clawing on me.”<\/p>\n That statement, however, came shortly after Palin’s “turn on the spigot” remark when she claimed Alaska has “the least amount of corruption in state government.”<\/p>\n The Alaska Marine Highway System<\/a> was the top Southeast Alaska issued mentioned by Peltola, who said “we’ve really seen that dismantled the past few years and I’m glad to see there’s relief for it in the infrastructure bill.”<\/p>\n She also mentioned energy projects, noting some communities such as Juneau have relatively affordable power due to hyroelectric facilities, but others are facing crippling prices even though some such as Hoonah and Angoon have projects that are “shovel-ready.” <\/p>\n