{"id":92102,"date":"2022-10-16T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-10-17T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/murkowski-swings-for-middle-in-race-filled-with-wild-pitches\/"},"modified":"2022-10-16T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-10-17T06:30:00","slug":"murkowski-swings-for-middle-in-race-filled-with-wild-pitches","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/murkowski-swings-for-middle-in-race-filled-with-wild-pitches\/","title":{"rendered":"Murkowski swings for middle in race filled with wild pitches"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is the third part in a three-part series of interviews with U.S. Senate candidates.<\/em><\/p>\n U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski doesn’t have to worry about people spelling her name right on the ballot this time, but in many ways she’s facing a similar significant challenge as her historic write-in win a dozen years ago due to a fellow Republican challenger who’s preferred by the party faithful.<\/p>\n The four-term Republican has been disowned by the state’s party leadership (and a majority of its voters in surveys) in favor of a challenger backed by former President Donald Trump after Murkowski voted to convict him of impeachment charges related to the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot. She’s also something less than universally loved by Democratswhose crossover vote she’ll need — due to actions such as voting to confirm Trump-nominated Amy Coney Barrett<\/a> for the U.S. Supreme Court.<\/p>\n Such is the wide world of political sports in the race that she topped her main opponent 56.6%-43.4%<\/a> in a poll a few weeks ago, a national pundit site relies on some of the same data to predict her opponent will win<\/a> and one of the state’s conservative media outlets keeps suggesting the senior Senator is trying to win by riding the coattails<\/a> of just-sworn Democratic U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola.<\/p>\n Murkowski, in an interview following an evening meet-and-greet with a few dozen supporters at Louie’s Douglas Inn on Oct. 12, responded to the assortment of wild pitches with the characteristic middle-of-the-road emphasis of her campaign.<\/p>\n “My read is people are looking at those who are willing to stand and put themselves out there, and are willing to serve and I think they are listening to individuals that are there to serve Alaska and aren’t afraid to say it,” she said.<\/p>\n None of this is particularly new or daunting for a longtime politician whose most-famous moment was winning an against-all-odds write-in campaign (especially given the spelling of her name) against a Tea Party candidate in <\/a>2010<\/a>. People on all sides of the political spectrum have things they grumble about, but Murkowski is currently among the most influential members of an evenly divided Senate and has a campaign war chest whose many millions (in both the accounts of her campaign and a supportive PAC) dwarf the funds of any other politician in the Last Frontier.<\/p>\n “The way I conduct myself and the relationships I build really doesn’t change,” she said. “I figure I have to find people to work on issues that are important to Alaska. That means I’ve got to work with Republicans and I’ve got to work with Democrats. I can’t work with everybody. There are some (people) that are just more problematic. It’s harder to do and so I find allies in other corners. I think that’s not unusual; you try to find these alliances and I think I have done so over time.”<\/p>\n