{"id":94968,"date":"2023-01-30T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2023-01-31T07:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/a-tale-of-two-terms\/"},"modified":"2023-02-01T10:10:41","modified_gmt":"2023-02-01T19:10:41","slug":"a-tale-of-two-terms","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/a-tale-of-two-terms\/","title":{"rendered":"A tale of two terms"},"content":{"rendered":"
(This story has been corrected to note Cathy Munoz’s appointment as acting commissioner of the Department of Labor Alaska and Workforce Development differs from the other people who are commissioner designees of other departments nominated by the governor and who are subject to legislative confirmation.)<\/em><\/p>\n Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s most controversial first-term appointee is again working at the Alaska State Capitol, but merely as a legislator’s aide as the governor is opting for what lawmakers in both parties call a more open-minded and less confrontational approach to his second-term appointments and agenda.<\/p>\n Four years ago Dunleavy’s chief of staff talked about mass firings and loyalty pledges, his administration commissioner resigned less than two months after allegedly lying during his confirmation hearing and his budget director imported from outside Alaska swooped in with massive cuts that generated sufficient outrage to trigger a recall effort of the governor.<\/p>\n But Dunleavy, perhaps aided by skyrocketing oil prices last year that helped make both a generous budget and Permanent Fund dividend possible, won reelection in November with an outright majority against two major contenders who split the dissenting vote. Since then, state legislators have largely praised his efforts to reach out even as they continue to disagree with many of his policy goals.<\/p>\n “I think the governor this term is different than his first term,” said state Senate President Gary Stevens, a Kodiak Republican, during a news conference on the opening day of this year’s session of the Alaska State Legislature.<\/p>\n “I believe it’s going to be a much easier working relationship. The governor has said he’s going to be in Juneau and he’s willing to meet with us when we want to meet with him.”<\/p>\n Dunleavy made an early impression on some legislators and observers during the days before this year’s session when he was seen visiting lawmakers and their staff as they moved into their offices at the Alaska State Capitol. His tone has also been more conciliatory for the most part when discussing policy such as his proposed budget, acknowledging for instance his flat funding of education is something likely to see adjustments during negotiations with a seeming majority of legislators in the Senate wanting to increase a formula that’s gone unchanged for many years.<\/p>\n “I’m glad he emphasized it’s a starting point budget,” state Sen. Jesse Kiehl, a Juneau Democrat, said when the budget was released in December. “That’s an indication of the version of Governor Dunleavy we’re going to work with.”<\/p>\n Dunleavy hasn’t abandoned some of his most steadfast positions, perhaps most notably the emphasis on maximizing the PFD, which Kiehl and others in the Senate majority say is at odds with increasing funding in areas such as education and the governor relying on reserve funds to cover a deficit. The governor also ended his State of the State speech with a long discourse about wanting to make Alaska “the most pro-life state in the entire country” that wasn’t in the prepared draft distributed to the media.<\/p>\n Achieving that legislatively or through a proposed constitutional amendment would be quite a feat considering the anti-abortion legislation in other states. But Dunleavy’s other current comments on the issue — acknowledging the bipartisan Senate majority he’s working with — suggest a less confrontational approach than during his initial years when he cut the Alaska Court System budget by $334,700 — the amount the government paid for what he called “elective” abortions. That action helped provide what recall activists said were legal grounds to remove him from office.<\/p>\n Many of the pieces of his second-term agenda continue to be a work in progress, from details of his much-touted plan to earn nearly $1 billion in carbon credits to the makeup of his cabinet, with the most recent change occurring Tuesday when he named former Juneau legislator and Assembly member Cathy Munoz as acting commissioner of the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development.<\/p>\n Munoz, deputy commissioner of the department since Dunleavy became governor in 2018, will need to be confirmed by majority vote of the full Legislature if Dunleavy decided to nominate her as the new full-time commissioner. Six other people appointed as commissioner designees since the end of the last legislative session are awaiting such confirmation.<\/p>\n The process might not be entirely smooth, although only one nominee has been voted down since statehood (Wayne Anthony Ross<\/a>, Sarah Palin’s pick for attorney general in 2009). Stevens said “there is a lot of concern” about one nominee in particular he declined to name, but discussions with the governor seemingly suggest he agrees it’s best to avoid a “food fight” during a floor vote.<\/p>\n “I believe the governor deserves to have the appointments he wants,” Stevens said. However, if there’s a nominee it appears legislators can’t stomach Stevens said his impression is the governor will be willing to nominate another person.<\/p>\n “We all look bad when there’s a fight on the floor,” Stevens said. “Things have been said on the floor that should have not been said in the past.”<\/p>\n Notable among potentially controversial nominees needing legislative confirmation is Brett Huber Sr., appointed chair of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, which oversees drilling activity in the state. He managed the governor’s successful 2018 campaign, helped managed the unsuccessful campaign against ranked choice voting in 2020, and rejoined the governor’s staff in 2021 as a “statehood defense” adviser until last spring. He has since become a primary target in a still-pending complaint by two watchdog groups alleging improper coordination between Dunleavy’s 2022 campaign and a PAC supporting the campaign.<\/p>\n Officials with the Dunleavy campaign and other named defendants deny any improper coordination took place.<\/p>\n When it comes to other appointees by Dunleavy, the following are among the more notable differences between the start of Dunleavy’s first term and his second:<\/p>\n Budget director: Donna Arduin (then) vs. Neil Steininger (now)<\/strong><\/p>\n Donna Arduin arrived as a nationally prominent slash-and-burn budget cutter<\/a> for leaders in various states including Michigan, New York, Florida, Illinois and California. She embraced being the lightening rod for a first-year Dunleavy budget that cut two-thirds from the ferry system (making what lawmakers called an absurd cost efficiency comparison to road systems), 40% from the University of Alaska and 90% for homeless services. Dunleavy’s politics were as confrontational as his pocketbook, conducting a series of public hearings that were sponsored and paid for by the Koch-brothers organization Americans for Prosperity. Attendees required to register with the group, and abide by rules such as bans on signs and recording the hearings.<\/p>\n “His first budget was devastating,” Stevens said during the first day of this year’s session. Legislators during that first budget year described the budget process using words like “warfare.”<\/p>\n Arduin’s tumultuous tenure ended when she stepped down in September of 2019, with Dunleavy appointing Neil Steininger as his new budget director in January of 2020. Steininger, who had five years of previous budget experience with the state, remains in that position and interactions with legislators have grown more cooperative, even though plenty of items in the governor’s budgets have remained controversial.<\/p>\n “At least he (Steininger) has some familiarity with state government,” Tom Begich, a Democratic Anchorage state Senator at the time, said following the budget director’s appointment. “He’s not Donna Arduin<\/a>, which is another plus.”<\/p>\n Arduin, meanwhile, is back at the Alaska State Capitol working for Rep. Ben Carpenter, a Nikiski Republican who during his four years in office has been involved in numerous controversies including attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election and comparing COVID-19 public health measures to Nazi Germany. He also chairs the House Ways And Means Committee, where Arduin’s experience is relevant. Carpenter and Arduin did not reply to a request for comment Tuesday.<\/p>\n Chief of staff: Tuckerman Babcock (then) vs. Tyson Gallagher (now)<\/strong><\/p>\n The chief of staff doesn’t require legislative confirmation, but Dunleavy’s first person in that role was determined to conduct a confirmation process of his own. A week after the election, Tuckerman Babcock, a longtime powerbroker in state Republican politics, sent letters to about 800 non-unionized employees demanding their resignations. The request far exceeded previous traditional requests to high-level political appointees, and the price to return for those contacted by Babcock was a loyalty pledge to Dunleavy.<\/p>\n A federal judge ruled in 2021 the resulting firing of employees who didn’t resign was unconstitutional. Babcock stepped down as chief of staff in July 2020 to become senior policy adviser for strategic affairs, and staged an unsuccessful campaign for state Senate last fall.<\/p>\n Gallagher became acting chief of staff in July of 2022 when Randy Ruaro departed, citing health and family reasons, then was permanently appointed in November. Gallagher’s only whiff of public controversy during that stint is a single and essentially incidental reference to him in the ongoing campaign-related complaint against Dunleavy and some of his campaign apparatus.<\/p>\n Department of Natural Resources: Corri Feige (then) vs. John Boyle (now)<\/strong><\/p>\n This is an outlier in the governor’s second-term Cabinet, as an experienced state official serving throughout his first term is being replaced by a former oil lobbyist with no state government experience.<\/p>\n Corri Feige, who served as director of Alaska’s Division of Oil and Gas under Dunleavy’s predecessor Bill Walker, was involved in key resource issues for Dunleavy such the state’s approval of BP selling the Prudhoe Bay oil field to Hilcorp in 2022. She resigned in June of 2022 due to “recent developments”<\/a> she declined to specify.<\/p>\n John Boyle was named the department’s new commissioner in December, following an interim period with a different leader. He worked for the North Slope and Utqiagvik borough governments before becoming director of government affairs for BP between 2016 to 2019 and then working in a similar role for the smaller company Oil Search.<\/p>\n