1. The claim by @repdonyoung, who is running against @AlyseGalvin, that he changed his position on the "beer virus" only "when it became serious" is nonsense. COVID was serious when Young called it the beer virus on March 13. But the oldest Congressman was seriously inattentive.
2. “This is blown out of proportion about how deadly this is. It’s deadly but it’s not nearly as deadly as the other viruses we have. But we respond, I’ll call it the hysteria concept,” Young said on March 13.
3. Young was wrong on every serious detail. The beer virus news coverage led to national ridicule. His young employees tried to clean up the mess, even inventing the idea that he wrote: “Knowledge is one of our best defenses against the spread of Coronavirus."
4. Thirteen days after his uninformed rant, his employees sat him down to deliver a hostage video and semi-apology: “Weeks ago I did not fully grasp the severity of this crisis. But clearly we are in the midst of an urgent public health emergency.”
5. On March 30, a reporter asked him if he had changed his mind about the "dumb" relief bill he opposed and his claim that this was all media hysteria. Young, who did not sound at all like the guy confessing his sins on the hostage video, retreated to his usual bluster.
6. “No, I didn’t say that, number one. Number two, I probably would have voted for it but that was the very beginning of this pandemic and there was a lot of questions about it then,” Young said on March 30.
7. “We can go back in history and decide what’s been said and what has not been said, but now we’re facing this I call a classic problem and we’re handling it very well, the governor and with the other two senators and the body as a whole,” he said March 30.
8. Six months have passed and Young is still making excuses for himself, claiming that no one knew how bad the situation was in March. This week he said, "Earlier on when I mentioned the beer virus and I've said this before—it was named corona—. . ."
9. "...I have lived through about four different pandemics in my life. And this one brought the attention. And I worry about people getting panicky and responding maybe not really to reality, but the fact is, they did not know.....
10."...I did not know how serious this would be. And it became serious. And I changed my position the fact it is serious. So we work on that. That's the thing about learning the process."
11. Young would have Alaskans believe that COVID-19 was not serious on March 13 and he changed his alleged position 13 days later when it became serious. He refuses to admit he was wrong. Nearly 200,000 people have died in the U.S.
l12. On March 13, as Young the Trump White House declared a national emergency. Nearly 200,000 people have died in the U.S. since then. He didn't change his allege position when it became serious. He changed his allllaskalAlaska
1. In a back-of-the-envelope atmosphere near the end of its meeting Monday, the state retirement board approved a 1-year cut to contributions to the health care portion of the state pension systems. #akleg#akgov
2. I missed the importance of this 1-year cut when it took place. I went back and listened to the recording again today. The board cut FY 23 health care payments to zero on grounds that the system is overfunded. This gives Dunleavy what he wanted in a different manner. #akgov
3. The cut appears to be on the order of $88 million. The two Dunleavy commissioners on the board—Lucinda Mahoney and Paula Vrana—provided the deciding yes votes. #akleg#akgov
1. Dunleavy revenue commissioner Lucinda Mahoney needs to go. This latest proposal from Mahoney and Dunleavy would disguise the financial health of state retirement assets by assuming the current market value, not longterm performance, is a foundation for action.
2. Here is a sample of the reckless or false information she has presented in recent months. "The timeline doesn't work."
3. Mahoney and Mike Barnhill made false claims about the Harvard endowment.
1. On Feb. 2, @adndotcom posted a press release from Gov. Mike Dunleavy saying "this is Alaska's time to think big" on the gas line. He said it is closer than ever. Most Alaska newspapers printed the same press release, without asking questions. #akleg#akgov
2. In Dunleavy's press release, he misled the public by suggesting his pipeline dream would be a private venture. "The good news is that, in addition to private funding, there is a strong possibility of federal funding." #akleg#akgov
3. Elwood Brehmer of the @AlaskaJournal reported on Feb. 4 that the dream relied on a 75 percent federal subsidy. The @adndotcom said "in addition to private-sector funding," the plan needed some government money, but did not mention how much.
1. Just before the pandemic, John Binkley, a political ally of @GovDunleavy, whose family owns @adndotcom, announced plans for a group to fight the recall, which had been illegally blocked by former AG Kevin Clarkson. #akleg#akgov dermotcole.com/reportingfroma…
2. Clarkson’s illegal stalling and the pandemic stalled the recall. Now comes @adndotcom with another high-handed defense of Dunleavy, linking his recall to Felix Rivera, claiming it is a similar situation. #akleg#akgov adn.com/opinions/edito…
3. While keeping quiet about John Binkley’s leadership role in backing Dunleavy, the Binkley-owned paper sniffs that the Dunleavy recall grounds are trivial. Wrong. Refusing to follow the law on appointing a judge is the most important. That Dunleavy backed down is irrelevant.
1. Former Gov. Sean Parnell and former Sen. Mark Begich are each getting hundreds of dollars an hour for promoting the Dunleavy gas pipeline dream—which consists of hoping the feds will pay $4.5 billion for it. #akleg#akgov
2. Parnell and Begich teamed up last year to offer high-profile support for Dunleavy's point of view on raiding the Permanent Fund and opposing the election initiative. The state contracts should have been disclosed. Parnell signed in April. Begich in Sept. #akgov
3. In March, as "volunteers" for Dunleavy, they claimed to have a big, bold plan for Alaska that was neither. #akgov dermotcole.com/reportingfroma…
The revelation that @GovDunleavy gave a gas line consulting contract to former Gov. Sean Parnell, at the “discount” rate of $450 an hour, starting April 30, 2020, puts this April 24 Parnell/Begich plug for bigger PFDs in a new light. #akleg#akgov
A similar valuable gas line contract with Begich followed in the fall. The Dunleavy administration never announced or revealed why it hired the two for a total cost of close to $250,000. #akleg#akgov
Parnell and Begich appear to be the point men on the Dunleavy plan to try to get a federal subsidy from the Biden administration to build a pipeline to Fairbanks. But the state withheld disclosure of the Parnell/Begich role. #akleg#akgovdermotcole.com/reportingfroma…