Passionate progressive Morphet seeks Alaska House District 33 nomination

Passionate progressive Morphet seeks Alaska House District 33 nomination

Among three in House District 33 primary, Morphet is only one not from Douglas

Editor’s note: Early voting for the Aug. 21 statewide primary election began Monday. Anyone who is registered to vote can cast a ballot at the State Office Building or the Division of Elections regional headquarters in Mendenhall Mall. As early voting begins, the Empire is publishing profiles of the six candidates who are in contested primary elections for Juneau House seats. A special voter guide covering all primary candidates will be published on the Sunday before the primary election day.

Tom Morphet used to write the news. Now, he’s trying to make it.

Morphet is one of three candidates vying for the Democratic nomination in House District 33. (A fourth candidate has ended his campaign.)

Morphet, who visited the Empire last week as part of an extended campaign stay in Juneau, said his political career isn’t much different from his work as a reporter and owner of the Chilkat Valley News in Haines.

“You know, you’re representing people. You’re finding things out. You’re making arguments, and that’s what I’ve done,” Morphet said. “That’s why there’s a lot of parallels.”

House District 33 covers Skagway, Haines, Gustavus, Klukwan, Excursion Inlet, Douglas and downtown Juneau, but Morphet is the only district candidate not from Douglas Island. The other two Democratic candidates (Steve Handy and Sara Hannan) and independent Chris Dimond (who will face the Democratic nominee in the Nov. 6 general election) are from Douglas Island.

Morphet is unapologetic and passionate about his belief that the district needs a vocal progressive to push issues in the Alaska Legislature. House District 33 is one of the few in the state that has more registered Democrats than Republicans (nonpartisan and unaligned voters are still a majority, as they are in most Alaska House districts).

“I think that the progressive banner needs to be hoisted and somebody has to run with it because it’s a good message and it’s a worthy message. It’s all the hope there is for a whole damn world and we can’t be defensive about it. We have to fight for it,” Morphet said.

In some ways, his attitude resembles that of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the New York City Democrat who defeated a 10-term moderate in a Congressional primary earlier this year. Ocasio-Cortez has said that Democrats in “safe” districts should be doing more to consider solutions traditionally associated with the political left.

Morphet was elected to the Haines Borough Assembly in 2016 and said he has seen the state fail to hold up its obligations to small towns like Haines. A state trooper assigned to the town was withdrawn; the state has told the borough to take over maintenance on roads and bridges; public health services have been cut back. Even the Big Brothers/Big Sisters program, which Morphet volunteered for, has disappeared after state support dried up.

“It just irks me to death because the state has enormous resources, and to dump its obligations on small communities is nothing short of bullying,” Morphet said.

He pointed out that the state funded the trooper post in Haines before the Prudhoe Bay oil discovery and argued that there is no reason the state should not fund it today.

Discussing the debate over the size of the Permanent Fund Dividend, Morphet said it would be great to receive a $3,000 dividend, but if Alaskans can’t get out of their driveways because roads aren’t plowed, and if kids are failing to get an education because schools aren’t funded, you have to ask if it’s worth it.

“I mean, the whole idea of government is that collectively we can do much more than we can do individually,” he said.

Morphet’s passion has caused him problems before. In Haines, he was censured by his fellow Assembly members after he revealed the names of Haines Police officers who had been subject to public complaints. Borough code and police employee contracts bar the release of those names.

Last year, he was among three Assembly members who were the targets of a recall effort. All three were retained on the Assembly.

Talking to the Empire, Morphet said he “gladly accepted” the censure and “I think I’ve atoned for what I did wrong.”

Morphet is opposed to construction of a road north from Juneau and believes improved ferry service is needed in northern Southeast.

“My standard line is that the traditional ferry system was built by the generation of engineers that took us to the moon,” Morphet said, adding that those ferries were built before the trans-Alaska Pipeline System and continue to work well. “I believe that is the model that maybe we should try to emulate. … I don’t know that it can be improved.”

The Alaska Gasline Development Corporation may seek additional funding from the Legislature next year, but Morphet said he thinks “the market’s not there” for gas from a trans-Alaska natural gas pipeline.

Morphet supports a payroll tax to balance Alaska’s $700 million budget deficit and it’s the best way to collect money from out-of-state workers.

“You’ve got to tax where the money is,” he said, but suggested he’d be open to modifications that capture income from investments.

Morphet said he supports keeping an expanded Medicaid program (the program was expanded by the current governor and could be reversed under a new one) and believes it’s important to provide education, job skills training and activities for kids in order to reduce rates of drug and alcohol addiction.

“You know, I was an editor and reporter in Haines for 30 years, and I think the town learned that I can throw punches but I can also be very fair. And I’m not quick to anger. I am passionate. And I believe that life is a short proposition. We have a narrow window to get things done,” Morphet said.


• Contact reporter James Brooks at jbrooks@juneauempire.com or 523-2258.


More in Home

Walter Soboleff Jr. leads a traditional Alaska Native dance during the beginning of the Juneau Maritime Festival at Elizabeth Peratrovich Plaza on Saturday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
A strong show of seamanship at 14th annual Juneau Maritime Festival

U.S. Navy and Coast Guard get into tug-of-war after destroyer arrives during record-size gathering.

Pastor Tari Stage-Harvey offers an invocation during the annual Blessing of the Fleet and Reading of Names at the Alaska Commercial Fishermen’s Memorial on Saturday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Loved ones gather for reading of 264 names on Fishermen’s Memorial and the Blessing of the Fleet

Six names to be engraved this summer join tribute to others at sea and in fishing industry who died.

Lisa Pearce (center), newly hired as the chief financial officer for the Juneau School District, discusses the district’s financial crisis in her role as an analyst during a work session Feb. 17 at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. Seated next to Pearce are Superintendent Frank Hauser (left) and school board member Britteny Cioni-Haywood. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Lisa Pearce, analyst who unveiled Juneau School District’s crisis, hired as new chief financial officer

Consultant for numerous districts in recent years begins new job when consolidation starts July 1.

The Alaska Supreme Court is seen on Thursday, Feb. 8, in Juneau. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
State seeks quick Alaska Supreme Court ruling in appeal to resolve correspondence education issues

Court asked to decide by June 30 whether to extend hold barring public spending on private schools.

Visitors on Sept. 4, 2021, stroll by the historic chapel and buildings used for classrooms and dormitories that remain standing at Pilgrim Hot Springs. The site was used as an orphanage for Bering Strait-area children who lost their parents to the 1918-19 influenza epidemic. Pilgrim Hot Springs is among the state’s 11 most endangered historic properties, according to an annual list released by Preservation Alaska. (Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Boats, a lighthouse, churches among sites named as Alaska’s most at-risk historic properties

Wolf Creek Boatworks near Hollis tops Preservation Alaska’s list of 11 sites facing threats.

Capital City Fire/Rescue responded to two residential fires within 12 hours this week, including one Thursday morning that destroyed a house and adjacent travel trailer. (Michael S. Lockett / Juneau Empire file photo)
Update: Man arrested for arson after fire in travel trailer destroys adjacent Mendenhall Valley home

Juneau resident arrested at scene, also charged with felony assault following Thursday morning fire.

Hundreds of people gather near the stage during last year’s Juneau Maritime Festival on Saturday, May 6, 2023, at Elizabeth Peratrovich Plaza. The event featured multiple musical performances by local bands and singers. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
Annual Maritime Festival to get a military salute with arrival of US Navy missile destroyer

A record 90+ vendors, music, search and rescue demonstration, harbor cruises among Saturday’s events.

Thunder Mountain High School seniors James Polasky, left, and Samuel Lockhart, right, signed letters of intent on Thursday in the TMHS commons to play college basketball. Polasky will attend St. Olaf in Minnesota and Lockhart will attend Edmonds College in Washington state. (Klas Stolpe / For the Juneau Empire)
Thunder Mountain’s Sam Lockhart and James Polasky sign letters of intent to play college basketball

All-state selection Lockhart to hoop at Edmonds, Polasky at St. Olaf.

(Getty images)
In final judgment, judge blocks Alaska correspondence provisions, keeps current rules through June

Legislature working on fixes, but Dunleavy suggests he will veto bills before Supreme Court rules.

Most Read