My Turn: Local politics don’t need to be so divisive

  • By Kate Troll
  • Sunday, August 28, 2016 1:01am
  • Opinion

It’s been awhile since I wrote a column. I decided to stop once I got to the pondering stage about whether or not to run again for the City and Borough of Juneau Assembly. It seemed the right thing to do, knowing that my columns would give me more exposure during the campaign season. The decision was also consistent with my practice of keeping my writing path separate from public service (for example, I do not write about matters that could come before me as an Assembly member).

The Juneau Empire went along, but asked me to keep the door open. “If there is something you’re burning to write about, send it in,” the editor told me.

The divisive tone of Win Gruening’s column in last Friday’s paper lit that fire by trying to re-ignite the senior sales tax exemption as a wedge issue to sway voters in October. Through my columns, I’m a known social progressive and to some people in this community that is enough to put the bullseye on my back. Gruening’s unambiguous message was to use the ploy that was so successfully brought against Karen Crane: Don’t disclose the fact that the modification to the senior sales tax exemption was a 7-2 vote, a super majority, and then make a disjointed link to the modest $35,000 cost for a special election to make it seem like the senior sales tax vote was really a result of five progressives on the Assembly. This is how they hide the hypocrisy of not making the senior sales tax question an issue for when a more conservative Assembly member supporting the changes ran right after that decisive vote.

It’s clear from Mr. Gruening’s column that he wants to have one more go at this strategy now that I am running for re-election. While I am happy to defend my vote, particularly in these fiscally uncertain times, this divisive strategy is unnecessary at the local level. We have more than enough of it at the national level.

I’m proud that on our Assembly it’s generally the merits of the issue that drive each vote, issue by issue. And any observer of Assembly votes will note that the votes go every which way. It is the rare exception that divides the Assembly ideologically. This is healthy. This is functional government. We need to keep it this way. We don’t need columns that make premature endorsements based on national political playbooks.

Mr. Gruening and I share at least one view in common: his headline, which reads “Juneau Assembly races deserve attention.” Check out the candidate’s websites, read the Empire’s Voter Guide or attend one of three candidate forums.

• Kate Troll is a Juneau resident and currently Assembly member running for re-election this fall.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

Win Gruening (courtesy)
OPINION: Eaglecrest’s opportunity to achieve financial independence, if the city allows it

It’s a well-known saying that “timing is everything.” Certainly, this applies to… Continue reading

Gov. Mike Dunleavy gestures during his State of the State address on Jan. 22, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
OPINION: It’s time to end Alaska’s fiscal experiment

For decades, Alaska has operated under a fiscal and budgeting system unlike… Continue reading

Atticus Hempel stands in a row of his shared garden. (photo by Ari Romberg)
My Turn: What’s your burger worth?

Atticus Hempel reflects on gardening, fishing, hunting, and foraging for food for in Gustavus.

At the Elvey Building, home of UAF’s Geophysical Institute, Carl Benson, far right, and Val Scullion of the GI business office attend a 2014 retirement party with Glenn Shaw. Photo by Ned Rozell
Alaska Science Forum: Carl Benson embodied the far North

Carl Benson’s last winter on Earth featured 32 consecutive days during which… Continue reading

Van Abbott is a long-time resident of Alaska and California. He has held financial management positions in government and private organizations, and is now a full-time opinion writer. He served in the late nineteen-sixties in the Peace Corps as a teacher. (Contributed)
When lying becomes the only qualification

How truth lost its place in the Trump administration.

Jamie Kelter Davis/The New York Times
Masked federal agents arrive to help immigration agents detain immigrants and control protesters in Chicago, June 4, 2025. With the passage of President Trump’s domestic policy law, the Department of Homeland Security is poised to hire thousands of new Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, and double detention space.
OPINION: $85 billion and no answers

How ICE’s expansion threatens law, liberty, and accountability.

Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon
The entrance to the Alaska Gasline Development Corp.’s Anchorage office is seen on Aug. 11, 2023. The state-owned AGDC is pushing for a massive project that would ship natural gas south from the North Slope, liquefy it and send it on tankers from Cook Inlet to Asian markets. The AGDC proposal is among many that have been raised since the 1970s to try commercialize the North Slope’s stranded natural gas.
My Turn: Alaskans must proceed with caution on gasline legislation

Alaskans have watched a parade of natural gas pipeline proposals come and… Continue reading

Win Gruening (courtesy)
OPINION: Juneau Assembly members shift priorities in wish list to Legislature

OPINION: Juneau Assembly members shift priorities in wish list to Legislature

Most Read