Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks to local leaders at the Alaska Municipal League’s legislative conference at the Baranoff Hotel on Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020. (Peter Segall | Juneau Empire)

Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks to local leaders at the Alaska Municipal League’s legislative conference at the Baranoff Hotel on Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020. (Peter Segall | Juneau Empire)

Opinion: Dunleavy is the sanity that needed to happen

We need to get spending under control.

  • By Larry Wood
  • Tuesday, March 3, 2020 3:52pm
  • Opinion

The recall of Gov. Mike Dunleavy is a product of the Democrat’s and establishment Republican’s desire to maintain the status quo in spending and policy in the face of reality.

When Mike Dunleavy came into office almost two years ago, the state was in crisis. We were 50th in jobs, in public safety, in economic opportunity and a dismal 51st in fourth-grade literacy. Our education system was rated at 46th across all grades despite spending $17,000 or more per student in the rail belt and more than $30,000 per student in the Bush. Education spending had increased 95% from 2003-2018, and the University of Alaska was graduating only 10% of those attending.

Most will agree that government spending is out of control steadily driving Alaska into a crisis since 2014. Former Gov. Bill Walker attacked our PFD and proposed additional taxes. He worked to maintain the growth of state government, rather than reducing spending to a sustainable level in line with revenues.

Dunleavy’s first budget was a shock to the state government’s complacency and the feel good outlook remain in power at all cost attitude of the Legislature. His budget was a reality check. Unlike Walker, he produced an almost-balanced budget that was in line with revenues.

Dunleavy further intended that this budget would start a dialogue with the Legislature resulting in a measured reduction in spending that would eventually produce a balanced budget policy. The Permanent Fund’s revenues were sufficient to maintain the individual PFD well into the future.

Dunleavy led the charge to rescind SB91 and to restore law and order and victim’s rights in the face of that unmitigated disaster, yet Sen. Cathy Giessel restored many in the Senate who supported SB91 to positions of leadership, including Sen. John Coghill, the architect of the misery and failure that was SB91.

We all know that more oil is being discovered on the North Slope; that it is a matter of time before the oil comes to market. First, however, the No. 2 conditioning plant has to be expanded and upgraded. This is the plant that removes the water and impurities from the oil for transport in the Trans Alaska Pipeline System. Roads and new transportation pipe to move the oil from the new pads to the conditioning plant have to be built and the repair and upgrade of existing transportation pipe systems need to be finished before new oil in any real quantity will flow into TAPS. 3-5 years is the estimated time before significant quantities of oil flow down TAPS.

Once this oil starts to flow, all bets are off. Either we get the spending under control now, or Dunleavy’s successors and the Legislature will spend every dime in pursuit of appeasing the plebes in order to stay in office. Government will become all pervasive and oppressive, given the red flag bills and other LGBTQ and Marxist agenda legislation that will do nothing but repress our rights and guarantee failure no matter how much money is spent.

Eventually, the Permanent Fund will disappear into the money pit and the issue of the PFD will be moot.

And, given the “fair” tax initiative, that promise of more oil may be reduced or delayed in favor of investment elsewhere until the state returns to sanity with respect for the need to pay the bills. One does not cut off the hand that feeds. The private sector needs to expand, not retract. We need jobs, not failed socialist ideological goals.

Dunleavy is the sanity that needed to happen, the shock to the system that had to be done. He is the clear voice of reason in the face of failure. We cannot afford to change horses in the middle of this stream. We cannot let establishment elitist Republicans like Giessel return us to failure.

Dunleavy must stay in office. Or, the failures of his predecessors, Parnell and Walker, will become the norm and we will continue to spend money like a drunken sailor.

Our transportation, public safety, economy, and education sectors will continue to fail.

The recall is not about an oppressive governor. It exists, because those who favor uncontrolled spending and government growth fear his success. They are fighting against the restoration of respect for our rights, the sanctity of life, the rule of law, investment, jobs and the expansion of the private sector.

Support this governor, or restore failure as the norm.

• Larry Wood is a 65-year Alaskan living on Lazy Mountain.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

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

President Trump as he visits Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi, Thursday, May, 15, 2025. During the first major foreign trip of his second term, President Trump has told audiences in the Middle East that he’s willing to set the past aside in the interests of peace and profit. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
Opinion: Count on Sullivan to erase another red line

“If you want President Trump to succeed, this kind of skeezy stuff… Continue reading

Michelle Bonnet Hale is a former deputy mayor of Juneau. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Sen. Sullivan and Rep. Begich are complicit in destruction of US democracy

I have found myself struggling, these past few months, to find the… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Demolishing Telephone Hill won’t save downtown businesses

In a recent front-page article of the Juneau Empire was a demolition… Continue reading

Dick Maitland, a foley artist, works on the 46th season of “Sesame Street” at Kaufman Astoria Studios in New York, Dec. 15, 2025. (Ariana McLaughlin/The New York Times)
Opinion: Trump’s embarrassing immaturity Republicans won’t acknowledge

It was only a matter of time before President Donald Trump took… Continue reading

An architect’s rendering of the proposed Capital Civic Center. (NorthWind Architects and Jensen Yorba Wall)
My Turn: Capital Civic Center will be an economic driver for Juneau

At the urging of the mayor, Travel Juneau, the Juneau Chamber of… Continue reading

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Clean up the Tulsequah Chief Mine

The Tulsequah Chief mine in northwest British Columbia, about 30 miles upstream… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Keep pressure up on Sen. Sullivan

On national news, Sen. Murkowski said that people should continue contacting their… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: SAVE Act would impose unreasonable barriers for people registering to vote

Retaining representative democracy requires due diligence and informed votes from all citizens… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Some fiscal realities should be self-evident

Dear Alaska legislators: Our need for an educated, rationally informed voting majority… Continue reading

Republican U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, standing with Alaska Public Media President Ed Ulman, at left, accepted a “champion of public broadcasting” award in 2020 from a coalition of public television stations. Amid efforts to strip federal funding of public media, Sullivan calls NPR “overly partisan” but says he “understands that Alaska’s public radio stations are essential to our state.” (Photo courtesy of America’s Public Television Stations)
Public media is in the crosshairs. How will Alaska’s congressional delegation vote?

Should public media be spared the budget cutting axe of President Donald… Continue reading