Alaska Public Media Alaska At-Large your news window on Washington DC

Jan. 5, 2023

The view from Seat 83

Welcome to the relaunch of Alaska At-Large! Now coming at you from Washington, D.C. 


If you’re new here, I’m Liz Ruskin, Alaska Public Media’s Washington correspondent.


If you followed Alaska At-Large during the election season, nice to see you again! You’ll notice some changes. Now that the election is over, we’re making this a letter from Washington with an Alaska focus.


And what a wild week to restart this newsletter. I really thought House Republicans would get it together this morning, but, as I write this, the House is still struggling to elect a speaker.


It’s been strangely compelling to watch the inaction on the House floor. Can’t tear myself away. 


My perch is Seat 83 in the press gallery, above the speaker’s chair. The seat is mine because I scored a ticket for the first day of the new Congress – Tuesday – and the folks in charge of the press gallery have determined that the first day is still underway. So I watch.

My ticket to the never-ending first day of Congress.

I feel like I’m rubbernecking a car crash. It’s sad and fascinating. 


I know a lot of Americans think they don’t care about this fight. We’ve got leftists gleefully popping corn and right-wingers delighted to see government dysfunction on full display. 


Alaska Congresswoman Mary Peltola isn’t celebrating.


“There is serious legislating that needs to be done and infighting is distracting us from even starting to work on the many problems we face,” she said in an email this afternoon. “I came to D.C. to do the work, not to score political points against my colleagues or perform for television cameras.”


She, like all Democrats, has been voting for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries to be speaker. Not that he has the votes, but Democrats are making a show of their unity.


Peltola is ready to put party unity aside to break the logjam.


“If there are members who want to form a coalition majority like we often see in Alaska, I’m open to discussing that,” she says. “Anything that gets us communicating with each other rather than talking at each other would be a good thing at this point.”


It’s too early to say whether this catches on outside of the Alaska delegation.

This is where I regularly work from, a media booth in the Capitol.

Alaska is a red state, and a lot of Alaskans probably concur with the Republican holdouts. The less government works, the better, in their view. But the effective way to rein in the government is to reform federal law. That takes a functioning Congress. 


Peltola won her seat pledging to change federal fish management. It’s a gargantuan task, passing a re-write of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Prior bills have withered on the vine, year after year. To have any chance of success, she and her allies have to get a running start. And getting anything beyond the very basics passed in this Congress seems unlikely. The new speaker, whoever it is, is going to be in a weak position. 


No one’s agenda advances if the House stalls at every decision point. 


Maybe I’ll have Seat 83 forevermore. And, if it gets too dull, we can always hope for a more lively scene on the Senate side. They’re on break for the next two weeks. Or, as the Brits would say, a fortnight


Which reminds me: We plan to send Alaska At-Large to your inbox every other week now. Think of it as your fortnightly peak under the Capitol dome.


That’s all for now.  As always, I want to hear from you. What do you want to see covered and what questions do you have about Washington, D.C. politics? Reach me at lruskin@alaskapublic.org


Thanks for reading,


-Liz Ruskin

Follow me on twitter: @lruskin

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