Alaska high court OKs recall petition drive for campaign to oust
governor
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[February 15, 2020]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - The Alaska
Supreme Court on Friday cleared the way for a campaign seeking to oust
the state's embattled governor to proceed with plans to collect enough
signatures to place a recall initiative on the 2020 ballot.
In the latest legal setback for Governor Mike Dunleavy, a first-term
Republican and ally of U.S. President Donald Trump, the state's high
court lifted a stay blocking state election officials from printing and
distributing petition booklets for the recall drive.
After a lower-court judge ruled that allegations of misconduct lodged
against Dunleavy met the legal requirements for placing a recall
question on this year's election ballot, an injunction was imposed
pending the Supreme Court's review of the case.
Friday's decision allows the signature-gathering process to move forward
while the high court considers the governor's appeal of the recall
ruling on its merits.
During his first 13 months in office, Dunleavy has antagonized large
swaths of Alaska’s electorate in both major political parties.
His most controversial actions have included a bid to slash state
university funding by more than 40%, a drastic cutback of state ferry
operations that left coastal communities stranded over the winter,
endorsement of an unpopular copper-mine plan, and the awarding of a
no-bid $441,000 contract to a major campaign contributor’s grandson.
The reasons cited for his ouster in the recall petition are narrower,
however.
It accuses Dunleavy of illegally using state funds for partisan
politicking, violating legal requirements for filling a judicial vacancy
and violating the constitutional separation of powers with a budget veto
intended to punish the courts for an abortion-rights ruling.
The state's constitution allows for recalling a governor on grounds of
incompetence, negligence or corruption.
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People participate in a festive parade held by the Recall Dunleavy
campaign seeking to oust Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy and to
deliver about 49,000 petition signatures in the first of two rounds
required to get the measure on the ballot in Anchorage, Alaska,
U.S., September 5, 2019. REUTERS/Yereth Rosen/File Photo
The campaign to remove Dunleavy has so far collected more than
49,000 signatures of registered voters, nearly double the number
necessary for the first phase of a recall. Qualifying for the ballot
requires 71,252 more signatures, equivalent to 25% of the total
votes cast in the last state election.
Further delays in the process while the legal challenge remains
under court review would be unfair to the recall campaign, the
Supreme Court ruled, finding that Dunleavy's supporters have failed
to demonstrate a likelihood of prevailing in their case.
Recall campaign manager Claire Pywell said her group wants to oust
Dunleavy as soon as possible.
"This is a serious recall. We’re very grateful that the Supreme
Court is treating it as such," Pywell said.
Alaska's assistant attorney general, Maria Bahr, said in an email
that the Alaska Division of Elections will comply with the high
court's ruling.
Elections Director Gail Fenumiai said petition booklets are expected
to be ready by next Friday.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage; Editing by Steve Gorman and
Edwina Gibbs)
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