She
defeated Republican former Governor Sarah Palin by 51.47% to
48.53%. Palin is widely known for her unsuccessful vice
presidential run with John McCain in 2008.
Peltola will finish the remainder of the term of Republican
Representative Don Young, who died earlier this year, and will
face re-election on Nov. 8.
She is the first Alaska Native to represent a state where almost
20% of the population is Indigenous, the highest proportion in
the United States.
Palin's campaign for the House seat was her first run for public
office after the McCain loss. She is seen as having helped open
the door to a more far-right wing of the Republican Party.
During her campaign, Peltola ran as "Alaska's best shot at
keeping an extremist from winning," according to her campaign
website. She highlighted her status as "the only candidate in
this race who isn't a multi-millionaire."
The election is the first one run under the state's new ranked
choice system, with voters listing candidates in order of
preference on the ballot. A candidate must clear 50% of the vote
to be declared the winner.
The special election was called after the death of Young, 88,
who was first elected in 1973.
The winner of the special election will serve out Young's term,
which expires at the end of this year. Palin, Peltola and
Republican Nick Begich III will vie in a Nov. 8 election to fill
the seat for the next two years.
Meanwhile, Democratic Representative Charlie Crist on Wednesday
announced he was resigning, effective immediately, from his
House seat so that he can focus on his gubernatorial campaign
against Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Seattle and Eric Beech in
WashingtonEditing by Richard Cowan, Jonathan Oatis and Matthew
Lewis)
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