Senate President Gary Stevens to retire; House Rep. Louise Stutes announces run for seat
After 22 years in the Alaska Senate, Senate President Gary Stevens is retiring.
Stevens' decision has been discussed in the Alaska Capitol for more than a year, but on Tuesday, it became official as Kodiak Republican Rep. Louise Stutes became the first person to announce that she will run for Stevens' seat.
'I certainly will endorse Louise any way I can to help her out,' Stevens said on Wednesday. 'She should be a really fine senator. She's had a lot of experience in the House, and I think she'd do a great job, and I'd be glad to help her out in any way I can.'
Stutes filed a letter of intent with the Alaska Public Offices Commission shortly after the Alaska Legislature adjourned its regular session for the year.
Legislators are forbidden from campaigning during the session, and the day after the first year of the legislative session typically marks the informal opening of the candidate filing period.
Campaigning typically doesn't begin in earnest until after the second year of the legislative session.
Stutes' early start may be a foreshadowing of things to come in the district: Stevens has represented the area covering Kodiak and the southern Kenai Peninsula since being appointed to the seat in 2003, making next year's election a generational shift for the district.
Stutes said on Wednesday that fundraising doesn't come naturally to her, 'so I thought that I'd better get a jump start on it. You can't get a jump start on it until you file your letter.'
Stutes said she doesn't know whether there will be many candidates in the race.
Each of Alaska's Senate districts includes two House districts. Rep. Sarah Vance, R-Homer, represents the other half of Stevens' district and hasn't filed a letter of intent for next year's elections. She did not return a phone call seeking comment on Wednesday afternoon.
Stutes noted that her husband, commercial fisherman Stormy Stutes, grew up in Anchor Point, and they still have family members who live in Vance's district, so she has connections to that part of Alaska.
This isn't the first time that Stevens has said he will retire, but it's certain this time.
'I'm 83 now. I'll be 85 when I retire, and I think that's just enough,' he said by phone. 'I have other plans, things I want to do. I wrote a play about Ted Stevens that was successful in Anchorage; I want to do another one. I'm a bit of a painter, and I want to go on and do painting and writing and concentrate on those things, as well as spend time with my grandkids.'
Stutes said she's been interested in running to replace Stevens since that first abortive retirement.
'I'm really lucky. Gary and I get along really well. … He's been wonderful to work with. I'll really miss him, of course, because we have such a great working relationship,' she said.
Voters elected Stutes to replace longtime Kodiak lawmaker Alan Austerman in 2014 and reelected her five times since then. She has governed as a moderate Republican, frequently joining the House's predominantly Democratic coalition and once served a term as speaker of the House.
'I'm like every legislator. I really feel like I'm helping my district and Alaskans. Right or wrong, I feel like I've been able to make a difference with the Marine Highway System. I believe I've been able to help bring fisheries to the forefront,' Stutes said. 'When I first got elected years ago, I told Stormy that the one thing I want to do is take fisheries from the back burner and put them on the front burner. And I think that I've been somewhat successful in moving it forward.'
The Alaska Senate is currently controlled by a 14-person bipartisan coalition that includes nine Democrats and five Republicans. Three of those Republicans are up for reelection next year, and all are in potential swing districts.
Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, and Senate Majority Leader Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage, said they will run for office again. Stevens is the third.
Among the coalition's Democrats, Sens. Elvi Gray-Jackson, D-Anchorage, and Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, both confirmed that they will run for reelection.
Sens. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, and Lyman Hoffman, D-Bethel, have not yet filed letters of intent. Hoffman has been in the Legislature since 1987 and in the Senate since 1991, making him the longest-serving legislator in state history.
Senate Minority Leader Mike Shower, R-Wasilla, said on Wednesday that he hasn't yet decided whether he will run for reelection.
Sens. Shelley Hughes, R-Palmer, and Rob Myers, R-North Pole, also face reelection next year. Neither returned a text message seeking comment on Wednesday.
Among incumbent members of the state House, Reps. Maxine Dibert, D-Anchorage, Carolyn Hall, D-Anchorage, and Donna Mears, D-Anchorage, have all filed letters of intent for reelection.
Former Rep. Cliff Groh, D-Anchorage, announced that he will again seek to challenge Rep. David Nelson, R-Anchorage, in 2026. Nelson had been elected in 2020, lost to Groh in 2022 and defeated Groh in 2024.Through Wednesday afternoon, Groh was the only nonincumbent to file with the Public Offices Commission.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
a minute ago
- New York Times
Senate Adds Guardrails in an Effort to Force Trump to Obey Spending Bills
Top Republicans and Democrats in the Senate, alarmed by President's Trump's moves to withhold funding approved by Congress, have teamed up to add new safeguards to next year's spending bills that would ensure the Trump administration allocates federal dollars as lawmakers intend. The little-noticed moves are part of a quiet escalation in the battle between the legislative and executive branches over federal spending powers. Ahead of a Sept. 30 deadline for funding the government, the bipartisan leaders of the Senate Appropriations Committee have said they must take extra steps to assert their authority over the allocation of government dollars, after the Trump administration has repeatedly questioned and defied congressional instructions on spending. 'In the past, the agency and department secretaries have always, or almost always, followed that guidance,' Senator Susan Collins, the Maine Republican who leads the committee, said in an interview. 'But in this administration, it is clear that we need to move far more of that language on how the money should be spent into the bills themselves.' The changes may not survive negotiations with the House, where Republicans have been far more deferential to Mr. Trump. And they may not have a chance to be enacted, given the White House's determination to have its way on spending. But proponents say that at the very least, the safeguards could strengthen the position of Congress in future legal battles over funding. The guardrails are largely technical and include putting instructions into legislative text that would have previously been spelled out in nonbinding reports. For example, officials say that detailed tables on spending for major agencies such as the Justice Department and the Department of Health and Human Services are now being added to the text of the bills themselves, to try to assure that the funds are used for their specified purposes. The guardrails also include significant new requirements for reporting to Congress on terminating contracts and grant awards, as well as for making substantial reductions in the federal work force. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Time Magazine
a minute ago
- Time Magazine
Texas GOP Set to Pass Gerrymandered Map Despite Protests
Texas Republicans are likely to clear a key hurdle in their bid to pass sweeping redistricting plans in the state on Wednesday, despite a two-week-long protest from Democrats and a two-night camp-out from one representative in the Capitol building. Democrat Texas Rep. Nicole Collier stayed locked in the chamber of the Texas Legislature for 48 hours rather than adhere to strict new surveillance rules implemented by lawmakers following a Democratic walkout in protest over a plan to add five more GOP seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. It came after more than 50 state Democratic representatives left Texas for two weeks to deny Republicans a quorum and delay a vote to drastically redraw the state electoral map to the Republican Party's advantage. Republicans issued civil arrest warrants to bring the Democrats back to the state to force their eventual return. New guidelines introduced following that protest prevented party members from leaving the House chambers without a police escort and a signed permission slip. Collier refused to sign the 'permission slip' to leave the chamber, saying that she did not want to 'sign away [her] dignity.' Republicans finally took up the redistricting session on Wednesday morning after achieving the necessary quorum for a vote, meaning Collier and her Democratic colleagues' protests against the plan are likely to come to an end. In a last-ditch effort to delay the redistricting plan, Minority Leader Gene Wu planned to introduce an amendment that would require the new House map to take effect only after the files related to the crimes of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein are released. Epstein's files have haunted President Donald Trump and his Administration as both Democrats and many in his own base have called for them to be released this summer. The vote could go well into the evening in Austin, depending on how long the Democrats continue to try to stall the plan. Trump has long called for redistricting in Texas in hopes of protecting the Republicans' thin majority in the U.S. House of Representatives, which currently stands at 219-212. 'I got the highest vote in the history of Texas, as you probably know, and we are entitled to five more seats,' Trump said in May. It was unclear what legal or Constitutional mechanism he was referring to that entitled him to 5 more seats. With the Democrats having returned from their protest, the Republican representatives now have the numbers necessary to continue their vote, despite their protest to the round-the-clock police escorts to ensure their attendance at Wednesday's session. Read More: The Difference Between Gerrymandering and Redistricting, Explained Collier was joined in her protest on Tuesday by several Democratic State Reps., including Mihaela Plesa, Morales Shaw, Rhetta Bowers, Cassandra Garcia Hernandez, Salman Bhojani and Minority Leader Wu, who remained overnight with Collier, locked into the chamber until the House reconvened in the morning. Former Vice President Kamala Harris called Rep. Collier on the phone to cheer her on on Tuesday: 'You are among those who history will reveal to have been heroes of this moment, so you just stay strong,' she said. 'We are in that room with you.' The GOP's redistricting plan has set off a chain reaction of Democratic responses across the country. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has launched his own plan to redraw his state's maps and pick up more Democratic seats in the state with the most federal representatives. Other Democratic Governors have now joined Newsom, including Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York, who said that if Texas proceeds with its plan, 'we must do the same,' as has Maryland's Democratic leadership.


CNN
a minute ago
- CNN
Judge rules that some Texas schools don't have to display Ten Commandments in classrooms
ReligionFacebookTweetLink Follow A federal judge has ruled that several Texas school districts do not need to comply with a state law requiring the Ten Commandments to be displayed in all classrooms. The colorful 55-page opinion issued Wednesday by US District Judge Fred Biery is the latest court victory in a series of legal challenges to laws that have been enacted in three southern states over the last year that require public schools to display the Ten Commandments. 'Even though the Ten Commandments would not be affirmatively taught, the captive audience of students likely would have questions, which teachers would feel compelled to answer. That is what they do,' Biery wrote. The judge – who was appointed by Bill Clinton – skewered the controversial law, known as S.B. 10, concluding that it's likely unconstitutional and cannot be enforced in several Texas school districts, including ones in Houston, Austin and Fort Bend County. 'Teenage boys, being the curious hormonally driven creatures they are, might ask: 'Mrs. Walker, I know about lying and I love my parents, but how do I do adultery?'' Biery added. 'Truly an awkward moment for overworked and underpaid educators, who already have to deal with sex education issues, … and a classic example of the law of unintended consequences in legislative edicts.' The judge ended his opinion by writing, 'For those who disagree with the Court's decision and who would do so with threats, vulgarities and violence, Grace and Peace unto you. May humankind of all faiths, beliefs and non-beliefs be reconciled one to another. Amen.' More than a dozen Texas families of various faiths sued over the state's law – which was signed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in June and is set to take effect statewide starting next month – arguing it violates the First Amendment's Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause. Biery agreed. The law, he said, 'impermissibly takes sides on theological questions and officially favors Christian denominations over others.' The Texas law requires public schools to post in classrooms a 16-by-20-inch (41-by-51-centimeter) poster or framed copy of a specific English version of the commandments, even though translations and interpretations vary across denominations, faiths and languages and may differ in homes and houses of worship. Similar laws were enacted this year and last year in Arkansas and Louisiana. Court challenges to those measures have also resulted in favorable rulings. Legal experts have said that it's likely the cases will eventually be appealed to the US Supreme Court. Attorneys for the families behind the Texas case cast Biery's ruling as a strong rejection of state lawmakers' push to impose their religious preferences on to public school students in the Lone Star State. 'Today's ruling is a major win that protects the constitutional right to religious freedom for Texas families of all backgrounds,' said Tommy Buser-Clancy, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union. 'The court affirmed what we have long said: Public schools are for educating, not evangelizing.' CNN has reached out to Abbott's office and the Texas attorney general's office for comment on the ruling.