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Tshibaka: “It’s Time for a Change” on supporting constitutionalist nominees
Alaska Republican U.S. Senate candidate Kelly Tshibaka today unveiled principles she will employ to support constitutionalist presidential nominees and oppose radical, leftist nominations as part of her “It’s Time for a Change” agenda. Especially under President Joe Biden, extreme leftists have enacted policies that have been devastating to Alaska’s economy and independence.
Incumbent Sen. Lisa Murkowski voted for more than 90 percent of Biden’s cabinet nominees, including environmental extremist Deb Haaland as Interior Secretary, and supported Ketanji Brown Jackson for the U.S. Supreme Court. Murkowski has also voted to confirm leftist nominees throughout the judicial system, including the judge who blocked the job-creating Willow oil and gas project and the life-saving King Cove Road. Murkowski also supported “Defund the Police” activist Vanita Gupta to become the Department of Justice official in charge of grants to local police departments.
“Unelected bureaucrats and leftist political appointees are enacting an agenda that means death to our resource industries and the thousands of jobs and families they support,” Tshibaka said. “Lisa Murkowski votes to approve almost all of them because she cares more about her membership in the D.C. club than she does about Alaska. When I’m in the Senate, I will do everything I can to stop radical nominees from imposing rules from the Lower 48 that purposely strangle us.”
As part of her “It’s Time for a Change” agenda, Tshibaka made the following pledges regarding constitutionalist nominees:
Tshibaka, who was born and raised in Alaska, has spent her career exposing fraud and abuse in government and served as Commissioner of Administration for the State of Alaska until she stepped down to announce her campaign. Her father was a union electrician and Vietnam War veteran, and her mother was one of the first workers at the startup of Prudhoe Bay, one of Alaska's large oil fields. Her parents were homeless for a time in the 1970s but fought their way into the working class thanks to a job in the oil industry.
Tshibaka graduated from Steller Secondary School in Anchorage and was the first in her family to pursue a college degree, beginning her studies at the University of Alaska Anchorage before graduating from college and law school. She lives in Anchorage with her husband, Niki, and their five children.
Incumbent Sen. Lisa Murkowski voted for more than 90 percent of Biden’s cabinet nominees, including environmental extremist Deb Haaland as Interior Secretary, and supported Ketanji Brown Jackson for the U.S. Supreme Court. Murkowski has also voted to confirm leftist nominees throughout the judicial system, including the judge who blocked the job-creating Willow oil and gas project and the life-saving King Cove Road. Murkowski also supported “Defund the Police” activist Vanita Gupta to become the Department of Justice official in charge of grants to local police departments.
“Unelected bureaucrats and leftist political appointees are enacting an agenda that means death to our resource industries and the thousands of jobs and families they support,” Tshibaka said. “Lisa Murkowski votes to approve almost all of them because she cares more about her membership in the D.C. club than she does about Alaska. When I’m in the Senate, I will do everything I can to stop radical nominees from imposing rules from the Lower 48 that purposely strangle us.”
As part of her “It’s Time for a Change” agenda, Tshibaka made the following pledges regarding constitutionalist nominees:
- I will only support constitutionalist judicial nominees, those who interpret the law as it was written and who do not legislate from the bench.
- I will always oppose radical, leftist Cabinet, department, and judicial nominees.
- I will protect and defend our constitutional rights, fighting against executive branch agencies that infringe on our freedoms.
Tshibaka, who was born and raised in Alaska, has spent her career exposing fraud and abuse in government and served as Commissioner of Administration for the State of Alaska until she stepped down to announce her campaign. Her father was a union electrician and Vietnam War veteran, and her mother was one of the first workers at the startup of Prudhoe Bay, one of Alaska's large oil fields. Her parents were homeless for a time in the 1970s but fought their way into the working class thanks to a job in the oil industry.
Tshibaka graduated from Steller Secondary School in Anchorage and was the first in her family to pursue a college degree, beginning her studies at the University of Alaska Anchorage before graduating from college and law school. She lives in Anchorage with her husband, Niki, and their five children.
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