Anchorage Assembly majority hailed by Alaska Democrats as a major victory for party

By SUZANNE DOWNING

April 29, 2026 – The Anchorage Assembly took on a bluer political tone Tuesday night, as newly elected and reelected members were sworn in during a regular Assembly meeting, followed by a leadership vote that elevated incumbent member Anna Brawley to chair of the body.

Brawley was selected by her colleagues to lead the 12-member Assembly, which now tilts firmly to the political left following the April municipal election. The swearing-in formalized a shift that has been building in recent cycles, but is now unmistakable in both numbers and hardline political pull.

The change did not go unnoticed by the Alaska Democratic Party, which quickly moved to celebrate the outcome. In a public post following the election, party officials highlighted that all seven candidates they supported in Anchorage municipal races were victorious, naming Brawley among them. The message reveals what has become an open secret in Anchorage politics: so-called “nonpartisan” races are increasingly shaped by Democrat partisan machinery, while the Alaska Republican Party maintains its stance that the local races are nonpartisan, thus the GOP invests little effort in them.

While municipal elections in Anchorage are officially nonpartisan, the reality, observers note, is far more complex. Democrats in this cycle, have played an active role, providing campaign infrastructure, voter data, and access to professional consulting networks that offer discounted digital advertising and strategic support.

Under Alaska campaign disclosure laws, these relationships are supposed to be reported through independent expenditures and campaign filings. Still, the system creates a disconnect between how races are presented to voters and how they are actually conducted. Voters may not be aware of the operators behind the curtain.

When a political party can point to a clean sweep of its endorsed candidates, it raises questions about whether the nonpartisan label has any meaningful value.

Adding to the dynamic is the scale of resources involved. Party-aligned groups can deliver thousands of dollars in in-kind support, including voter targeting data and bundled advertising strategies that are not readily available to candidates operating independently. That advantage tilts the playing field in subtle but significant ways.

Eagle River’s Donald Handeland, considered the lone non-Democrat voted onto the Assembly, was also sworn in Tuesday night. His win was not celebrated by the Democrats.

With Brawley now holding the gavel, the Assembly enters its new term with the same leftist governing majority and a leadership team aligned with it.

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2 thoughts on “Anchorage Assembly majority hailed by Alaska Democrats as a major victory for party”
  1. Why is this a surprise. I keep saying this, “The conservatives must move the Assembly and Mayor races to the fall like Wasilla did or they will lose the assembly seats to the D’s” The union and Muni phone backs get out their vote and normal residents go on with their lives and miss this election. How long will this go on and the conservatives keep thinking they have a chance?

    It’s almost like they don’t want to win. How do get this initiative on the ballot? Get a petition coupled with a 2nd petition for the elimination of the gas tax so everyone will sign and go to the poles.

    Absent this, the same win for the D’s

  2. The Marxist Nine continue to reign supreme, with a new (and fatter) cat woman at the helm.
    .
    All she’s missing is the Crayola blue hair and the “retarded owl” radical leftist giant eyeglasses with the thick black frames.

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