I am in Anchorage today and am jumping out of my skin because I think I found the most underrated Congressional race in the country—@AlyseGalvin's campaign for Alaska's sole House seat.pic.twitter.com/cKSV9iMECE
You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more
So why isn't Galvin getting huge national support? A big part of it is that (like most Alaskan voters) she is an independent. While she is a strong progressive who has committed to caucus with the Democrats, the Democratic Party doesn't much want to help her
Through a heroic effort, Galvin has raised $800,000 for her campaign, the lion's share as small donations from inside the state. She takes no corporate PAC money. And polling shows that she *leads* Young if prospective voters hear a short sentence describing her candidacy.
I can't think of a clearer example where simply adequately funding a candidate will net us a House seat this November. So it gives me the greatest pleasure to welcome Alyse Galvin to the Great Slate!pic.twitter.com/iRJJCyZ35b
Finally, as a personal favor to me, please watch this short video of Don Young bragging about how he once shot a sleeping bear. See if you can keep yourself from donating to his opponent. You can't! You won't!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bAsMKV6TSRw …
You can donate to @AlyseGalvin and nine other underrated progressive candidates on the Great Slate. Be an election hipster! Give to the races no one is talking about!https://secure.actblue.com/donate/great_slate …
If you need more convincing, here is a public polling memo from June that shows Galvin trailing Young by only four points if people haven't heard of her, and winning outright if they have. It really is just a matter of raising enough money to reach votershttps://drive.google.com/file/d/1ygufKlHl5cf9NgRdHx9RZLr23fsndKXz/view?usp=sharing …
I grew up in Anchorage and learned the greenhouse effect in 1st grade, and discussed why the glaciers were receding. If you go down to Portage while you’re there, into the early 90s the glacier was fully visible from the visitors center. Hasn’t been for decades.
Driving up AK-3 to Denali and seeing all the dead trees was chilling. The cold used to kill off the spruce bark beetles, but no more.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.