Updated
Updated · Anchorage Daily News · Jun 28
Alaska Weighs 2 Dan Sullivans on 2026 Ballot as Supreme Court Hearing Looms
Updated
Updated · Anchorage Daily News · Jun 28

Alaska Weighs 2 Dan Sullivans on 2026 Ballot as Supreme Court Hearing Looms

3 articles · Updated · Anchorage Daily News · Jun 28

Summary

  • At least 1 Dan Sullivan will appear on Alaska’s ballot later this year, and a second could join him depending on an Alaska Supreme Court hearing Monday.
  • The dispute centers on whether multiple same-name candidates can appear and how much voter confusion that may create in a race already shadowed by party-switching questions.
  • A 2014 Alaska race showed the risk: 19% of expected primary voters in one poll thought future U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan was former Anchorage Mayor Dan Sullivan.
  • David Reamer’s historical review argues the tactic is old rather than novel, citing examples from Nebraska, Boston and New York where similar-name candidates were used to siphon votes.
  • The broader backdrop is Alaska’s long election history, including rules once banning alcohol sales on election day until polls closed—a statute repealed effective Jan. 1, 2024.

Insights

Could having same-name candidates on a ballot inadvertently create more informed and diligent voters?
Why do simple election manipulation tactics persist despite centuries of legal reforms and changing voter behaviors?
Can modern voting systems like ranked-choice voting finally defeat ancient tactics designed to confuse voters?