Political cheats should pay the fine

A state Superior Court judge last week upheld fines of more than $90,000 against a group that opposes ranked-choice voting in Alaska. The group wasn’t fined by the Alaska Public Offices Commission for its views on the new voting system, but for cheating and lying in its ongoing effort to overturn the voting system, which was approved by voters in 2020.

Back in December 2022, the director of the anti-ranked-choice voting group Alaskans for Honest Elections and others established a tax-exempt church in Washington state “to promote Christian doctrines, establish and oversee places of worship, evangelize worldwide, support missionary activities” and promote “the preservation of truth.”

And to funnel money back to the political campaign office in Alaska, without disclosing the donors. So much for preserving the truth.

Art Mathias, who led both the anti-ranked voting group in Alaska and the new “church” in Washington state, donated $90,000 to the church, which then sent the money to the political campaign in Alaska.

Alaskans for Honest Elections did not initially disclose the source of the money, which the public offices commission determined violated state law. The group, along with Mathias, went to court, alleging that the fine violated their free-speech rights. Besides, they told the court, the state law against hiding the identity of donors did not apply to the ballot initiative campaign to overturn ranked-choice voting.

Essentially, among all their appeal points, they argued that campaign finance disclosure laws do not apply to them.

The judge, however, wasn’t buying it, and upheld all but a few hundred dollars of the fines.

Litigation continues in court over whether Alaskans for Honest Elections has gathered enough valid petition signatures to win a spot on this fall’s statewide ballot to overturn ranked-choice voting. The new voting system eliminated party primary elections, with all candidates running tother in the primary and the top four advancing to the general election.

If the initiative makes it to the ballot, Alaskans will have the chance to vote to repeal or retain ranking voting. That’s how the system should work. Breaking the law to get on the ballot, hiding the identity of donors and cleansing the money through a pop-up church is not how the system should work.

Alaskans for Honest Elections should follow their name, behave honestly and pay the fines.

- Wrangell Sentinel

 

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