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Constituents air complaints and questions

Constituents in Fairbanks comment to a cardboard portrait of US Senator Dan Sullivan at a quickly-scheduled town hall meeting he was not able to attend, Monday, March 17 at the Noel Wein Library.
Robyne
/
KUAC
Constituents in Fairbanks comment to a cardboard portrait of US Senator Dan Sullivan at a quickly-scheduled town hall meeting he was not able to attend.

Fairbanks constituents for Senator Dan Sullivan organized a town hall to hear from him during the Congressional spring break this week. But the hastily-arranged event didn’t jibe with the Senator’s schedule and he wasn’t able to appear. The organizers decided to hold the event anyway.

There was an overflow crowd at Noel Wein Library’s Auditorium Monday night, as about 175 people tried to squeeze in. A life-size portrait of Alaska’s junior US Senator, Dan Sullivan, was printed on cardboard and set up in the center of the room, which acted as a stand-in for the Senator. Constituents lined up at two microphones to address their grievances.

“My name is Sarah Garland. Today the Republican administration crossed yet another line, a particularly terrifying one. They have now openly defied a legal ruling by the courts. This was in regard to deportations, and I want to know, Senator Sullivan, what are you going to do?” Garland asked.

This week, U.S. senators and representatives return to their home districts, and very often hold constituent meetings. Kelly Barker described the ad-hoc organizing of this one.

“One person said we should do a town hall since Republicans are being told not to hold them, and we should hold one and let's invite Senator Sullivan.”

A spokesperson for Senator Sullivan said Monday that congressional offices have been flooded with calls and email messages asking about the many changes to federal jobs and spending made by the Trump administration. So much that it is hard to keep up.

Barker said the Fairbanks group made calls to set up the constituent meeting, and it took more than a week to get a response.

"And every effort was made through every avenue to extend the invitation… multiple times a day, calling every office number that we could find for him… and then one day at "Pack the Offices," which happens every Monday at the federal building, someone put a flyer for this town hall event in Sullivan's door slot, and, someone got a call after that." Barker explained.

"And they (Sullivan's office) said, ‘well, he won't be there.’ And the response was, well, we're gonna hold it anyway.”

An overflow crowd filled the auditorium at Noel Wein Library in Fairbanks Monday evening, March 17. Constituents came to vent frustrations about not getting responses to their questions from the Alaska congressional delegation.
Robyne
/
KUAC
An overflow crowd filled the auditorium at Noel Wein Library in Fairbanks Monday evening, March 17. Constituents came to vent frustrations about not getting responses to their questions from the Alaska congressional delegation.

The chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, Representative Richard Hudson of North Carolina told G.O.P. lawmakers two week ago to stop having town hall meetings, because many were leading to public confrontations with angry constituents, and could hurt them politically in the midterm elections.

Barker said she understands representatives are overwhelmed with constituent questions about the impacts of presidential Executive Orders and funding cuts from the Trump administration.

“We also do realize that, you know, his schedule's really packed and that this did happen at short notice. So, I want to give that caveat there," Barker said.

"At the same time, these are really tense times and you're our senator and we feel like you should meet with us.”

Republican leaders say many of these “empty chair” town halls across the country are set up just for social media fodder. But constituents at Monday’s town hall say they were trying to reach the Senator through his office, first.

Senator Sullivan. Hi, this is Shelby again. You should probably know my address by now; I leave you voicemails every single day. As a Yup’ik woman and a 100% disabled veteran with countless combat flying hours, I think I've earned at least one answer. One response.”

“Hi Dan. This is Sarah Furman. My voice is probably familiar to you by now. I have a few questions… how you're going to protect the people of Alaska from the gutting of Social Security and Medicaid? Where do you suggest the people of Fairbanks go for hospital services, if the Fairbanks Memorial Hospital has to close its doors without these payments?”

A cardboard portrait of U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan was set up as a stand-in for constituents to address. He was unable to come to the hastily-scheduled town meeting, March 17, so organizers went ahead without him.
Robyne
/
KUAC
A cardboard portrait of U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan was set up as a stand-in for constituents to address. He was unable to come to the hastily-scheduled town meeting, March 17, so organizers went ahead without him.

Many comments were about how Alaska would be affected by Canadian tolls and tariffs, deportation of legal immigrants and natural-born citizens, the chaos of not being able to prepare for a construction season, and the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.

“My name is Arianne Glover. I live in North Pole Alaska, I was selected to attend the model Arctic Council, with members in Russia in the spring of 2022, prior Russia's invasion of Ukraine. And with this background, I would think that as a former Marine, you did not serve our country in the military for 30 years to see a sitting US president stand side by side with a Russian autocrat, dictator, and oligarch with fascist tendencies,” Glover said.

There are similar town-hall meetings planned with Sullivan in Anchorage Wednesday, and Juneau on Thursday, each planned by different organizations or individuals. Senator Sullivan will be addressing the Alaska Legislature in Juneau on Thursday morning. He will return to Fairbanks Friday, where he will be the keynote speaker at the annual Republican Women’s dinner.

Robyne began her career in public media news at KUAC, coiling cables in the TV studio and loading reel-to-reel tape machines for the radio station.