
Anchorage Daily News investigative ace Richard Mauer has been sleuthing some of Sen. Stevens' earmarks, and has homed in on the Seward Sea Life Center. More specifically, Mauer's report concentrates on the land deal Sen. Stevens and his office relentlessly pushed into the hands of his former aide, Trevor McCabe.
One of the things that Mauer's narrative clearly shows is how, when Sen. Stevens insinuates himself into a public process, people caught in the crossfire feel uncomfortable. People who feel like they might have to become unwilling accessories to the way the Federal earmarks get processed into projects favorable to one friend of Ted or another, often are put into a position of believing that if they don't enable Ted or Friends of Ted, their career, their business or their position in their community will be slimed.
In that sense, Mauer's article is very strong, although that isn't the article's central message. Another thing that came through is how tired the people of Seward and the City of Seward must be getting of seeing how this deal went down, and how it projects negatively on the community's image. If there is a warning here, it might be "If you know what's good for you, watch how you touch - or don't touch - Ted's magic money!"
And that same message is carried today in the Washington Post by conservative columnist George Will, in an opinion piece about Don Young and Coconut Road. Progressive Alaska covered the same territory last year that Wills is now traveling. Wills is saying that the dead end marking the derailment of Young's unconstitutional attempt to get an earmark directed to shady contributors is more than a cul-de-sac barrier hurricane fence to nowhere. Wills is saying it is a bridge to permanent minority status for the GOP. Go, Don!
It is remarkable that Diane Benson, the first political aspirant to request an investigation into Young's questionable Coconut Road earmark insertion, isn't quoted more in articles now that cover what she so ably brought out early last Autumn.
image for Progressive Alaska by Darkblack