Rep. Mary Peltola was prepared to take her oath of office on Tuesday, to begin her first full term after finishing out the remainder of the late Congressman Don Young’s term.
As befitting the first Alaska Native to serve in Congress, she wore a black kuspuk for the occasion — a traditional Yup’ik dress with big pockets trimmed in red. She also wore mukluk boots made of fur and hide.
But as the week dragged on Peltola, a Democrat, was still waiting to be sworn in, a ceremony that can’t take place until a new House speaker is elected. But after round after round of voting, the Republican majority has yet to elect a speaker — the first time this has happened in a century.
Then again, these are not ordinary times — and Peltola is no ordinary politician. In fact, she has said she would consider teaming up with Republicans to form a majority coalition, a form of power sharing that happens often in the Alaska Legislature.
Peltola’s Yup’ik supporters are not surprised to hear this. Marie Meade, a Yup’ik culture bearer and language teacher, says she’s glad Alaska voters have finally sent a politician to Washington D.C. who embraces the Yuuyaraq, a Yup’ik code of conduct that has been passed down across the generations.
“For me, Yuuyaraq is just being human, to live and survive, to live honorably,” said Meade, who believes the world needs more “Yuuyaraq’ing.”
“I’m just happy and joyous,” Meade said on Nov. 8, the night Peltola learned she was the top vote-getter in her fight to keep her job in Congress. At that point, under the state’s new system of ranked choice voting, Peltola did not have enough votes to win outright and had to wait until second choice votes were counted. When they were included in the totals, she won with a 10 percentage point lead.
Meade said she felt pride during the campaign as she watched Peltola practice Yuuraraq, and its teachings that encourage interconnectedness, balance and respect for others, even those you disagree with.
Sen. Donny Olson, a Democrat who currently serves in a Senate bi-partisan majority coalition, believes Peltola is in a position to influence national politics.
“Whether you were a Democrat or a Republican, she was able to identify with both sides and was able to connect with them. And I think that was the secret that people seemed to really latch onto.”
Olson, who is an Inupiat from the Bering Sea region, served with Peltola in the state Legislature. He said cultural values like the Yuuyaraq are shaped by Alaska’s harsh environment.
“You cannot have anybody that’s adversarial,” Olson said. “You need to help somebody else if they’re in need of food, in need of shelter, in need of friendship, in need of anything.”
As a state lawmaker, Peltola was known for her ability to work across the aisle. When she started the tradition of wearing kuspuks on Fridays at the State Capitol in support of an Alaska Native staffer who was suffering from a serious illness, it wasn’t long before other female lawmakers followed suit, both Democrats and Republicans. Soon male lawmakers began wearing them, too.
Peltola also bonded with Sarah Palin when Palin was governor. Both were pregnant at the same time and remained friendly, even after Palin stepped into the race for Congress. During the candidate forum at the Alaska Federation of Natives in October, Palin, a Republican, acknowledged her special relationship with a Democrat.
“Let me tell you, I’ve been involved in politics for 30 years. But this is the toughest campaign, because of her, Mary,” Palin said to the crowd, which began cheering wildly. “We are in Mary’s house, I know that.”
Anton McParland, who was Peltola’s campaign manager, said this was a powerful political moment.
“It was so inspiring and real,” McParland said. “It was that relationship that was more important than the partisanship.”
McParland said it’s rare to find a politician who is so good at building across-the-aisle relationships.
“There are like aspects of her Yup’ik upbringing that she would share with me, how one speaks more in the affirmative than the negative,” McParland said.
It didn’t hurt Peltola that Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican, endorsed her candidacy over the two Republicans in the race, Palin and Nick Begich, who sniped at each other constantly during the campaign, allowing Peltola to stand out in contrast.
But Art Hackney, a consultant for Begich, said this was not the main reason Peltola won — that her election, more than anything else, was probably due to Alaska’s new ranked choice voting system — and an element of luck, when Al Gross pulled out of the special election to finish Don Young’s term.
“For whatever reason, Al Gross, who was the top vote-getter on the Democratic side, dropped out and left it all to her,” Hackney said. “So everybody on the Democratic side was able to get behind her, which means she didn’t have to run a tit-for-tat primary campaign.”
Hackney said Peltola might have bipartisan appeal but it was Palin’s entry into the race, which split the vote between the two Republicans, that paved the way for Peltola.
“It left her a free ride to go be what she certainly is that everybody knows her for, is charming. And that’s wonderful,” Hackney said. “She is charming, and she does know a lot. At the same time, the proof of the pudding will be in the eating, depending on what she actually does back there.”
With Republicans in control of the House, Hackney said Peltola won’t have the committee assignments she had under Nancy Pelosi’s leadership and may have trouble getting much accomplished, despite her desire to build bridges to Republicans.
Peltola, on election night, acknowledged she was in for a tough job — and that while serving out Young’s term, she was struck by how toxic today’s politics are compared to when she served in the state Legislature, between 1999 and 2009.
Peltola said partisanship permeates politics today, from Washington D.C., to the school boards and city councils in the smallest communities.
“I think at the local level, they’re not designed to be partisan, but the partisanship has really crept down to every level. And it’s on steroids in Washington, D.C.,” she said. “It’s hard to go to committee hearings and talk about the issue at hand, because the conversation quickly turns into partisan bickering.”
Jim LaBelle, a retired Alaska Native studies and history professor who taught at the University of Alaska Anchorage, hopes Peltola will find a way to use her Native culture to navigate these difficult times. Alaska has only one lone vote in Congress, and so that vote needs to be amplified, he said.
“She needs to take advantage of the novelty of her being a Yup’ik woman, using that position to get their attention on strategic issues that she’s working on,” said LaBelle, who believes Peltola is in a position to set a powerful example for the country.
A certain amount of showmanship from Alaska’s representative in Congress would not be unprecedented. Don Young, who held the job for almost a half a century, had a stuffed grizzly bear outside his office to greet visitors and excelled at the kind of political theater that goes against the grain of Yup’ik Yuuyaraq.
“So much of Yuuyaraq is setting aside your own ego. Setting aside yourself,” said Peltola, who struggled privately with being the center of attention during her campaign, key to winning her race. But Peltola said one part of her job is the essence of Yuuyaraq.
“Really thinking about other people and thinking about the community, thinking about the knowledge that has been passed onto you,” she said.
And Yuyaraaq has other teachings that Peltola finds helpful.
“One of the best ones is to have a good sense of humor, and to find humor in all the different moments. So much of life is enjoying the moment,” she said.
And as the 118th Congress gets underway, there is no shortage of opportunities to practice Yuuyaraq.
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