Liz Ruskin, Alaska Public Media

Liz Ruskin, Alaska Public Media
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Liz Ruskin is the Washington, D.C., correspondent at Alaska Public Media. Reach her at lruskin@alaskapublic.org. Read more about Liz here.

Murkowski says Supreme Court should live by an ethics code of its own making

She's co-sponsoring a bill that would require the justices to adopt their own ethics rules. She and Sen. Angus King are the only sponsors so far.

Alaska Supreme Court reaffirms decision leaving 5th-place finisher off U.S. House ballot

Justices say the state made the right call when it decided not to advance Tara Sweeney to special election ballot.
women hold an era yes sign

Murkowski votes with Democrats to advance Equal Rights Amendment but measure stalls in Senate

Sen. Murkowski co-sponsored the ERA resolution. Sen. Sullivan voted no citing "serious constitutional infirmities."
Three women holding Alaska Native regalia,

Federal commission hears from Alaskans on high rate of missing and murdered Indigenous people

The Not Invisible Act Commission met in Anchorage this week to hear testimony from victims and from advocates working to prevent violence.
small bodies of water dot the tundra

Corps to reconsider permit rejection for proposed Pebble mine

It's a partial win for Pebble on appeal, but mine developers also have an EPA veto to contend with.
a man in a suit

Rep. Peltola’s party-bending chief of staff departs

Alex Ortiz was the last chief of staff for Rep. Don Young and helped cement Peltola's image as bipartisan.

Alaska writer Don Rearden finds AI has his number, and it freaks him out

Don Rearden challenged a bot to write a poem. The result was trippy for him, and for reporter Liz Ruskin.

ExxonMobil says it plans ‘relatively limited’ Arctic investment

ExxonMobil told shareholders not to expect an expansion of Arctic activities. A second Arctic National Wildlife Refuge lease sale is expected in 2024.

On trip to Ukraine, Murkowski calls aid ‘worth every penny’

The U.S. has given $35 billion in security aid to Ukraine. "An investment in the democracy of the free world," Sen. Murkowski calls it.
Construction workers walk down a city street.

Alaska population dipped last year, Census Bureau finds

More people moved out of Alaska than into the state last year, but other population factors nearly offset the loss.

Alaskan sentenced in Jan. 6 riot at Capitol tells judge he needs a gun for moose defense

Aaron Mileur was sentenced to two years of probation. He'd like to modify one of the terms.

Peltola says charges against Trump further divide Americans

Rep. Mary Peltola avoided passing judgment on former president Donald Trump's indictment Tuesday, but called it "a bleak day for Americans."
man standing at a microphone

With the Trump charges still sealed, Sullivan denounces prosecution as unjust

Sen. Sullivan's castigation of the decision to charge the former president contrasts with the neutral positions taken by the rest of the Alaska delegation.

UAA to house Ted Stevens papers

The collection fills 4,800 boxes, not counting a warehouse full of memorabilia.
woman in striped jacket

Peltola speaks of Second Amendment rights, not gun control, following Nashville shooting

Rep. Mary Peltola on Tuesday plugged "Second Amendment rights and good values."

Judge likely to rule next week on halting Willow construction on Alaska’s North Slope

The Legislature and Alaska's congressional delegation have jointly filed an amicus brief urging the judge not to grant an injunction.

Arctic policy conference brings international leaders to Anchorage. Russia not included.

Arctic Encounter has taken on new focus as Russia's invasion of Ukraine put the Arctic Council on pause.
an oil facility in a remote, snowy area

Alaska regulators examine ConocoPhillips’ 2022 Alpine gas leak near Nuiqsut

ConocoPhillips says it now monitors well pressure more closely and would use more cement to reinforce its wells if needed.
banner on grass outside a building with columns

Willow protesters dog Biden as he touts his environmental achievements

The protests haven't been huge, but the focus on the Willow project could tarnish Biden's climate legacy.