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Alaska Legislature Falls Two Votes Short of Overriding Elections Bill Veto

Cover image for article: Alaska Legislature Falls Two Votes Short of Overriding Elections Bill Veto

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Alaska Legislature Falls Two Votes Short of Overriding Elections Bill Veto

by Alaska News·May 5, 2026(1mo ago)
4 min readJuneauAI
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The Alaska Legislature fell two votes short Monday of overriding Gov. Mike Dunleavy's veto of a comprehensive elections reform bill that would have let voters track their ballots online and fix minor errors before their ballots are rejected.

Senate Bill 64 would have allowed voters to track their ballots online, given them a chance to fix minor errors on ballot envelopes, clarified that tribal identification is acceptable at polling places, and created a rural liaison position to help remote communities conduct elections.

Senate President Gary Stevens announced the result after a two-hour debate. "By a vote of 38 yeas and 22 nays, the joint legislative session has failed to override the governor's veto of Senate Bill 64," Stevens said.

The bill represented nearly a decade of work on election reform. Over the past 10 years, legislators introduced 164 election-related bills and more than 40 resolutions, but only three became law and none significantly changed how Alaska conducts elections, according to Sen. Bill Wielechowski, who helped negotiate the compromise. Rep. Sarah Vance noted she had scrutinized the vast majority of those bills during her eight years in the legislature.

Wielechowski said the bill emerged from months of negotiations between legislators who disagree on ranked choice voting but agreed on election administration improvements. He said the governor's veto message cited "operational burdens" rather than policy disagreements, despite the administration supporting similar provisions in legislation it introduced in 2022.

Dunleavy vetoed the bill in late April, saying the Division of Elections needed more time to implement the changes. His administration had introduced ballot tracking and curing legislation in 2022 with a July 1 effective date, requiring implementation in less than two months. Senate Bill 64 would have delayed implementation until the November general election, 182 days away.

Vance, a Homer Republican who co-sponsored the bill, said the current system fails voters. "Right now, our system is broken where not every vote is being counted," Vance said. "My constituents tell me that every illegal vote cancels out their legal one, thus nullifying their voice."

Sen. Loki Tobin said approximately 1.7 percent of Alaska voters had their ballots rejected in the 2024 general election. In his district, which includes Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, 123 ballots were rejected, with 53 thrown out because of witness signature issues. "Just imagine being a soldier, an airman stationed overseas defending democracy and not having your voice heard here in Alaska," Tobin said.

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Ballot curing exists in 33 states, and ballot tracking is used in 46 states, according to the U.S. Election Assistance Commission's 2024 report to Congress. Sen. Mike Cronk noted that Texas and Florida, two Republican-led states, have both ballot tracking and ballot curing.

Supporters said the bill would have strengthened election security and improved transparency. Wielechowski said it would have made it a crime to tamper with voting machines or ballot envelopes, and would have required daily public release of updated tabulation data. He said the bill would have allowed the division to begin reviewing absentee ballots 12 days before Election Day instead of seven, speeding up results and allowing certification five days earlier.

Sen. Jesse Bjorkman said the bill would have strengthened election security by requiring photo identification at polling places. Under current law, voters can show a hunting license or utility bill as identification. Supporters said the bill would have made those forms of identification unacceptable.

Rep. Rebecca Schwanke opposed the override, saying the 10-day ballot curing timeline would not work for Alaska's most remote communities. "The statewide ballot curing process as written with a 10-day rule simply does not work for the majority of our hardest-to-reach, most distant rural communities," Schwanke said. She also raised concerns that the bill's true-source donor disclosure provisions would permanently mask individuals who have the financial means to influence ballot initiatives.

Rep. Mike Prax said the bill did not address underlying problems with voter roll accuracy. He said the Motor Voter Act and automatic voter registration through Permanent Fund Dividend applications create inaccuracies that the bill would not fix. Prax also argued the bill would weaken ballot security safeguards, saying it would make it harder to detect ballot harvesting. Supporters later clarified that witness signatures would still be required under the bill.

Sen. Bert Hoffman, who represents rural Alaska, urged colleagues to support the override. "All of us have sent out ballots, claiming that we're going to do the right thing, we're going to represent the people to the best of our ability," Hoffman said. "Well, now is a chance for you to vote and do what you think is right to the best of your ability to make sure all of the people that voted for you and those that did not get their votes counted are corrected."

Wielechowski said the bill would have required the Division of Elections to implement ballot tracking within 26 weeks. In 2022, the division implemented ballot tracking in six weeks for the June special election following Congressman Don Young's death, according to a division press release. A ballot tracking company told legislative staff it could implement statewide tracking in 30 days, with 90 days being a more comfortable timeframe.

The House voted 23-17 in favor of the override. The Senate voted 15-5 in favor. The combined 38-22 vote fell two short of the 40 votes required under the Alaska Constitution to override a gubernatorial veto.

The bill had passed both chambers with bipartisan support earlier this year. The failure to override means Alaska's election procedures will remain unchanged for the 2026 election cycle.

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