Pat Tynan, left, and Tom Melville, review absentee ballots Tuesday at the Division of Elections office at the Mendenhall Mall. The review process is taking place in a separate room from where ballots are being tallied for the official results. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)

Pat Tynan, left, and Tom Melville, review absentee ballots Tuesday at the Division of Elections office at the Mendenhall Mall. The review process is taking place in a separate room from where ballots are being tallied for the official results. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)

Incumbents solidify positions in updated election count

Peltola, Murkowski and Dunleavy likely to prevail when ranked choice ballots are tallied Nov. 23

This story has been updated with results released after Tuesday’s print deadline.

There’s little change among the leaders in Alaska’s congressional and gubernatorial races — with all three incumbents solidly positioned for reelection — halfway between Election Day and the day when ranked choice votes will be tallied to determine the winners, according to updated results released Tuesday by the state Division of Elections.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola is maintaining a dominant first-choice vote lead over two Republican challengers, Republican U.S. Senate challenger Kelly Tshibaka is clinging to a tiny lead over incumbent Republican Lisa Murkowski (although the latter is likely to prevail from Democratic ranked choice votes) and Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy still appears assured of reelection with about 51% of first-choice votes compared to 44% for his two main challengers.

The update that includes about 27,000 ballots is the first since the “same-day” results on Election Night were released during the early morning hours last Wednesday. Another interim update is scheduled Friday since it’s the deadline for absentee ballots mailed within the U.S., with the final tally including the ranked choice preferences scheduled Nov. 23 since it’s the 15-day deadline for internationally postmarked absentee ballots to arrive.

Roughly 17,500 ballots remain outstanding and/or uncounted, according to elections officials. The elections division is releasing daily updates of ballots received as a way of assuring people about the integrity of the counting process, said Tiffany Montemayor, an elections division spokesperson.

“It’s not 10,000 ballots that are coming out of nowhere,” she said. “We’re receiving them every day.”

Different types of ballot processing are occurring in different offices in Juneau. Workers at the official elections division office on Tuesday were, among other things, scanning ballots originally hand-counted in their precincts to determine first-choice votes so they can be tallied during the ranked choice process if necessary. The actual counting of ballots, as well as other operations such as processing absentee ballots, is taking places in separate rooms at space the elections division occupies at Mendenhall Mall.

Members of the public are allowed to observe the counting process at the mall, but so far the disruptions and controversies involving observers in some other states aren’t occurring in Alaska, said Lauri Wilson, Region I Elections Supervisor at the mall location.

“We’ve had a few observers, not many,” she said, noting the interest isn’t drastically different compared to other elections during her roughly 30 years working for the division. “I think a few candidates and parties have rotated people through.”

Updated results by race

A total of 245,013 ballots representing 40.71% of registered voters were tallied as of Tuesday, according to the elections division.

In the U.S. Senate race the latest tally has Tshibaka at 43.34%, Murkowski at 43.11%, Democrat Patricia Chesbro at 10.11% and Republican Buzz Kelley (who suspended his campaign and endorsed Tshibaka shortly after the August primary) at 2.87%. Tshibaka had an initial lead of 6% in the first Election Night tally, but the margin has all but vanished as uncounted votes from primarily rural regions favoring Murkowski have come in.

Peltola leads the U.S. House race with 48.13%, followed by Republicans Sarah Palin at 26.08% and Nick Begich III at 23.76%. While the combined vote totals of the Republicans could make one of them the winner, a similar number of votes for the three candidates during the August primary resulted in Peltola prevailing because many voters for the Republican candidates did not rank a second choice.

Dunleavy is retaining a dominant lead with 51.04% of the vote, followed by Democrat Les Gara at 23.81% and independent former Gov. Bill Walker at 20.42%. Even if Dunleavy were to fall below 50% when all first-choice ballots are tallied, he is expected to get most of the second-choice votes from the 4.46% of voters who picked Republican Charlie Pierce as their first choice.

• Contact Mark Sabbatini at mark.sabbatini@juneauempire.com

Steve Lewis, foreground, and Stephen Sorensen from the Alaska State Review Board scan ballots from precincts where they were hand counted at the Division of Elections office Tuesday. The hand counts were for first-choice votes only, while the scans will be used for ranked choice tallies for any races where a candidate does not have a first-choice majority. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)

Steve Lewis, foreground, and Stephen Sorensen from the Alaska State Review Board scan ballots from precincts where they were hand counted at the Division of Elections office Tuesday. The hand counts were for first-choice votes only, while the scans will be used for ranked choice tallies for any races where a candidate does not have a first-choice majority. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)

More in News

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Aurora forecast through the week of Nov. 17

These forecasts are courtesy of the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute… Continue reading

The Palmer project would sit in the watershed of the Chilkat River, pictured here. (Scott McMurren/Flickr under Creative Commons license 2.0)
Japanese smelting giant pulls out of major Southeast Alaska mining project

Palmer development, above the salmon-bearing Chilkat River, has for years fueled political divisions.

Juneau Police Department cars are parked outside the downtown branch station on Thursday. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
JPD’s daily incident reports getting thinner and vaguer. Why and does it matter?

Average of 5.12 daily incidents in October down from 10.74 a decade ago; details also far fewer.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Monday, Nov. 18, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

The Douglas Island Breeze In on Wednesday. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
New owner seeks to transfer Douglas Island Breeze In’s retail alcohol license to Foodland IGA

Transfer would allow company to take over space next to supermarket occupied by Kenny’s Liquor Market.

A butter clam. Butter clams are found from the Aleutian Islands to the California coast. They are known to retain algal toxins longer than other species of shellfish. (Photo provided by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
Among butter clams, which pose toxin dangers to Alaska harvesters, size matters, study indicates

Higher concentrations found in bigger specimens, UAS researchers find of clams on beaches near Juneau.

An aerial view of people standing near destroyed and damaged buildings in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene flooding on Oct. 8, 2024 in Bat Cave, North Carolina. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Members of U.S. Senate back disaster aid request amid increasing storm severity

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration’s request for nearly $100 billion in natural… Continue reading

Media members and other observers gather at the Alaska Division of Elections office on Wednesday evening as the results of all ballots, including ranked choice tabulations, were announced. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Ranked choice voting repeal fails by 0.2%, Begich defeats Peltola 51.3%-48.7% on final day of counting

Tally released Wednesday night remains unofficial until Nov. 30 certification.

Looking through the dining room and reception area to the front door. The table will be covered with holiday treats during the afternoon open house. The Stickley slide table, when several extensions are added, provides comfortable seating for 22 dinner guests. (Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire)
The Governor’s House: Welcoming Alaskans for more than 100 years

Mansion has seen many updates to please occupants, but piano bought with first funds still playable.

Most Read