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A Surprising Choice for GOP’s Keynote Address?

Alaska's Dan Sullivan could get the nod

Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan, seen here with his home state colleague Lisa Murkowski, has been tapped for a key speaking slot in Cleveland. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call File Photo)
Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan, seen here with his home state colleague Lisa Murkowski, has been tapped for a key speaking slot in Cleveland. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call File Photo)

Who will deliver the keynote address at next week’s Republican National Convention?  

Speculation is centering on freshman Sen. Dan Sullivan, a native son of Cleveland who now represents America’s last frontier.  

Sullivan, who has been Alaska’s junior senator since 2015, declined to discuss the matter Monday night.  

“You’re just hearing rumors,” Sullivan said. “Not that I’m going to comment on.” Likewise, a convention spokesperson would not comment.  

If Sullivan speaks, his will be the most prominent speaking slot for a politician from Alaska since Sarah Palin was the vice presidential nominee back in 2008.  

Sullivan actually was born down the road from Cleveland in Fairview Park, Ohio. He still has family in the Cleveland area and as the Plain Dealer reported back in late 2013, Sullivan said he still keeps an eye on the NFL’s Browns.  

Sullivan spoke with Roll Call earlier this year as part of a broader report on how the freshman senators were adjusting to life in the chamber and working to become a force.  

“The overreach of the federal government, federal overreach, over regulation, [is a] big big issue for us. I was attorney general in Alaska,” Sullivan said in the February interview. “I’d like to say I probably sued the Obama administration on a lot of these overreach issues, probably more than any other AG, with probably the exception of the Texas attorney general.”  

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Sullivan’s policy focuses have included energy and veterans issues, as well as work on the Senate Armed Services Committee. Alaska has a number of unique challenges on which he’s worked with senior Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a fellow Republican.  

Among those efforts has been elevating the importance of U.S. policy in the Arctic, particularly in relation to the behavior of the Russian government in the far north.  

“You may have seen in the last year on the Armed Services Committee, a growing sense of the importance of the Arctic with regard to Arctic military strategy, what the Russians are doing in the Arctic, huge sea lanes opening up because of the receding ice, huge resources in the Arctic. And so I’ve raised this on the Armed Services Committee a lot,” Sullivan said.  

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He said that since he began raising questions about Russia’s role in the arctic, colleagues on both sides of the aisle had joined in, including the chairman of the committee, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.  

Like McCain, Sullivan is a military man.   He joined the Marine Corps after earning graduate and law degrees from Georgetown University and entered the Marine Corps Reserves after four years of active duty.  

Sullivan did not move north to Alaska until after leaving active duty, which led critics to dismiss him as an outsider in Alaska government. Sullivan met his wife, an Alaska Native, when they were both in D.C. — he was studying at Georgetown, she was working for the legendary Republican Sen. Ted Stevens.  

After stints in federal and state government, Sullivan jumped into the 2014 U.S. Senate race.  

He narrowly defeated incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Begich with 48 percent of the vote. The Sullivan victory – declared after weeks of counting absentee ballots – helped Republicans ultimately capture control of the Senate.  

Information from CQ profiles was used in this report.
Contact Lesniewski at NielsLesniewski@cqrollcall.com and follow him on Twitter @nielslesniewski.
Contact Bowman at BridgetBowman@cqrollcall.com and follow her on Twitter @bridgetbhc.


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