- Source: 2024 United States House of Representatives election in Alaska
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The 2024 United States House of Representatives election in Alaska was held on November 5, 2024, to elect a member of the United States House of Representatives to represent the state of Alaska from its at-large congressional district. The election coincided with the 2024 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the U.S. House, elections to the United States Senate, and various other state and local elections.
Incumbent Mary Peltola, the first Democrat to represent Alaska in the House since 1972, sought a second full term in office. Peltola had been elected in an August 2022 special election to succeed deceased Republican Don Young. She won a full term the following November.
In accordance with 2020 Alaska Measure 2, the race was conducted using the state's ranked-choice voting procedures. Eleven candidates challenged Peltola in the August all-party primary. Republicans Nick Begich III, Nancy Dahlstrom, and Matthew Salisbury initially qualified for spots in the ranked-choice general election, but Dahlstrom and Salisbury withdrew shortly after the primary in a show of party unity. The final general election ballot thus featured Peltola, Begich, Alaskan Independence Party nominee John Wayne Howe, and Democrat Eric Hafner. The Alaska Democratic Party attempted to have Hafner removed from the ballot due to his status as a federal prisoner in New York, but the Alaska Supreme Court rejected their arguments.
Given Alaska's conservative lean, Peltola was considered a top target for Republicans throughout the cycle. By late October, multiple outlets regarded Peltola as one of the 10 most vulnerable incumbents running for reelection in the House.
Despite Peltola's loss, she did outperform Kamala Harris in the concurrent 2024 presidential election in Alaska by about 10 points, but this was not enough to win.
Begich was declared the winner on November 20, following the tabulation of ranked-choice votes.
Candidates
= Democratic Party
=Advanced to general
Mary Peltola, incumbent U.S. representative
Eric Hafner, federal prisoner and perennial candidate
= Republican Party
=Advanced to general
Nick Begich III, Alaska Policy Forum board member, grandson of former U.S. Representative Nick Begich Sr., and third-place finisher for U.S. House in 2022
Withdrew after advancing to general
Nancy Dahlstrom, Lieutenant Governor of Alaska
Matthew Salisbury, property claims adjustor
Eliminated in primary
Gerald Heikes, drywall contractor and perennial candidate
= No Labels
=Eliminated in primary
Richard Grayson, author, former co-chair of the Pinal County, Arizona Green Party, and perennial candidate
= Alaskan Independence Party
=Advanced to general
John Wayne Howe, chair of the Alaskan Independence Party, candidate for U.S. House in 2022, and nominee for U.S. Senate in 2020
= Independents
=Eliminated in primary
David Ambrose
Samuel Claesson, author
Lady Donna Dutchess, notary, candlemaker, and candidate for U.S. House in 2022
Richard Mayers
Primary election
= Endorsements
== Fundraising
== Polling
=Top four primary
Results
Peltola performed well in the primary, securing slightly more than 50% of the vote. She received the plurality of the vote in 33 out of 40 Alaska House of Representatives districts. Her top three districts were the fourth district in Southeast Alaska (79.5% of the vote) as well as the 17th and the 19th districts located in Anchorage (75.3% and 71.0% of the vote respectively).
General election
On August 23, Nancy Dahlstrom withdrew from the general election. Despite initially stating he had no plans to withdraw, Matthew Salisbury also dropped out of the race. They were replaced by fifth-place finisher John Wayne Howe of the Alaskan Independence Party and sixth-place finisher Eric Hafner, a Democrat. Hafner remained on the ballot even though he has never been to Alaska, and was serving a 20-year sentence in a federal penitentiary in New York. The Alaska Democratic Party sued to remove Hafner from the general election ballot, but an Anchorage Superior Court judge dismissed the lawsuit. The party appealed to the Alaska Supreme Court, who upheld the lower court's decision, keeping Hafner on the ballot.
= Post-primary endorsements
== Predictions
== Polling
== Debates and forums
== Results
=Notes
Partisan clients
References
External links
Official campaign sites
Nick Begich (R) for Congress
Mary Peltola (D) for Congress
John Wayne Howe (AIP)