About a month ago, the Alaska Dispatch News, the state’s largest newspaper, published a striking report on just how far Donald Trump’s White House was allegedly willing to go to lobby senators on health care. The ensuing controversy prompted an investigation, which apparently wrapped up this week.
To briefly recap, the Trump administration’s Interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, reportedly called both of Alaska’s Republican senators in July, explaining that Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s (R-Alaska) position on health care “had put Alaska’s future with the administration in jeopardy.” Murkowski’s colleague, Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) went on the record at the time, saying the call from Zinke heralded a “troubling message.”
Sullivan added that the message from Trump’s cabinet secretary “was pretty clear.”
The prospect of the Trump administration threatening to penalize Alaska unless Murkowski went along with a regressive health care plan seemed plainly outrageous. The intimidation didn’t work — Alaska’s senior senator opposed the far-right health care gambit anyway — but reports of Zinke’s alleged tactics prompted the Interior Department’s inspector general to agree to take a closer look at what transpired.
At least, that was the idea. TPM reported yesterday on the outcome.









