Campaign

Murkowski trolls Alaska Senate challenger as she takes lead in first-place votes

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) trolled her Republican opponent Kelly Tshibaka after she took a lead in the first-place votes for the state’s Senate race. 

Alaska’s ranked-choice voting system means voters ranked the candidates from first place to last. A candidate must win a majority of first-place votes to win outright without additional rounds being needed.

No candidate is projected to win a majority of first-place votes in the first round. Tshibaka had led Murkowski narrowly since Election Day, but Murkowski took a lead and noted it in a tweet on her campaign account Friday. 

Murkowski posted a GIF from the movie “The Usual Suspects,” including the start of one line from the movie. 

“And just like that …” the GIF states, with text overlaying it continuing, “Kelly’s claim that she only lost because of Ranked Choice was gone.” 


Murkowski led Tshibaka by about 0.4 points in the first-place votes with 98 percent reporting as of Friday night. 

Under ranked choice, the candidate with the fewest first-place votes is eliminated if no one wins a majority in the first round, and their votes are then redistributed to the remaining candidates according to their voters’ second preferences. 

Republican Buzz Kelley received less than 3 percent of the vote, so he will be eliminated first, and Democrat Pat Chesbro, who won about 10 percent of the vote, will be eliminated in the second round. 

Whichever candidate receives more of Chesbro’s votes will likely win the race. Analysts view Murkowski as more likely to prevail, as she is more moderate and less supportive of former President Trump than Tshibaka is. 

All absentee votes will be counted by Wednesday, and the additional vote tallies from the additional rounds will be published then. 

Conservatives previously slammed ranked-choice voting after Rep. Mary Sattler Peltola (D) won the special election for Alaska’s House seat in August over Republicans Sarah Palin and Nick Begich through receiving enough first- and second-place votes to prevail.