Eric Hafner, a 33-year-old New Jersey resident who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence in New York for threatening and menacing local elected officials, could play a determining role in the race for Alaska’s at-large seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Alaska’s elections use a ranked-choice voting system, which arguably cost Republicans the U.S. House seat in a September 2022 special election following the death of longtime Congressman Don Young (R-AK).
The November ballot in Alaska will feature just one Republican candidate, Nicholas Begich, who hails from a longtime political dynasty based in Anchorage. During the 2022 special election, Begich and former Governor Sarah Palin both appeared on the ballot, leading to a degree of confusion, with some voters leaving their second-choice ranking inadvertently blank. Meanwhile, the incumbent, Rep. Mary Peltola (D-AK), will have to contend with a second Democrat in Eric Hafner, who is known in the federal prison system as Inmate 00932-005.
A perennial candidate who has run for office in various states, including Hawaii and Oregon, Hafner’s Alaska candidacy has survived two Democratic Party-brought court challenges. He qualified for the state’s August primary ballot, where he finished in sixth place out of twelve candidates with 467 votes. However, after the third and fourth-place primary finishers—both Republicans—dropped out of the race, Hafner qualified as a candidate on the state’s general election ballot as a top four vote-getter.
“The chances of Eric Hafner having an impact on this election are legitimate and real,” Republican strategist Matt Shuckerow told the New York Times. The form campaign manager for Dan Sullivan added: “This is an extremely tight race, and every vote will count.”
Democrats worry Hafner could draw several percentage points of Democratic Party voters during the November election. Even if a fraction of those leave their second choice blank instead of choosing Peltola, the Congressman could very easily lose her re-election bid.