Press Contact: Taylor Bickford, Campaign Manager
Anchorage, AK – In a Thursday press conference, Sean Parnell stated that he vetoed a bill aimed at protecting the state from giving away upwards of $20 billion in revenue to BP, ConocoPhillips and Exxon, because it “represents a tax increase on the oil industry.” Bill Walker, Republican candidate for Governor, said Parnell’s comment should serve as a lesson to all Alaskans that in a state that receives 90 percent of our revenue from oil taxes, we just cannot afford to have a former oil industry lobbyist as our Governor.
Walker said he watched in amazement, as Sean Parnell struggled to explain the idea that Alaska would have done undue harm to these companies had we decided to not provide them with a multi-billion dollar subsidy to ship our gas into Canada.
The proposed giveaway would amount to the state of Alaska paying for roughly 50 percent of the cost of construction of a pipeline into Canada that will be 100 percent owned and controlled by TransCanada and the North Slope producers. Walker said he finds it ironic that the very same members of the Parnell team that quit Governor Murkowski’s administration in protest of his attempt to give the producers concessions on oil taxes in exchange for a gasline are now promoting a significantly more expensive version of the very same concept.
According to Walker, it does not appear that any North Slope producer publicly requested that this $20 billion subsidy remain in AGIA. “One has to wonder what went on behind closed doors,” said Walker. “This certainly doesn’t come as a surprise when you consider that Parnell also plans to conduct in secrecy the gasline negotiations set to follow the open season this fall. Alaskans deserve to know why their Governor decided to thwart the will of the legislature to protect a tax scheme that he himself stated could be easily tweaked at a later date,” he continued. “If it will be no trouble to eliminate the subsidy, then why did Sean Parnell so urgently rush to protect it?
“By vetoing this bill, Sean Parnell decided for all of us that saving himself the embarrassment of a failed open season represents a proper use of public money,” said Walker. “Sean Parnell needs to recognize that those resources, and the revenues they produce, rightfully belong to the people of Alaska, not Exxon, BP, ConocoPhillips or anyone else for that matter.
“Just as the CEOs of these companies are required to maximize value for their shareholders, the Governor of Alaska is obligated to lookout for the best interests of our state,” he continued. “As Governor, I can tell you that my allegiance would not be to the boardrooms in London or Houston, but to the Alaskan living rooms in Barrow, Ketchikan and everywhere in between.
“Consider how that $20 billion could be spent to actually benefit the people of Alaska. We are talking about over $90,000 for every Alaskan household or 15 million permanent fund dividend checks taken at last year’s total. For $20 billion we could construct virtually every proposed infrastructure project in this state. We could build docks, roads, bridges, rail extensions and more, providing high paying jobs and real opportunities for economic growth in communities across Alaska.
The Anchorage Heart Run is just around the corner & we are looking for volunteers to join the Walker for Governor Team. The race is on Saturday, April 24th at the UAA campus. If you would like to run or walk on our team, please register 
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Walker Continues Criticism of Parnell’s “AGIA Bailout”
Taylor Bickford, Campaign Manager
On Wednesday at a gubernatorial forum hosted by the Alaska State Chamber of Commerce, Bill Walker continued his criticism of Sean Parnell’s decision to veto SB 305, a bill aimed at protecting the state from giving the North Slope producers $20 billion to ship our gas and jobs into Canada.
“This is why I’m running for Governor because I can’t stand to watch us give our resources to a neighboring country and our kids are looking for work and we have unemployment in Kenai at 12.6%. It is wrong what Parnell is doing – trying to make sure AGIA is successful at all costs. I would end that,” said Walker in front of a packed house at the Dena’ina Center in Anchorage.
Sean Parnell responded directly to Walker saying that the number one reason he made the veto was because it represented a “tax increase” on the oil industry.
“That bill, if I would have signed it, would have amounted to a total tax increase on the industry,” said Parnell.
According to Walker, Parnell’s response was misleading and inappropriate.
“Protecting the people of Alaska from a $20 billion mistake that was accidentally built into the original AGIA contract does not amount to a tax increase,” said Walker. “Along with delivering affordable energy to communities across Alaska, the primary goal of a natural gas pipeline is to offset declining revenues from an oil pipeline that is now two-thirds empty. Sean Parnell has decided that his primary goal is instead to protect AGIA at all costs, even if that means putting us in a position to effectively pay the North Slope producers to take our gas into Canada, with no real benefit to the state of Alaska.
“It was never the intention of AGIA that Alaska residents would pay Exxon, BP and ConocoPhillips $20 billion to take Alaska’s gas into Canada,” concluded Walker.
Bill Walker is a lifelong Alaskan. He served as mayor of Valdez at the age of 27 before entering the private sector as a successful business owner (construction, tourism, real estate, law). He has decades of experience in Alaska’s oil and gas, tourism, local government and other issues and is a longtime advocate for the development of Alaska’s natural resources.