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A retired teacher from a small Alaska fishing community has ignited one of the most unusual legal battles in recent American electoral politics by simply sharing a name with the Republican U.S. senator he is trying to unseat. The controversy, which has drawn national attention and involved state and federal investigations, raises fundamental questions about ballot access, voter confusion and how far election officials can go to protect incumbents.
Daniel J. Sullivan, a 69-year-old former elementary and middle school teacher from Petersburg, filed to run as a Republican for Alaska’s U.S. Senate seat on May 29, just three days before the June 1 deadline. He was immediately certified as an eligible candidate by the Alaska Division of Elections. Three days later, however, the National Republican Senatorial Committee sent a letter to state election officials alleging that Sullivan had filed “with the intention of confusing and misleading voters” and called him a “sham candidate.”
The Republican lieutenant governor then opened an official investigation. On June 15, Carol Beecher, the director of the Alaska Division of Elections, made an unprecedented decision: she removed Sullivan from the ballot. She concluded that his declaration of candidacy was filed with a purpose to confuse voters and compromise the fairness of the ballot. Among her concerns were that Sullivan had initially requested to appear on the ballot simply as “Dan Sullivan,” the same name format as the incumbent senator; that he had registered as a Republican despite no prior affiliation with the party during his 40-plus years in Alaska; that his campaign website appeared similar to the senator’s; and that he had worked with a political consultant who had previously advised Democratic candidates.
Sullivan immediately challenged the decision in Alaska Superior Court. On Friday, June 26, Superior Court Judge Thomas Matthews issued a sweeping 32-page ruling in his favor. Matthews found that the Division of Elections had “abused its discretion” by disqualifying Sullivan. The judge determined that the agency had created a new “good-faith” candidacy requirement not found in the U.S. Constitution, Alaska law or the division’s own regulations. He also found insufficient evidence to support Beecher’s conclusion that Sullivan intended to confuse voters.
“The division accepted at face-value the assertions of the complaint, and disregarded Mr. Sullivan’s assertions,” Matthews wrote, noting that Sullivan had denied trying to trick anyone and had insisted his candidacy was genuine. The judge ruled that Sullivan met all constitutional requirements for the Senate—he is at least 30 years old, a U.S. citizen for at least nine years, and a resident of the state. He also noted that Alaska election law gave the division tools to address voter confusion short of removing a candidate from the ballot, such as regulating how candidates appear on the ballot listing.

The state immediately appealed. The Alaska Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Monday, June 29, and issued a brief ruling just three hours later, effectively hours before the deadline for printing primary ballots. The court affirmed Matthews’ decision, finding that Sullivan was eligible to run. The justices, however, left to the Division of Elections the matter of how Sullivan’s name would appear on the ballot “within the confines of existing Alaska ballot design law.”
The outcome immediately drew fierce criticism from the incumbent and Republicans. Senator Dan S. Sullivan’s campaign said it was “disappointed” in the decision. The National Republican Senatorial Committee and 14 Republican-led states had filed briefs supporting the division’s attempt to keep Sullivan off the ballot. The Alaska Republican Party and the senator’s allies have maintained that the challenger is trying to deceive voters to help the Democratic candidate, former U.S. Representative Mary Peltola, who is considered the senator’s main challenger.
But back in Petersburg, a tight-knit island community of about 3,000 people accessible only by air or water, locals overwhelmingly defended their former teacher. When reporters came to cover the story, many Petersburg residents expressed shock that anyone would characterize Sullivan as dishonest or underhanded. Friends and colleagues described him as trustworthy, principled and genuinely frustrated with the incumbent senator’s record.

“You really have to do a lot of mental gymnastics to suddenly not respect Dan Sullivan, because he’s honestly a very stand-up human being,” said one community member. Even people who said they were planning to vote for other candidates spoke against the state’s effort to exclude him from the ballot. “To say somebody can’t run — that he’s fake — that’s fear,” said one resident.
Sullivan himself has stated that he filed to run because he had grown frustrated with the incumbent senator and believed it was the right time to mount a challenge. He has vehemently denied working with Peltola or any Democratic operatives. “The decision to run was my choice,” he said.
However, the Sullivan saga did not end with the court rulings. The Division of Elections released a sample ballot on June 30 showing how it planned to list the challenger. Instead of appearing as “Dan J. Sullivan, Republican” as he requested, Sullivan was listed as “Sullivan, Daniel J. Jr.” with no party affiliation. Meanwhile, the incumbent was listed as “Sullivan, Dan S. (Registered Republican) Incumbent”—the only candidate on the ballot with the title “incumbent.” Multiple legal observers and Sullivan’s attorneys argued that the ballot listing violated Alaska law, which allows candidates to be listed according to their chosen party affiliation and does not permit election officials to strip affiliations based on tenure with a party.
The controversy also drew scrutiny from federal authorities. State and federal prosecutors in Alaska began investigating whether Sullivan’s campaign represented a conspiracy to confuse voters, according to reporting in early July. The FBI, the Alaska Attorney General’s office and the U.S. Attorney’s office in Alaska were all examining whether two or more people conspired to create the Sullivan challenger’s campaign with the intention of hurting the incumbent and boosting Peltola.
The race itself has enormous stakes. Alaska is one of the most competitive Senate battlegrounds in the 2026 midterm elections, and control of the chamber could hinge on its outcome. The August 18 primary will feature all candidates on a single nonpartisan ballot, with the top four vote-getters advancing to a ranked-choice general election in November, regardless of party affiliation. Currently, the incumbent and Peltola are the only candidates to report significant fundraising.
Some analysts worry that the presence of two Dan Sullivans on the ballot could siphon votes and create confusion, particularly given Alaska’s ranked-choice voting system where voters rank multiple candidates. Others point to Alaska’s electoral history, noting that voters successfully navigated the complicated write-in campaign of Senator Lisa Murkowski in 2010, suggesting voters may be capable of distinguishing between the two Sullivans.
For now, Dan J. Sullivan remains on the August ballot, a testament to his legal victory and a remarkable chapter in one of the nation’s most closely watched Senate races.

