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|term_end =January 15, 2019
|term_end =January 15, 2019
|predecessor =[[Drew Scalzi]]
|predecessor =[[Drew Scalzi]]
|successor =[[Sarah L. Vance|Sarah Vance]]
|successor =[[Sarah Vance (Alaska politician)|Sarah Vance]]
|birth_date ={{Birth date and age|1945|10|1}}
|birth_date ={{Birth date and age|1945|10|1}}
|birth_place =[[Oxnard, California]]
|birth_place =[[Oxnard, California]]
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===2018 election===
===2018 election===
Seaton filed to run for re-election as a nonpartisan candidate and ran unopposed in the Democratic primary. Three Republicans filed to challenge him in the general election: Jon Cox, Sarah Vance, and Hank Kroll. He lost to Sarah Vance the general election on November 6, 2018, after advancing from the primary on August 21, 2018.<ref>https://ballotpedia.org/Paul_Seaton</ref>
Seaton filed to run for re-election as a nonpartisan candidate and ran unopposed in the Democratic primary. Three Republicans filed to challenge him in the general election: Jon Cox, Sarah Vance, and Hank Kroll. He lost to [[Sarah Vance (Alaska politician)|Sarah Vance]] the general election on November 6, 2018, after advancing from the primary on August 21, 2018.<ref>https://ballotpedia.org/Paul_Seaton</ref>


==Personal life==
==Personal life==

Revision as of 23:19, 10 April 2020

Paul K. Seaton
Seaton at the Alaska Legislature's annual shooting competition (2015)
Member of the Alaska House of Representatives
from the 31st district
In office
January 20, 2003 – January 15, 2019
Preceded byDrew Scalzi
Succeeded bySarah Vance
Personal details
Born (1945-10-01) October 1, 1945 (age 79)
Oxnard, California
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseTina
ChildrenRand, Tawny
ResidenceKachemak City, Alaska
Alma materUniversity of Alaska, Fairbanks
OccupationFisherman/Educator

Paul K. Seaton (born October 1, 1945) is a former Republican member of the Alaska House of Representatives, who represented the southern Kenai Peninsula between 2003 and 2018.[1]

Political career

In 2002, Seaton ran in the Republican primary against incumbent Drew Scazi, winning with 60% of the vote.[2]

Since then, he has chaired the Education Committee, State Affairs Committee, Health & Social Services Committee, Resources Committee and the Special Committee on Fisheries. He also served on the Commerce, Community & Economic Development, Education & Early Development, Environmental Conservation, and Law Finance Subcommittees, for the 26th Legislature.[3]

2016 election

Seaton won his 2016 Republican primary with 48% of the vote, followed by John Cox with 27%, and Mary Wythe with 25%.[4] After being elected without general election opposition to his 7th term in the state house, Seaton joined a majority coalition of Democrats, Independents and two other Republicans, with an avowed goal of ameliorating the state's budget deficit, the latter a product of declining oil revenues, budgeting, and prior taxation restructuring. Seaton was chosen to co-chair the house finance committee. Tuckerman Babcock, chair of the Alaska Republican Party, informed Seaton by letter that the party will recruit and support a primary opponent against him in 2018.[5][6] While campaigning early in 2016, Seaton said he doubted the Legislature could continue to successfully organize "simply on partisan grounds," and that legislators needed to address the budgetary crisis.[7]

2018 election

Seaton filed to run for re-election as a nonpartisan candidate and ran unopposed in the Democratic primary. Three Republicans filed to challenge him in the general election: Jon Cox, Sarah Vance, and Hank Kroll. He lost to Sarah Vance the general election on November 6, 2018, after advancing from the primary on August 21, 2018.[8]

Personal life

Seaton has a wife, Tina, and two children, Tawny and Rand. Seaton graduated from Ventura College with an A.A. in 1965; from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks with a B.S. in 1966 and an M.A. in 1969, respectively; and from the University of California, San Diego with an M.S. 1972. He completed his graduate studies in crustacean population ecology at the University of California, Santa Barbara from 1974 - 1976. He also graduated from AVTEC (Alaska's Technology Institute) in Diesel Mechanics in 1979.[9]

References

  1. ^ http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Paul_Seaton
  2. ^ Chambers, Mike (August 28, 2002). "Primary knocks out House speaker candidate, another still hanging". Juneau Empire. Juneau, Alaska. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  3. ^ http://housemajority.org/seaton/index.php
  4. ^ Election Summary Report, Alaska Division of Elections, August 16, 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  5. ^ Musk Ox revolt: How Republicans lost control of the Alaska House for first time in years, Alaska Dispatch News, Nathaniel Herz, November 13, 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  6. ^ Alaska Republican Party, Tuckerman Babcock, November 9, 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  7. ^ Alaska Republican Party formally pulls support from three of its own, Alaska Dispatch News, Annie Zak, December 10, 2016. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  8. ^ https://ballotpedia.org/Paul_Seaton
  9. ^ http://house.legis.state.ak.us/rep.php?id=san