Hughes, Alaska

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Hughes, Alaska

Location
Map of Alaska highlighting Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area.svg
Cities by state



Hughes is a city in Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area, Alaska. The city had 85 residents as of 2020, according to the United States Census Bureau.[1]

Federal officials

The current members of the U.S. Senate from Alaska are:

Office title Officeholder name Date assumed office Party affiliation

U.S. Senate Alaska

Lisa Murkowski

December 20, 2002

Republican Party

U.S. Senate Alaska

Daniel S. Sullivan

January 3, 2015

Republican Party


To view a map of U.S. House districts in Alaska and find your representative, click here.

State officials

The following is a list of the current state executive officials from Alaska:

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Office Name Party Date assumed office
Alaska Commissioner of Natural Resources John Boyle Nonpartisan January 6, 2023
Alaska Comptroller Kayla Wisner Nonpartisan October 1, 2019
Attorney General of Alaska Treg Taylor Republican May 11, 2021
Chief of Staff to the Governor of Alaska Tyson Gallagher Republican November 14, 2022
Governor of Alaska Mike Dunleavy Republican December 3, 2018
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska Nancy Dahlstrom Republican December 5, 2022


To view a list of state legislators from Alaska, click here.

Ballot measures

See also: List of Alaska ballot measures and Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area, Alaska ballot measures

To view a list of statewide measures in Alaska, click here.

To view a list of local ballot measures in Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area, Alaska, click here.

Local recalls

See also: Laws governing recall in Alaska

Alaska allows the following grounds for recall: "misconduct in office, incompetence, or failure to perform prescribed duties." To start the recall process, supporters must file an application for a recall petition containing the signatures of 10 voters who are sponsoring the petition. If a municipal clerk determines the application meets the requisite requirements, the petition will be approved to circulate. To get the recall on the ballot, supporters must collect signatures within 60 days of the recall petition getting approved. For an at-large officeholder, the petition must be signed by a number of voters equal to 25% of the votes cast for that office at the last regular election. For an officeholder who represents a specific district, the petition must be signed by a number of the voters residing in the district equal to 25% of the votes cast in the district for that office at the last regular election.[2]

See also

Local Politics Other Alaska Content Elections in Alaska
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City government
Local courts
School boards
Local ballot measures
Local recalls

Alaska congressional delegation
Alaska state executives
Alaska State Legislature
Alaska statewide ballot measures
Alaska courts
Alaska counties
Alaska cities
Alaska school boards

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State executives
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Footnotes


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