President Barack Obama closed out his three-day Alaska trip yesterday in Kotzebue, a town of 3,200 people that sits 33 miles north of the Arctic Circle. And though the president drew some heat for 听during an address earlier this week, the overall response he鈥檚 received from Alaskans has been positive鈥攕urprisingly so.
Obama and Alaska have often been at odds during his seven-year tenure. The conservative state鈥檚 economy relies on resource extraction, and the liberal president came to town to promote a progressive environmental agenda and burnish his legacy by addressing climate change. Add to that independent-minded Alaskans鈥 antipathy towards the federal government and you wouldn鈥檛 exactly expect the welcome mat.听
But the president has seemed to balance unpopular moves, like when protecting sections of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from drilling, with more Alaska-friendly ones, like his a few weeks ago that Shell would be permitted to resume exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea. Duing the trip, he won over hardscrabble Alaskans by taking听time during his short trip to engage with , highlight issues important to the state, and venture beyond urban Alaska to bush villages, where he inquired about things like the appropriate age to begin .
The White House stoked local enthusiasm by handing over the 听to the president himself, setting up a 听for the visit, posting a message from the president on , and putting together a snappy, pre-trip , as well as posting videos during the trip. Coupled with wall-to-wall coverage from Alaskan news outlets鈥擮bama 听at an Anchorage cafe and paid with a $50 bill鈥攖here's a lot to examine about his visit.
We scoured social media to discern听the pros and cons of Obama's trip.听Here's a list of听the amusing scenes and reactions, both positive and negative:听
Anchorage Arrival
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Pro: The city was abuzz. Streets swelled with crowds鈥攑eople even wore ties and 听(!)鈥攁nd local restaurants renamed menu items for the president (, anyone?). Pictures of Obama shaking hands with people went viral on social networks and photos of secret service agents on a jog made the nightly news. 鈥淚鈥檓 impressed,鈥 听Obama encountered in an ice cream shop in Seward, 鈥渁nd I鈥檓 a Republican.鈥
Con: Some of the 听who attended the Rising Together rally, organized to welcome the president, were disappointed that he instead chose to attend a 听across town at the home of billionaire publisher of the Alaska Dispatch News, . He 听a pre-recorded video message to the rally, as well as someone arguably more important to Alaska: Interior Secretary Sally Jewell.
Mount McKinley vs. Denali
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Pro: Reverting Mount McKinley to its Native name, Denali, the day before his arrival certainly got things off on the right foot. The move was greeted with overwhelmingly positive response in Alaska, where most residents have long called the peak Denali anyway.
Con: Predictably, there was a small chorus of dissent from the right: Lawmakers from Ohio (President McKinley鈥檚 home state) ; Sarah Palin鈥檚 daughter, Bristol, wrote in an 听that听鈥淚鈥檝e never called the mountain Denali鈥nd neither does anyone I know,” which听further undermined whatever credibility the Palins have left in the state; and Donald Trump if he鈥檚 elected.
Arctic Issues
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Pro: Obama became the first sitting president to visit a town north of the Arctic Circle, and he鈥檚 already discussed plans to study and fund two big-ticket items that Alaskan lawmakers have long had on their wish list: funding for 听(we have two currently in service, Russia has 40); and plans for a new deep-water port to serve Alaska鈥檚 northern coast, likely to be located in Nome.
Con: Residents of Kotzebue, where Obama wrapped his trip on Wednesday, would prefer to in their town. Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski praised Obama for the icebreaker decision, but said听the president needed to go further and 听for the vessels.
Climate Change
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Pro: The president鈥檚 听at the 听in Anchorage was widely hailed as his . He repeated the phrase, “We鈥檙e not moving fast enough,” five times in the speech, like a kind of chorus. 鈥淥n this issue,鈥 he said, 鈥渢here is such a thing as being too late. And that moment is almost upon us.”
Con: The president was criticized both for the 听of his trip to Alaska and, more convincingly, for 听and explain the fact that, just weeks ago, he 听further exploratory oil drilling in the Chukchi Sea north of Alaska. Congressman Don Young accused the president in a 听and on 听of using Alaska 鈥渁s a prop for an extreme, economy killing, environmental agenda.鈥
Exploring the Hinterlands
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Pro: The week prior to Obama鈥檚 visit to Dillingham and Kotzebue was a frenzy of excited effort to prepare the small towns for his arrival鈥攔esidents听were seen collecting trash, painting buildings, repairing roads, and making welcome signs. , a docile brown bear showed up and decided to stay, leading to an impromptu 鈥淏earack viewing area.鈥 Local fishermen took Obama to see a salmon net on a local beach, and one pink salmon听. “He said he was happy to see me,” Obama quipped.
Con: There were 听about interruptions to the fall hunting season, and about the 听of preparing for the visit. In Dillingham, which serves as one of main hubs for the legendary Bristol Bay salmon fishery, some residents wished the president had talked more directly about what they see as the greatest immediate threat to their way of life: the proposed Pebble Mine, a massive copper and gold mine that would sit amid prime salmon habitat. An EPA action to curtail the mine is currently tied up in litigation, but locals made sure to make their feelings known, lining the roads from the airport and through town with .听
Filming with Bear Grylls
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Pro: During a walk to the Exit Glacier in Kenai Fjords National Park on Tuesday, Obama 听with TV survivalist Bear Grylls. Details at this point are sketchy, but producers say the segment will address climate change.
Con: Some wondered whether touring a section of the park abutting the highway is really a 鈥渨ilderness鈥 experience. Others pointed out that the glacier, which the president aimed to use as a , has been melting since the pre-Industrial Revolution听1800s.听Others called the Obama/Grylls selfie that surfaced soon after a 鈥.鈥 And a petition on WhiteHouse.gov听calling for the president to 鈥溾 while filming the segment has garnered more than 600 signatures, and counting.