Alaska and the Left’s Relentless Campaign to Make Loyalty to the Constitution “Unconstitutional”


(Rep. David Eastman (R-Wasilla) taking his oath of loyalty to the Constitution as a state legislator on 1/19/21. Rep. Eastman is currently being sued to have his election overturned for not being sufficiently “loyal” to the Constitution.)

In a day when professional athletes are encouraged not to stand for the national anthem, and pundits declare that Americans everywhere should feel ashamed of America and her founding, I suppose it is but a small step to next attack the Constitution itself in court.

In Alaska, I find myself at the tip of the spear as this latest assault on the Constitution unfolds. Using the Constitution to attack those who support the Constitution; when did that even become a thing?

For me, that became a thing on August 1st, when I learned that a well-financed law firm was filing suit to overturn my 2020 election and give my district’s seat in the legislature to someone that voters in my part of the state had never elected. A second part of the lawsuit also would overturn the results of this year’s primary election and legally bar voters in my district from being able to vote for me in November—and all in the name of protecting the Constitution.

This is where the front lines have moved to today.

By the way, in Alaska, there is no government agency to defend the results of an election against these kinds of attacks. Our Division of Elections has balked at having to assess every political candidate’s loyalty to the Constitution, which they should never, ever be asked to do, but they have stopped far short of defending the rights of the voters in my district to continue to be represented by a legislator they actually elected.

At present, the legal responsibility for defending the right of my constituents to choose their own elected representatives falls on me alone, with the help of my attorney and those willing to financially support that effort.

To turn away from this latest attack means forfeiting that right, and inviting a future in which the voters in my state will only be permitted to vote for those candidates whom the state has first deemed appropriately “loyal” to the Constitution; from state governor to the city dogcatcher.

Let that sink in.

What the attorneys against me are arguing is that the Constitution not only allows, but in fact requires, the state to subject political candidates to a loyalty test where the state will subjectively determine whether someone is sufficiently loyal to the government—prior to allowing that individual to serve in a government position or even allow that candidate’s name to appear on the ballot.

This manner of conducting elections would flip the Constitution on its head. In the future, instead of candidates seeking to obtain the consent of the governed (voters) before serving in office, they would first have to seek and obtain the consent of the government.

What this also means practically, is that a well-financed law firm will be able to unilaterally double or triple the cost of running for office for any candidates they decide to target. Not only will conservative candidates have to win a primary and a general election, but before even competing in an election, they will face the prospect of an expensive legal battle in the courts over whether or not the state has accurately assessed their loyalty.

In my case, the other side has already indicated that they plan to appeal to the supreme court and pursue the lawsuit into next year, assuming they are not successful in the lower court. As a candidate, just defending my candidacy in court, even if we win the case at every level, will almost certainly cost more than my election campaign.

How many conservative candidates have an extra $50K or $100K to spend on an election lawsuit, the results of which are never certain? And perhaps that’s the point: getting conservative candidates to think twice about ever running for office.

To add insult to further insult, in my case, the other side is trying to make the case that my unwavering support for the Constitution is actually further proof that I am unfit for office, and that I am violating the constitution today just by the mere act of serving in the legislature.

Like every other state legislator, on January 19, 2021 I took the oath of loyalty to the Constitution immediately before assuming office. But while that oath was sufficient to establish the loyalty of every other legislator, those behind the lawsuit argue that it wasn’t sufficient to establish my loyalty.

They point back to thirteen years ago when I became a Lifetime Member of an organization (Oath Keepers) that requires members to take an oath of loyalty to the United States Constitution before joining and, consequently, forbids any member from being disloyal to the Constitution or advocating for its overthrow. Oath Keepers has never encouraged me to engage in violence. What they have asked is that everyone who has taken an oath to the Constitution consciously live up to that promise. I do. Some want to see that as evidence of my disloyalty to the Constitution.

They point to January 6th, 2021, before I was sworn in to the current legislature, and the fact that I willingly attended the speech that President Trump gave that day, in person. I traveled all the way to Washington, D.C.—more proof that I am disloyal to the Constitution, that my election should be overturned, and that the voters in my district should lose their elected representative.

The Left cannot abide that I went to DC to stand with a president they had already “cancelled”. They cannot abide that I continue to be an unapologetic voice for my district and the conservative voters who live there. They cannot abide that I proudly defend a Constitution that they have been trying to cancel for years, and that I continue to count it a privilege to stand with each and every American who is committed to defending that Constitution, regardless of whatever group or party they join or don’t join.

This is what puts me on the front lines today. This is what has earned me all the epithets the Left can dream up. As a legislator, as a firefighter, as a soldier, there is no backing down from the oath I have taken. On January 19th, I ended my oath with the words “so help me God.” He will be the one to remind me of that oath and what it means.

Please visit www.davidlegal.org and join with me in holding the line today.

(Part 2 To Be Released Shortly)