Wednesday, June 24, 2026

The Judge Taught Them Judicial Neutrality — They Became Partisan Weapons

Alaska Election Law · The Tymkovich Network · Ukraine · USAID · #akleg

The Judge Taught Them Judicial Neutrality — They Became Partisan Weapons

Timothy Tymkovich spent years in Ukraine teaching judicial independence and constitutional limits on executive power. His clerks took his training, built careers defending Republican Party interests, and are now in Alaska defending executive overreach in election administration — inverting everything their clerkship was supposed to stand for.

The Clerkship Covenant — And Its Betrayal

A federal judicial clerkship is not merely a prestigious credential. It is a formation experience. Clerks serve a neutral arbiter of constitutional disputes. They research and draft for a judge who decides cases regardless of political outcome. The experience is explicitly nonpartisan — the entire point is to instill judicial values. Neutrality. Constitutional fidelity. Institutional integrity. The understanding that state power cannot be deployed for partisan advantage without constitutional authority.

Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich's chambers reinforced those values with particular force. A judge who promoted judicial independence in Ukraine. Who taught that election administration must be free from political interference. Who built a reputation for constitutional discipline over political convenience. Who spent years warning that executive overreach in election administration corrodes democratic institutions.

Christopher O. Murray and Michael Francisco both clerked in those chambers. They absorbed that training. Then they took it home and built careers doing the precise opposite of what it stood for.

Murray applied his constitutional litigation skills exclusively to Republican Party clients — the RNC, the Romney campaign, the Arizona Republican Party, the January 6th subpoena resistance. Francisco applied his Supreme Court appellate skills to conservative cause litigation — 303 Creative, Masterpiece Cakeshop, Groff v. DeJoy. Neither built a practice that reflects the judicial neutrality their clerkship was supposed to instill. Both are now in Alaska defending a state official who used state power for partisan advantage without constitutional authority — the precise pathology their mentor spent years warning Ukrainian judges against.

The skills came from Tymkovich's chambers. The application inverts everything those chambers stood for.

To understand the full depth of that inversion you have to understand who Tymkovich is. Not just the judge who appeared on Trump's Supreme Court shortlist. Not just the Bush appointee who wrote the Hobby Lobby decision. But the man whose great-grandfather left a Ukrainian village in 1913, arrived at Ellis Island, and worked as a miner in Colorado — and whose grandson spent decades traveling back to that village to teach Ukrainian judges about exactly the judicial values his own clerks have abandoned.

The Ukrainian Heritage

Chaikovichi, Ukraine · Tymkovich Family History

Timothy Tymkovich is a third-generation Coloradan. His great-grandfather emigrated from Ukraine to the United States via Ellis Island and worked as a miner. His grandfather arrived at Ellis Island in 1913 as a six-year-old boy from the village of Chaikovichi, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. When Tymkovich visited Ukraine as a judge — recruited by USAID to promote western judicial norms — he discovered the Tymkoviches were a founding family in that part of Ukraine. Their status as early property owners qualified them as Ukrainian nobility. "Who knew that you could go from having known nothing about your family to finding out that you're part of the Ukrainian noble class?" he said. During his 2018 visit he spoke to an assembly at a local school. Most of the boys who attended that assembly, he noted, are now probably 18 and fighting Russia.

The USAID Work

USAID recruited Tymkovich to participate in Ukraine's Rule of Law program — an American government initiative to help post-Soviet Ukraine build an independent, accountable judiciary. He visited Ukraine four times since joining the federal bench, speaking to judges and lawyers about western judicial norms, participating in legal clinics, and helping develop an electronic case management system designed to reduce corruption in court administration.

The work was personal. Tymkovich watched a new generation of Ukrainian judges emerge — people who had studied abroad, undergone extensive background and financial checks, and committed to judicial independence as a genuine value rather than a Soviet-era formality. He was optimistic about what he saw.

What made me optimistic was really this new generation of judges that I was working with. Many had traveled widely and some had gone to law schools in the United States. They were subject to really extensive background checks and financial checks to ensure they come on the bench without any substantial conflicts of interest.

— Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich, Colorado Politics, 2022

The principles Tymkovich was teaching Ukrainian judges — independence from political actors, accountability in election administration, constitutional limits on executive authority — are precisely the principles at issue in Sullivan v. Division of Elections. A state election official acted on a political party's demand, without statutory authority, to remove a constitutionally qualified candidate from a ballot. The Alaska Legislature's own lawyers said it was likely unconstitutional. Tymkovich's own clerks are defending it.

The Three-Way Collision

Tymkovich's Legacy
Ukrainian heritage — founding family in Chaikovichi
Four USAID-funded visits to Ukraine
Promoted judicial independence and rule of law
Publicly expressed admiration for President Zelensky's leadership and legal background
Watched translator flee Russian aggression
Boys he spoke to now fighting Russia
Trump Supreme Court shortlist — never chosen
Trump's Actions
Dismantled USAID — gutted Rule of Law programs
Publicly humiliated Zelensky — the president Tymkovich admires
Demanded Zelensky capitulate to Russian terms
Withheld military aid to Ukraine
Defunded the infrastructure Tymkovich helped build
Appointed Tymkovich's clerk Domenico to his seat
The Clerk Network
Murray — RNC election attorney, now in Alaska
Francisco — Gorsuch clerk, now in Alaska
Domenico — Trump's Colorado judicial appointee
Craddock — Trump's DOJ Office of Legal Counsel
All serving the administration that gutted USAID
All connected through Tymkovich's chambers

The USAID Destruction and What It Means

In February 2025, Trump's DOGE operation effectively dismantled USAID — including the Rule of Law programs that funded Tymkovich's Ukraine work. The judicial training infrastructure he helped build. The anti-corruption courts he praised. The legal clinics that gave ordinary Ukrainians access to justice. Defunded. Eliminated. By the administration his clerk network now serves.

The personal dimension of Tymkovich's Ukraine work goes further still. When Russia invaded, Tymkovich publicly stated he had been inspired by the leadership of President Volodymyr Zelensky — noting that Zelensky holds a law degree himself — and expressed hope that Ukraine's branches of government would respect due process and resist corruption even under the war's massive strain. That is a sitting federal judge publicly admiring a foreign head of state in the specific context of judicial independence and rule of law.

Trump's posture toward Zelensky has been the precise opposite — public humiliation, demands for capitulation, withheld military aid, and treatment of Ukrainian sovereignty as a bargaining chip. The judge who respects Zelensky built the clerk network that serves the administration hostile to him. The contrast is not subtle. It is documented in both men's own words.

What Tymkovich Taught in Ukraine

Election administration must be neutral. Executive officials cannot override constitutional processes for political convenience. Judicial independence requires accountability. Background checks and financial transparency matter. These are not abstract principles — they are the specific lessons he carried to Chaikovichi and Kyiv and back.

What His Clerks Are Defending in Alaska

A state election official who acted on a political party's demand without statutory authority to remove a constitutionally qualified candidate. The Alaska Legislature's own lawyers said it was likely unconstitutional. The official refused to testify. The agency bypassed its own state lawyers. This is precisely the executive overreach in election administration that Tymkovich spent years warning Ukrainian judges against.

The USAID Paradox

The program that funded Tymkovich's rule of law work in Ukraine has been gutted by the administration his clerk network serves. The principles he taught abroad are being violated at home. The clerks who absorbed his judicial philosophy in his chambers are now deploying their skills in service of the political apparatus that dismantled his life's international work.

The Trump-Zelensky Dimension

Trump's animosity toward Zelensky — his public humiliation of Ukraine's president, his demands for capitulation, his withholding of aid — runs directly counter to everything Tymkovich invested in Ukraine. The boys from Chaikovichi who attended his 2018 school assembly are now fighting Russia. The American administration their judge's clerk network serves has treated their survival as a bargaining chip.

The Divergence Within the Network

It would be unfair to suggest Tymkovich endorses what his clerks are doing in Alaska. Judges do not control their former clerks' careers or client choices. The clerkship network is a professional connection, not a chain of command.

But the divergence is real and worth naming. A judge who spent his career promoting constitutional limits on executive authority, who traveled repeatedly to a country now fighting for its democratic survival, who was recruited by an agency since dismantled to teach the very principles at issue in Sullivan v. Division of Elections — his professional legacy now includes both that work and the network of attorneys currently defending its antithesis.

Tymkovich announced his senior status on February 24, 2026 — the same day Trump nominated his clerk Daniel Domenico to fill his seat. The judge stepping back. The network stepping forward. Into Alaska.

The Central Irony

A federal clerkship is supposed to instill judicial neutrality — the understanding that constitutional law protects everyone equally regardless of political outcome. Timothy Tymkovich's chambers reinforced that principle with particular force, then sent it across the ocean to Ukraine where he taught it to a new generation of judges. His clerks Murray and Francisco came home from those same chambers and built careers as partisan legal weapons for the Republican Party apparatus. They stayed away from international work entirely. The principle Tymkovich carried to Chaikovichi never made it into their practice. Now they are in Alaska defending executive overreach in election administration — the precise pathology their mentor spent years warning Ukrainian judges destroys democratic institutions. The judge crossed the ocean to teach the principle. His clerks stayed home and litigated against it.

The Verdict

A federal judicial clerkship is supposed to instill neutrality — the constitutional discipline to apply the law regardless of political outcome. Timothy Tymkovich's chambers stood for that principle with particular clarity. He carried it to Ukraine four times on USAID funds and taught it to judges building democratic institutions under Russian pressure. His clerks Murray and Francisco absorbed his training in those same chambers, then built careers as the Republican Party's election law apparatus — exclusively domestic, exclusively partisan, entirely disconnected from the international principle their mentor embodied. They are now in Alaska defending a state official who removed a constitutionally qualified candidate at a national party committee's request, without statutory authority, likely unconstitutionally. The clerkship was supposed to make lawyers who serve the Constitution. It made lawyers who serve the party. The judge crossed the ocean to teach the difference. His clerks never learned it.

Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich · U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit · Senior Status February 24, 2026

USAID Rule of Law Program · Ukraine · Village of Chaikovichi

First & Fourteenth PLLC · Christopher O. Murray · Michael Francisco

Sullivan v. Division of Elections · Case 3AN-26-07485CI · Alaska Superior Court

Colorado Politics · Bloomberg Law · Wikipedia · #akleg · #Ukraine · #USAID

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

First & Fourteenth: The RNC's Conservative Litigation Boutique Is Now Alaska's Division of Elections

Alaska Election Law · #akleg · #RNC · #jan6th · First & Fourteenth

The Alaska Division of Elections Is Being Defended by the RNC's Own Litigation Firm

Both partners of First & Fourteenth PLLC — the conservative litigation boutique that defeated the January 6th committee's subpoena for the RNC — are now in Alaska Superior Court defending a state agency that removed a candidate at the NRSC's request.

When the Alaska Division of Elections filed Pro Hac Vice motions on June 22, 2026, admitting two out-of-state attorneys to defend against Sullivan v. Division of Elections, the names meant everything. C. Murray and M. Francisco are not generic outside counsel. They are Christopher O. Murray and Michael Francisco — both partners at First & Fourteenth PLLC, a self-described conservative litigation boutique whose tagline is "Tradition wins."

Both partners. Not one attorney with election law expertise. Both partners of the same firm — the firm that represents the Republican National Committee in election litigation — deployed simultaneously to defend a Republican state election director's decision to remove a constitutionally qualified candidate made at the request of the Republican National Senatorial Committee.

A state agency tasked with neutral election administration is now being defended by the RNC's own law firm.

"Tradition Wins" First & Fourteenth PLLC · Colorado · Conservative Litigation Boutique · RNC Counsel

Who They Are

Christopher O. Murray Partner · First & Fourteenth PLLC
Harvard Law School J.D.
Law clerk, Judge Timothy Tymkovich, 10th Circuit
Deputy General Counsel, Romney 2012 presidential campaign
Republican National Lawyers Association member
Defeated January 6th committee's congressional subpoena for the RNC — the only entity to do so
Represents RNC and Arizona Republican Party in election procedure challenges
Federalist Society speaker
Michael Francisco Partner · First & Fourteenth PLLC
Law clerk, Judge Timothy Tymkovich, 10th Circuit
Law clerk, Justice Neil Gorsuch, U.S. Supreme Court
19 cases briefed before the U.S. Supreme Court
Instrumental in 303 Creative v. Elenis and Masterpiece Cakeshop
Represents candidates, voters, and political parties in ballot access and election administration cases
Nationally respected constitutional litigator in First Amendment and election law

The Tymkovich Connection

The Shared Judicial Clerkship That Built This Firm

Both Murray and Francisco clerked for Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. They came up through the same judicial chambers, built their careers in parallel, and co-founded First & Fourteenth together. This is not two attorneys who happen to share a firm — it is a tightly coordinated conservative legal operation built from the same clerkship, deploying the same judicial philosophy, in service of the same political ecosystem. Judge Tymkovich was appointed by President George W. Bush and is known for his conservative jurisprudence on constitutional and religious liberty questions — exactly the legal framework First & Fourteenth now applies to election law.

What First & Fourteenth Actually Is

First & Fourteenth describes itself as a values-driven litigation boutique that handles "fearless, creative, and principled advocacy." Their practice spans religious liberty, constitutional law, and election litigation. Their tagline — "Tradition wins" — is not marketing language. It is a statement of judicial philosophy that maps directly onto the legal arguments Murray and Francisco will make in Alaska Superior Court.

Michael has represented candidates, voters, political parties, and advocacy groups in cases involving ballot access, campaign finance, election administration, and the unfortunate trend of criminalization of political activity. His strategic counsel has shaped some of the most consequential First Amendment and election law battles in recent years.

— First & Fourteenth PLLC, biography of Michael Francisco

Francisco's biography specifically references "the unfortunate trend of criminalization of political activity" — language that signals a legal philosophy hostile to using state power against political actors. Yet Francisco is now in Alaska defending exactly that: a state election official who used state power to remove a political candidate at a national party committee's request.

The ideological tension in that position is significant. First & Fourteenth built its reputation defending political actors from government overreach. In Alaska, they are defending government overreach on behalf of political actors.

Every Actor — One Party

Demand Side — Republican
NRSC — national Republican party committee
Alaska Republican Party — state party complaint
Incumbent Sen. Dan S. Sullivan — Republican
RNC Chairman Joe Gruters — Republican
NRSC General Counsel Blake Murphy — authored removal demand letter
Defense Side — Republican
Carol Beecher — Republican election director
Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom — Republican, running for governor
Gov. Dunleavy — Republican
Murray — RNC election attorney, Romney campaign
Francisco — Gorsuch clerk, 19 Supreme Court cases
First & Fourteenth — "Tradition wins"

There is not a single non-Republican actor on either side of the decision to remove Daniel J. Sullivan from the ballot. The complaint came from Republican Party entities. The removal was executed by Republican state officials. The defense is being mounted by the Republican Party's own litigation firm.

The Alaska Division of Elections is a constitutionally neutral state agency charged with administering elections for all Alaskans. What is now defending that agency's decision in Alaska Superior Court is indistinguishable from the Republican Party's national legal apparatus.

The Ideological Contradiction

Francisco's Own Biography Condemns the Position

Francisco built his career opposing "the criminalization of political activity" and defending candidates from government overreach. He is now defending a government official who removed a candidate from a ballot at a political party's request — with no statutory authority to do so, according to the Alaska Legislature's own lawyers.

Murray's January 6th Expertise Cuts Both Ways

Murray defeated a congressional subpoena for the RNC by arguing the subpoena exceeded legislative authority and violated First Amendment rights. The Alaska Legislature's subpoena to Beecher raises identical questions. He is now on the other side — defending against scrutiny of the same party he protected from congressional scrutiny in 2022.

"Tradition Wins" vs. U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton

First & Fourteenth's conservative judicial philosophy is built on constitutional text and original meaning. The constitutional text here — U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton — is unambiguous: states cannot add qualifications for Congressional office. The Alaska Legislative Counsel applied exactly this textual analysis to conclude the removal was likely unconstitutional. First & Fourteenth must now argue against the plain constitutional text their own judicial philosophy demands they follow.

The AG's Absence Speaks Volumes

The Alaska Attorney General's office — which routinely defends state agencies — is not here. The Division bypassed its own state's lawyers for a private conservative litigation boutique with direct ties to the RNC. That choice either signals the AG declined to defend an unconstitutional position, or that the RNC's legal apparatus was involved in the defense strategy from the beginning.

The Question July 20 Must Answer

The legislative subpoena demands all communications between the Division of Elections, the NRSC, the Alaska Republican Party, and the incumbent senator's campaign. Those documents are due July 20. The most important question those documents could answer is not when the NRSC wrote its complaint letter. It is when First & Fourteenth was retained.

If Murray and Francisco were retained before the June 15 removal decision — if the RNC's litigation firm was advising the Division while it was deciding whether to remove Sullivan from the ballot — that transforms the Division's decision from an independent administrative determination into a coordinated partisan legal strategy executed through a nominally neutral state agency.

If they were retained after the removal — engaged specifically to defend the decision once litigation became inevitable — the coordination question is narrower but the partisan alignment is no less complete.

Either way, a state election agency is being defended by the Republican Party's own law firm in a case that began with the Republican Party's own national committee demanding a candidate's removal. The Division of Elections is not a neutral administrator in this case. It is a partisan actor with partisan counsel defending a partisan decision.

The Partisan Record — Complete

The NRSC demanded the removal. The Alaska Republican Party filed the complaint. Republican state officials executed it. The Alaska Legislature's own lawyers said it was likely unconstitutional. A legislative subpoena was negotiated into mootness past the ballot printing deadline. The case went to Superior Court. The Division bypassed the Alaska AG and retained both partners of First & Fourteenth — the RNC's conservative litigation boutique, tagline "Tradition wins" — to defend a constitutionally suspect removal of a qualified candidate from a ballot. Murray clerked for Tymkovich. Francisco clerked for Tymkovich and then Gorsuch and has argued 19 Supreme Court cases. Together they defeated the January 6th committee's subpoena for the RNC. They are now in Alaska. The Division of Elections is not defending this case. The Republican Party is.

Sullivan v. Division of Elections · Case 3AN-26-07485CI · Alaska Superior Court · Filed June 22, 2026

Christopher O. Murray · Michael Francisco · First & Fourteenth PLLC

Republican National Committee v. Pelosi, 2022 WL 4349778 (D.C. Cir. 2022)

303 Creative v. Elenis · Masterpiece Cakeshop · RNC v. Fontes

Alaska Legislative Affairs Agency Memorandum 26-190.lei · June 17, 2026

U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton, 514 U.S. 779 (1995) · #akleg · #RNC · #jan6th

Dan Sullivan Has a New Nickname — And It Might End Up on the Ballot

Alaska Senate 2026 · #akleg · #aksen

Dan Sullivan Has a
New Nickname

The NRSC spent weeks calling him Decoy Dan. He acknowledged it. Now here's the legal irony they didn't see coming.

When the National Republican Senatorial Committee adopted "Decoy Dan" as their official label for Daniel J. Sullivan of Petersburg, they thought they were running an attack. What they were actually doing was building his brand — and satisfying an Alaska ballot regulation in the process.

Sullivan has been called Decoy Dan in every Alaska outlet, national wire services, and official federal filings. He has acknowledged the label. A retired schoolteacher from Southeast Alaska who filed to run for U.S. Senate, got removed from the ballot by the Division of Elections, hired three Ballard Spahr attorneys, and filed in Superior Court — Decoy Dan Sullivan has more name recognition today than any challenger to an Alaska incumbent in recent memory.

And under the very regulation Carol Beecher cited to remove him from the ballot, that nickname may now be legally eligible to appear on it.

DECOY DAN
SULLIVAN
Adopted by the NRSC · Acknowledged by the candidate · Legally eligible under 6 AAC 25.214(c)

The Regulation That Backfired

Beecher's June 15 removal letter cited 6 AAC 25.212 — the regulation prohibiting ballot listings that are "confusing or misleading to voters." That was her basis for striking Sullivan's name entirely rather than designing a ballot that distinguished the two Sullivans with middle initials, full legal names, or city of residence.

But the Alaska ballot regulations don't end at 25.212. One section over, 6 AAC 25.214(c) addresses nicknames directly:

6 AAC 25.214(c) · Alaska Administrative Code · Candidate Name on Ballot
A candidate's nickname may appear on a ballot if the nickname is a name by which the candidate is commonly and generally known in the community; and does not imply any action or position the candidate intends to take if elected.
The same regulatory framework Beecher cited to remove Sullivan also permits his most famous name.

The standard is straightforward: is the candidate commonly and generally known in the community by that name? For Decoy Dan Sullivan the answer is documented across every major outlet that has covered this story.

How Famous Is "Decoy Dan"?

The NRSC adopted the name and put it in official federal filings. Beecher's own removal letter used it. It has appeared in every outlet that has covered this story — locally, statewide, and nationally. The nickname that was meant to delegitimize him has become the most recognizable shorthand for his candidacy in Alaska politics.

Documented Public Record of "Decoy Dan Sullivan"

NRSC FEC complaint June 9 — adopted as official label "Daniel J. Sullivan (Decoy Dan)"
RNC Chairman Joe Gruters — used officially in statement after removal June 15
Beecher's June 15 removal letter — used in the official determination
Anchorage Daily News — statewide coverage across multiple stories
Alaska Landmine — repeated use across reporting and social media
NBC News — national wire pickup
Washington Times — national coverage
Alaska House Judiciary Committee hearing — June 22, 2026
Sullivan himself — acknowledged the label publicly

Every element of the 6 AAC 25.214(c) nickname standard is satisfied. He is commonly known by that name. He is generally known by that name in the community — and well beyond it. The candidate himself acknowledged it publicly.

The Layered Irony the NRSC Created

They Adopted and Amplified the Name

The NRSC adopted "Decoy Dan" as their official label in their June 9 FEC complaint — "Daniel J. Sullivan (Decoy Dan)" — and deployed it in their letter to Beecher and Dahlstrom. The RNC Chairman used it in his official statement after the removal. Every subsequent institutional use of the name traces back to the NRSC and RNC making it their own.

They Spread the Name

By filing an FEC complaint, lobbying the Division of Elections, issuing press statements, and conducting a national media campaign, the NRSC ensured "Decoy Dan Sullivan" appeared in every outlet that covered the story. They built his brand while trying to destroy his candidacy.

Beecher Used It Officially

The Division of Elections' own removal letter referenced the nickname. Putting "Decoy Dan" in an official government document is the strongest possible evidence that the name is commonly and generally known — it's now part of the administrative record.

Sullivan Acknowledged It

Sullivan has acknowledged the Decoy Dan label publicly. A candidate's own acknowledgment of a nickname is direct evidence of how he is commonly known — exactly what 6 AAC 25.214(c) requires. Combined with the saturation coverage across every outlet that has touched this story, the standard is unambiguously satisfied.

The Regulation Permits It

The same regulatory framework the Division cited to justify removal contains an explicit provision permitting commonly known nicknames on the ballot. The NRSC created a ballot-eligible nickname while lobbying for his removal from the ballot.

It Doesn't Imply a Position

The second element of 6 AAC 25.214(c) requires the nickname not imply any action or position the candidate intends to take if elected. "Decoy Dan Sullivan" is a label applied by opponents — it implies nothing about his policy positions. The standard is satisfied.

What the Ballot Could Look Like

Former Democratic state senator and attorney Hollis French testified at the June 22 House Judiciary Committee hearing that the Division of Elections has all the tools it needs to distinguish the two candidates on the ballot. Options floated by lawmakers and legal commentators include middle initials, full legal names, city of residence, and nickname designation.

The Division of Elections has all the power it needs to designate those names in a manner that allows voters to tell the difference. It's not up to the candidate to solve the Division of Election's problem.

— Former Sen. Hollis French, attorney, testifying before the Alaska House Judiciary Committee, June 22, 2026

Under the regulatory framework as written, the ballot could legitimately read:

DAN S. SULLIVAN
DECOY DAN SULLIVAN

The remedy was always available. Middle initials solve the problem cleanly. But the nickname regulation opens a second door — one the NRSC built, Beecher labeled, and Sullivan acknowledged.

The Bigger Picture

The NRSC's campaign to remove Sullivan from the ballot has produced the opposite of what was intended on the name recognition front. Before the NRSC's letter, the FEC complaint, the Division investigation, and the national media coverage, Daniel J. Sullivan of Petersburg was a retired schoolteacher almost nobody outside Petersburg had heard of.

After six weeks of the most intensive political attention any Alaska primary challenger has received in years — he is Decoy Dan Sullivan. His case is fast-tracked before an Anchorage judge under his legal name. His lawyers are from Ballard Spahr. National outlets are watching.

The NRSC tried to make him disappear. Instead they made him famous. And under Alaska's own ballot regulations, that fame may be exactly what puts his name — his new name — on the August 18 primary ballot.

The Bottom Line

The NRSC adopted "Decoy Dan" as their official label. Beecher put it in an official removal letter. Sullivan acknowledged it. Alaska's ballot regulations explicitly permit commonly known nicknames. The same regulatory framework used to remove him from the ballot also permits his most recognizable name to appear on it. The remedy was always two middle initials. But Decoy Dan Sullivan works too.

6 AAC 25.214(c) · 6 AAC 25.212 · Alaska Administrative Code

Sullivan v. Division of Elections · Case 3AN-26-07485CI · Alaska Superior Court · Filed June 22, 2026

House Judiciary Committee Hearing · June 22, 2026 · Anchorage Legislative Information Office

Alaska Legislative Affairs Agency Memorandum 26-190.lei · June 17, 2026

#akleg · #akgov · #aksen · Analysis June 2026

Monday, June 22, 2026

If Tap Water Was Used: The Chemical Consequences Nobody Is Reporting
Alleged by Emily Miller Unverified — Contradicted by FactCheck.org

If Tap Water Was Used:
The Chemical Consequences
Nobody Is Reporting

Conservative journalist Emily Miller, citing four anonymous sources, claimed Washington DC tap water was used to refill the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool — framed as a deliberate choice for visual clarity. If true, the chemical consequences of mixing chloraminated municipal water with a degrading polyurea liner are significantly more serious than anything yet reported. This is what that chemistry produces.

Editorial Caveat — Read First

The tap water claim is unverified and contested. FactCheck.org found no evidence the water source changed from the 2012 Tidal Basin system. Miller's own subsequent reporting — algae came "through internal pipes" — contradicts her anonymous source claim. The Interior Department's statement that algae came from "reactivated supply lines" is inconsistent with chloraminated municipal water. This analysis examines the chemical consequences if Miller's claim is true — not as an assertion that it is.

Washington DC's municipal water supply uses chloramine — a compound formed by combining chlorine and ammonia — as its disinfectant. Unlike free chlorine, chloramine is more stable in distribution pipes and provides longer-lasting disinfection as water travels to consumers. For drinking, bathing, and household use, it is safe at the EPA regulatory standard of up to 4 mg/L.

It is not, however, safe for aquatic life without treatment. It is not tested for contact with degrading polyurea coatings in open-air conditions. And when it breaks down — which it does rapidly under UV sunlight — it initiates a chemical cascade whose consequences have not appeared in any media reporting on the Reflecting Pool crisis.

Part 01

The Claim — and Why It Contradicts Itself

Emily Miller — Two Contradictory Reports — June 2026
Earlier report — tap water claim

Anonymous sources told Miller the pool was refilled with city tap water — framed as a deliberate operational choice for visual clarity. "Crystal clear" initial appearance was the stated positive. Four anonymous sources.

Later report — pipe algae claim

Miller reports "algae came back through internal pipes, filthy water." Her video caption: "also tonight there's some weird influx of algae." Algae through internal pipes only occurs with Tidal Basin supply lines — not chloraminated municipal water.

These two claims cannot both be true. Chloraminated tap water traveling through municipal supply lines does not produce algae inoculum. Algae coming through internal pipes is the signature of the Tidal Basin supply system installed in the 2012 renovation. Miller's own on-the-ground reporting undermines her own anonymous source claim — without acknowledgment or correction.

Despite this internal contradiction, the tap water claim has circulated widely. The question of whether it is true is separate from the question of what the chemistry would be if it were true. The answer to that second question is alarming — and has not been reported.

Part 02

The NSF Certification Paradox: Why the "Safe for Drinking Water" Label Means Nothing Here

Here is the central paradox of the tap water claim — one that has not appeared anywhere in public reporting. PipeLiner 5000 carries NSF/ANSI 61 certification — the standard for materials in contact with potable drinking water. Municipal tap water contains chloramine. Therefore, the argument goes, PipeLiner 5000 must be chloramine-resistant — it was certified for exactly that water.

That argument is wrong. And the reason it is wrong is documented in the NSF certification standard itself.

NSF/ANSI 61 Certification — What It Actually Covers CONDITIONS VIOLATED

NSF 61 listings specify allowable use conditions including maximum temperature, contact time, and critically — surface area-to-volume ratios. The certification is issued for specific conditions. The Reflecting Pool violates every one of them.

Certified Conditions — Inside a Pipe
  • Small diameter enclosed pipe — no UV exposure
  • Water flows continuously — brief contact time
  • High surface area to volume ratio — but rapid dilution of extractables in flowing water
  • Underground temperature — cool, controlled, stable
  • Pressurized system — no outgassing possible
  • Dark environment — zero UV degradation of coating
  • Chemical extractables dilute and flush continuously
  • Chloramine contact time: seconds to minutes per volume
Actual Conditions — The Reflecting Pool
  • 300,000 sq ft open basin — full DC summer UV
  • Static water — indefinite contact time with coating
  • Surface area to volume ratio completely outside pipe certification parameters
  • Water temperature 85–90°F — accelerates all chemical reactions
  • No pressure — concrete moisture and CO₂ outgas freely causing blistering
  • Constant UV exposure — rapidly degrades both coating and chloramine simultaneously
  • Chemical extractables accumulate in static water indefinitely
  • Chloramine contact time: weeks of continuous immersion
The NSF/ANSI 61 certification for PipeLiner 5000 provides zero assurance of chemical stability in the Reflecting Pool. The certification was granted under pipe conditions. Every condition under which it was tested — enclosed environment, flowing water, controlled temperature, no UV, pressurized system, brief contact time — is the opposite of what exists at the pool. The manufacturer's own product warranty states explicitly: when their product is used outside its documented applications, the toxicity and risk profile changes and it is the contractor's responsibility to determine and disclose those changed risks. That determination was never made. That disclosure was never issued.

This is not a technicality. The surface area-to-volume ratio condition exists in NSF 61 precisely because the same coating that is safe in a flowing pipe can leach dangerous concentrations of chemical extractables into static water given enough contact time. The standard accounts for this. The contractor, the NPS, and the Interior Department apparently did not.

Part 03

What Chloramine Does to a Degrading Polyurea Liner

PipeLiner 5000 is an aromatic polyurea/polyurethane hybrid. Aromatic formulations are specifically noted in coating science literature to have weaker hydrolytic and UV stability than aliphatic alternatives. Contact with chloraminated water initiates a documented chemical sequence.

Chemical Degradation Sequence — Chloramine + Aromatic Polyurea in Open Water
01
NH₂Cl → oxidative attack on urethane linkages
Chloramine is an oxidizing agent. It attacks the urethane chemical bonds — the backbone of PipeLiner 5000 — causing chain scission and hydrolytic degradation. Peer-reviewed literature documents chlorine degradation of polyether-based polyurethane specifically. The aromatic isocyanate chemistry of PipeLiner 5000 is more vulnerable to this attack than aliphatic alternatives.
02
Polyurea hydrolysis → free isocyanate (R-NCO) released
As the polymer backbone degrades, free isocyanate groups are released back into the water column. Isocyanates are the toxic precursor component of the original two-part coating system. In their free form they are classified as highly toxic compounds with known sensitization and respiratory effects.
03
R-NCO + H₂O → carbamic acid → amine + CO₂
Free isocyanates react immediately with water to form carbamic acid, which decomposes into amines and carbon dioxide gas. The CO₂ formation beneath the coating surface creates pressure — producing the blistering and delamination visible in the pool. This reaction is accelerated by the elevated water temperatures created by the dark blue liner absorbing DC summer sun.
04
NH₂Cl + amine byproducts → N-nitrosamines including NDMA
This is the most serious step. Chloramine reacts with the amine byproducts released from the degrading liner to form N-nitrosamines — including NDMA (N-Nitrosodimethylamine). NDMA is classified by the EPA as a probable human carcinogen. Cancer risk is associated with concentrations as low as 0.7 ng/L — nanograms per liter, parts per trillion.
05
UV photolysis → NDMA partial degradation, but open to further DBP formation
NDMA degrades under direct UV sunlight — but the shallow pool's DC summer UV environment is not uniform. Shaded areas, deeper sections, and nighttime hours allow NDMA to persist and accumulate. Research shows THM formation increases to 420% with extended chloramination contact time from 1 to 4 days — the pool has been filled for weeks.
Part 03

NDMA: The Carcinogen in the Cascade

N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) deserves separate attention because its toxicological profile is exceptional even among disinfection byproducts.

⚠ N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) — Toxicological Profile EPA: Probable Human Carcinogen
EPA Cancer Risk Level
0.7 ng/L
nanograms per liter — parts per trillion
California Notification Level
10 ng/L
drinking water threshold
Primary Target Organ
Liver
moderate to high acute toxicity

NDMA is both carcinogenic and genotoxic. The EPA has established a 1-in-1,000,000 cancer risk at 0.7 ng/L. It forms as an unintentional byproduct when chloramine reacts with organic nitrogen-containing compounds — including the amine byproducts released by degrading polyurethane.

Peer-reviewed research published in ScienceDirect confirms: chloramine contact with polymer-based materials containing nitrogen — such as polyurethane — facilitates formation of N-DBPs including NDMA. N-DBPs, despite being present at lower concentrations than carbon-based disinfection byproducts, are more toxic, carcinogenic, and mutagenic.

NDMA is miscible in water — it dissolves completely and distributes evenly through the water column. It does not settle or concentrate at the surface. It is not detectable by sight, smell, or taste. The pool could contain NDMA at or above cancer risk thresholds with no visible indication whatsoever.

No NDMA testing of the pool water has been publicly disclosed.

Part 05

Tap Water vs. Tidal Basin: Which Is Actually Worse for the Liner?

A critical question the tap water narrative ignores: if the pool was refilled with chloraminated municipal water specifically to avoid the Tidal Basin's algae-laden natural water — did that choice actually reduce the chemical risks to the liner and to pool visitors?

Risk Factor Tap Water (Chloraminated) Tidal Basin Water Outcome
Algae — Day 1 Suppressed initially by chloramine Immediate bloom from nutrient-rich estuarine water Tap slightly better
Liner chemical attack Chloramine directly attacks urethane bonds from day one Natural organic acids cause slower hydrolytic degradation Tap worse
Isocyanate release Accelerated by chloramine oxidation of polymer backbone Slower release through UV degradation and hydrolysis Tap worse
NDMA formation Confirmed pathway: chloramine + amine byproducts → NDMA No chloramine present — no NDMA formation pathway Tap far worse
Blistering/delamination CO₂ from isocyanate-water reaction creates subsurface pressure Moisture outgassing from concrete — same mechanism Both bad
Wildlife toxicity Chloramine acutely toxic to aquatic life without treatment Natural water — not acutely toxic to native wildlife Tap worse
Long-term DBP formation THM formation increases 420% with extended chloramination No disinfectant residual — no DBP formation Tap worse

The comparison is stark. The only category where tap water performs better than Tidal Basin water is the initial suppression of algae — which lasts only as long as chloramine residual persists in the open-air UV environment, typically hours to days. On every other chemical risk dimension, chloraminated tap water in contact with a degrading aromatic polyurea liner produces worse outcomes than natural Tidal Basin water.

"N-DBPs are more toxic, carcinogenic, and mutagenic than C-DBPs... NDMA is considered a probable carcinogen and concentrations as low as seven ng/L are associated with a 10⁻⁵ cancer risk level."

— ScienceDirect, Formation of disinfection by-products from polymer-based materials, Water Research, 2022
Part 06

The Timeline — If the Tap Water Claim Is True

Hypothetical Chemical Timeline — Chloraminated Tap Water + Degrading PipeLiner 5000
Day 1
Pool refilled. Chloramine suppresses initial algae. Pool appears "crystal clear" — the stated goal. Chloramine immediately begins oxidative attack on aromatic urethane bonds in liner.
Days 2–4
UV photodegradation destroys chloramine residual rapidly in open summer sun. Chloramine attack on liner has already initiated chain scission. Free isocyanates begin entering water column.
Days 3–7
Isocyanates react with water to produce carbamic acid, then amines and CO₂. CO₂ pressure beneath liner causes blistering. Combined with concrete moisture outgassing — delamination begins. Chloramine, now partially depleted, reacts with amine byproducts to form N-nitrosamines including NDMA.
Days 5–8
With chloramine depleted, algae blooms unchecked. Liner peeling visible to tourists. NDMA and other DBPs distributed invisibly through water column at potentially detectable concentrations.
Day 8+
Hydrogen peroxide treatment kills first algae bloom. Creates conditions for Scenedesmus — harder, more resistant secondary bloom. Peroxide may react with existing DBPs to form additional byproducts. Dead duck recovered June 21.
Present
No NDMA testing disclosed. No water quality results published. National Guard stationed for vandalism enforcement. No public health advisory issued for any contaminant. The only independent water testing was commissioned by The Atlantic — which identified Scenedesmus but did not test for NDMA or isocyanate compounds.
Part 07

The Question That Must Now Be Asked

Whether the pool was filled with tap water or Tidal Basin water, the question of NDMA formation is now unavoidable. The chemical pathway is documented in peer-reviewed literature: chloramine plus amine-containing polymer degradation products produces N-nitrosamines including NDMA. The pool contains a degrading aromatic polyurea liner. If tap water was used, all the precursors for NDMA formation were present simultaneously.

NDMA is invisible, odorless, and tasteless. It is miscible in water and distributes evenly. It is detectable only through laboratory testing. The EPA cancer risk threshold is 0.7 nanograms per liter — parts per trillion. No testing at that level of sensitivity has been publicly disclosed for the Reflecting Pool.

The administration has arrested a tourist for touching the water under a destruction of monuments statute. It has stationed the National Guard at the pool's edge. It has issued blanket reassurances that there are "no harmful side effects" from the hydrogen peroxide treatment. It has not tested for NDMA. It has not tested for free isocyanates. It has not published any water quality data whatsoever.

The only people who tested the water independently were journalists at The Atlantic — who confirmed a secondary algae bloom. They did not test for NDMA, isocyanates, or disinfection byproducts.

If Emily Miller's tap water claim is true — someone needs to test that water for NDMA. If it is false, and Tidal Basin water was used, the chemical risks are somewhat different but the absence of any water quality disclosure remains equally indefensible.

Millions of visitors will gather on the National Mall in thirteen days for America's 250th birthday. The pool will either still be contaminated or will have been hastily drained and refilled again. In neither scenario has the government disclosed what is — or was — in the water.

Primary Sources — All Publicly Accessible
  1. EPA — Chloramines in Drinking Water: epa.gov/dwreginfo/chloramines-drinking-water
  2. NCBI/NIH — NDMA Toxicological Profile: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK601154
  3. ScienceDirect — DBP Formation from Polymer-Based Materials: sciencedirect.com — Water Research, 2022
  4. L-I.co.uk — The Chemistry of Polyurethanes (isocyanate + water reaction): l-i.co.uk
  5. ACS Environmental Science & Technology — DBP Health Impacts: pubs.acs.org
  6. Water Research Foundation — NDMA Background Technical Information: waterrf.org
  7. WSP Engineering — 2012 Renovation (Tidal Basin water source): wsp.com
  8. FactCheck.org — No evidence water source changed in 2026: factcheck.org
  9. Rhino Linings PipeLiner 5000 TDS: uscoatingspec.com
  10. CRV Science — Independent Technical Analysis: crvscience.com
Published June 22, 2026  ·  This analysis examines chemical consequences of the alleged tap water claim — not an assertion that tap water was used  ·  All chemical reactions cited from peer-reviewed literature  ·  No NDMA testing of pool water has been publicly disclosed as of publication