Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Everything Bubble: GDP, AI, War & the Coming Crash
Sunday, May 24, 2026  ·  Economic Analysis
The Contrarian
Markets · Macro · What They're Not Telling You
Special Report

The Everything Bubble:
GDP, AI, War & the Crash They Can't Stop

Strip away government spending and AI hype from the world's largest economy, add a war closing 20% of global oil supply, and a 50-year divergence between Wall Street and Main Street — and the picture looks nothing like the headlines.

The world economy is projected to hit $124 trillion in 2026, with the United States alone accounting for $29 trillion — more than China, Germany, and India combined. It's the kind of number that gets shared on social media with pride and awe. But what happens when you look behind it?

Strip out government expenditure. Remove the AI investment bubble. Account for a war that has closed the world's most critical oil chokepoint. What remains tells a very different story — one that three separate charts, each alarming on its own, tell together with unusual clarity.

The GDP Number Nobody Talks About

The $29 trillion US GDP figure is real. But roughly 41% of it — approximately $12 trillion — is government expenditure at the federal, state, and local level. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense, debt interest. Remove that, and the private-sector economy is closer to $17 trillion.

Then there's AI. Tech-related capital expenditure contributed an estimated 0.9% to GDP growth before accounting for imports — but after deducting the foreign-made chips and data center equipment that flood back out of the country, the net contribution falls to roughly 0.4–0.5 percentage points. Meaningful, but not transformative. Not yet.

$29T US Nominal GDP
41% Government Spending
~$17T Private Sector GDP
124% Debt-to-GDP Ratio

The deficit funding that 41% is running at approximately 6% of GDP annually — a figure typically seen during wars or deep recessions, not relative periods of peacetime growth. The debt-to-GDP ratio sits above 124%. This is not sustainable arithmetic. It is borrowed prosperity.

Now look at other major economies. Germany spends 51% of GDP through government. France an extraordinary 57%. The UK 45%. When you rebuild the world GDP chart using only private-sector output, the rankings shift — and the totals shrink considerably.

Country 2026 GDP Govt % GDP Private GDP (est.)
🇺🇸 United States$29T41%~$17T
🇨🇳 China$20.7T~36%~$13T
🇩🇪 Germany$5.3T51%~$2.6T
🇮🇳 India$4.5T19%~$3.6T
🇯🇵 Japan$4.5T43%~$2.6T
🇫🇷 France$3.6T57%~$1.5T
🇬🇧 United Kingdom$4.2T45%~$2.3T

Wall Street vs. Main Street: A 50-Year Divergence

The second chart is harder to explain away. The S&P 500 sits at an all-time high above 7,400. The University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment Index sits at an all-time low of 44.8. In fifty years of data, these two lines have never been further apart.

"We've never seen a gap this wide between Wall Street and Main Street."

— Charlie Bilello, Creative Planning, May 24, 2026

The stock market, in theory, reflects economic reality. In practice, it reflects the wealth of the top 10% of Americans who own roughly 90% of equities — people insulated from the cumulative damage of inflation, the sting of 7–8% mortgage rates, and the anxiety of a job market being reshaped by automation. Consumer sentiment captures everyone else.

And the S&P's strength is narrower than the headline suggests. Strip out the five or six mega-cap AI-adjacent stocks — Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Meta, Alphabet — and the index looks considerably more ordinary. The market is not broadly confident. It is concentrated in a single thesis: that AI will be transformative enough to justify virtually any valuation.

The 3.8% Threshold — And We're Already There

The third chart adds historical pattern to the picture. Every major market crash of the past 25 years — the dot-com collapse (−49%), the financial crisis (−57%), the 2022 rate-hike selloff (−25%) — was preceded by CPI crossing above 3.8%.

As of April 2026, the annual US inflation rate hit exactly 3.8% — the highest since May 2023. That's the trigger level. And top economic forecasters now project CPI could reach 6% in Q2 2026, driven largely by one factor: the war.

3.8% CPI — April 2026
6% Projected CPI Q2 2026
4.46% 10yr Treasury Yield
0% Rate Cut Probability 2027

The War No One Priced In

On February 28, 2026, US and Israeli forces launched military operations against Iran. By March 4, Iran had declared the Strait of Hormuz closed — the narrow waterway through which roughly 20% of the world's oil supply and 25% of seaborne oil trade transits daily. Commercial traffic through the Strait dropped more than 90%.

The International Energy Agency called it "the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." Brent crude surged past $120 a barrel. Qatar's LNG exports — critical for European energy — were stranded. European gas storage, already at just 30% capacity after a brutal 2025–26 winter, saw benchmark prices nearly double.

Feb 28, 2026
US & Israel launch military operations against Iran
Mar 2, 2026
Iran's IRGC declares Strait of Hormuz closed. Shipping lines reroute.
Mar 4, 2026
Commercial traffic through Strait drops 90%+. Brent crude surges past $120/barrel.
April 2026
US CPI hits 3.8% — exactly the pre-crash threshold in all three prior major selloffs
May 2026
Forecasters project CPI hitting 6% in Q2. Fed rate cuts now priced out through 2027.

The economic word for what follows is stagflation — the combination of rising prices and stagnating growth that plagued the 1970s and that monetary policy is uniquely poorly equipped to fight. The Federal Reserve can raise rates to kill inflation, but doing so crushes an already weakening job market. It can cut rates to stimulate growth, but doing so pours fuel on the inflationary fire. It cannot do both. It is trapped.

The Global Ripple

The damage is not evenly distributed. Asia — which receives roughly 80% of Gulf oil exports — faces fuel shortages and rationing. Eurozone growth is projected to slow to just 0.5% in the second half of 2026, with risks of technical recession if the Strait disruption extends through summer. UK inflation is expected to breach 5%. Iran, Qatar, Iraq, Kuwait, and Bahrain are all projected to contract.

A UN Development Programme study estimated the war could reduce economic growth in Arab nations by $120–194 billion in GDP. A cascading debt crisis in the Global South — where governments already stretched thin face higher energy import bills and rising interest rates in developed markets — is a real risk, not a tail scenario.

The IMF put it plainly in its April 2026 World Economic Outlook — titled, revealingly, "Global Economy in the Shadow of War": a longer conflict, combined with geopolitical fragmentation and a reassessment of AI productivity expectations, could significantly weaken growth and destabilize financial markets globally.

The Convergence

Each of the charts shared this week captures one dimension of the same underlying reality. The GDP chart shows an economy propped up by borrowed money and unproven technology. The sentiment chart shows the widest gap in fifty years between asset prices and lived experience. The CPI chart shows the precise threshold — 3.8% — at which all three previous major crashes began. And the war adds the supply shock that history consistently identifies as the accelerant.

  • GDP overstated by ~$12T in government deficit spending
  • S&P 500 at all-time high; consumer sentiment at all-time low — never seen together
  • CPI at 3.8% — the exact pre-crash level in 2000, 2008, and 2022
  • 20% of global oil supply disrupted; energy prices surging
  • Federal Reserve trapped — cannot cut rates without worsening inflation
  • AI capex masking underlying economic softness
  • Debt-to-GDP at 124% with 6% annual deficit in peacetime
  • IMF explicitly warns global recession risk if conflict continues

None of this means a crash is imminent tomorrow. Bubbles can extend far longer than skeptics expect. But the conditions for one — the overvalued market, the sentiment collapse, the inflation trigger, the supply shock, the policy trap, the debt overhang — are not hypothetical warnings. They are the present situation, documented in real-time data, published this month.

The only remaining question is timing. And that, unfortunately, is the one thing no chart can tell you.


This analysis draws on data from the IMF World Economic Outlook (April 2026), US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Trading Economics, the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, the Stimson Center, Council on Foreign Relations, and Britannica's coverage of the 2026 Iran War. Charts originally published by Visual Capitalist, Barchart, and Bull Theory on X.

2029: When the Bill Comes, Alaskans Get the Sticker Shock | Thomas Lamb
Notes on Alaska Energy & Public Policy
Thomas Lamb
Alaska LNG · Construction Timeline · Sticker Shock · Special Session

2029: When the Bill Comes, Alaskans Get the Sticker Shock

Glenfarne says gas will flow to Alaskans in 2029. The arithmetic says otherwise. And when the real cost becomes public in mid-2027 — after the tax deal is locked in — Alaska will understand what it agreed to.

Breaking — Special Session, May 24, 2026

Senate leadership has sidelined Resources Chairwoman Cathy Giessel — the legislator who has most persistently demanded cost disclosure — and routed the Alaska LNG tax bill directly to Senate Finance. The last institutional voice asking the right questions has been bypassed. The pattern is now complete: remove every transparency mechanism, route around every person asking inconvenient questions, and call it progress.

Glenfarne says gas will flow to Alaskans in 2029. Mechanical completion of the 739-mile pipeline in 2028. First gas delivery by end of summer 2029. Those dates appear in a FERC filing. They appear in press releases. They appear in testimony to the legislature. They have been repeated so often that the political debate treats them as engineering fact.

They are not engineering fact. They are a political statement — a number chosen to create urgency, pressure the legislature, and justify the special session demand that tax certainty be granted now, before verified costs exist, before the ROW leases are converted, and before a single binding financing commitment has been made.

The construction record of every comparable pipeline project in Alaska and North America tells a different story. And when the real cost becomes public in mid-2027 — after the tax deal is locked in and the special session gavels out — Alaskans will understand what was agreed to on their behalf without their knowledge.

The Prerequisites That Don't Exist Yet

Before evaluating whether 2029 is possible, consider what must happen first — and hasn't.

Prerequisites for Construction — Current Status
Final Investment Decision
Not taken. Was anticipated by end of 2025. Now targeting 2026 — at the earliest. Without FID there is no financing. Without financing there is no construction.
Verified Project Costs
Not public. Glenfarne acknowledges verified costs won't be available until mid-2027. No lender commits billions to a project whose cost is unverified.
Tax Certainty Legislation
Not passed. Being forced through Senate Finance in special session today after Giessel — who demanded cost disclosure — was sidelined.
ROW Conversion on State Land
Not done. Conditional ROW leases on state land require commissioner's written public interest finding before construction can begin. Finding cannot be defensibly made without verified costs.
Binding Supply Contracts
Not signed. All producer agreements are precedent agreements — conditional frameworks, not binding supply contracts. Binding contracts require FID.
Construction Financing
Not secured. All partner commitments are letters of intent or strategic investments. No binding project financing exists. No EPC contract has been executed.

Every single prerequisite for breaking ground is unresolved as of today. Every one. Yet Glenfarne is telling Alaskans the pipeline will be mechanically complete in 2028 — roughly 18 months from now.

What History Actually Looks Like

Alaska has built one comparable pipeline in its history. North America has built one comparable gas pipeline in recent memory. Both tell the same story about what 739 miles of large-diameter pipeline through difficult subarctic terrain actually requires.

Comparable Pipeline Construction — The Historical Record
Trans-Alaska Pipeline (TAPS)
Coastal GasLink (BC)
Alaska LNG Phase One (Glenfarne)
800 miles, 48-inch diameter
416 miles, 48-inch diameter
739 miles, 42-inch diameter
Three mountain ranges, permafrost, 800 river crossings
Two mountain ranges, difficult terrain, 650+ water crossings
Three mountain ranges, permafrost, subarctic conditions
70,000 workers at peak construction
6,000 workers at peak construction
Four simultaneous construction spreads — workforce unspecified
Construction time: 3 years, 2 months (1974-1977)
Construction time: 5 years (2019-2023)
Claimed construction time: ~18 months (2027-2028)
Final cost: $8 billion (1977 dollars) — $43 billion today
Final cost: $14.5 billion — nearly 3x original $5 billion estimate
Claimed cost: $11 billion for Phase One pipeline — unverified
6 years pre-construction planning, permitting, ROW
8 years from announcement to FID to construction start
FID not yet taken. ROW not converted. Financing not secured.
465 federal and 403 state notices to proceed required
Fully permitted before construction began
Conditional ROW leases on state land not yet converted

The Trans-Alaska Pipeline — built by seven major oil companies at the height of the 1970s energy crisis, with unlimited federal support, 70,000 workers, and the most urgent national energy imperative in American history — took three years and two months to build after all permits were in place. Coastal GasLink — 416 miles through difficult British Columbia terrain — took five years of construction after FID.

Glenfarne is claiming 18 months for 739 miles of subarctic pipeline — starting from a position where no FID has been taken, no ROW conversion has occurred, no construction financing exists, and verified costs won't be known until mid-2027.

That is not an engineering timeline. It is a political instrument.

The Giessel Sidelining — History Repeating

Today's news that Senate leadership has routed the tax bill around Giessel and directly to Senate Finance is not a procedural footnote. It is the political culmination of everything this series has documented.

Giessel is the Resources Committee chairwoman. The Resources Committee is the appropriate legislative body to evaluate the statutory compliance questions — the AS 43.82 bypass, the AGDC transparency obligations, the ROW conversion prerequisites, the relationship between verified costs and tax certainty. She has been asking those questions for months. She has not received answers. Now she has been removed from the process.

Senate Finance evaluates fiscal impacts — revenues and expenditures. It is not structured to evaluate whether AGDC violated its statutory mandate, whether "appropriate separation" was misapplied, whether the conditional ROW leases can legally convert without verified costs, or whether AS 43.82 provides the correct statutory pathway for tax certainty. Those questions are gone from the process the moment the bill moves to Finance.

Glenfarne bypassed AS 43.82 because its transparency requirements were inconvenient. Senate leadership bypassed the Resources Committee because Giessel's transparency demands were inconvenient. The pattern is identical — remove the oversight, route around the person asking questions, and call it progress.

When the Bill Comes — The Sticker Shock

Here is what mid-2027 looks like if the special session succeeds and the tax bill passes today.

The Sticker Shock — What Arrives in Mid-2027
The Tax Structure Was calibrated against a $44-46 billion cost assumption nobody verified. The Worley estimate arrives. Independent analysts have projected $65-70 billion. The tax structure built against $44 billion is now either structurally inadequate — too low to generate promised revenues — or wildly over-generous — conceding far more than the economics required. Either way it was set against the wrong number. And it is locked in.
The Revenue Projections Governor Dunleavy's $26 billion in state revenue over 30 years was calculated against project cost assumptions. Recalculate against verified costs. The number changes. The promise to Alaskans changes with it. But the tax concessions that were traded for that promise are already law.
The ROW Conversion If the DNR commissioner proceeded with conversion before verified costs — certifying in writing that construction serves the public interest — that finding is now measured against the real number. A public interest finding made on $44 billion arithmetic is legally vulnerable when the verified cost is $70 billion. The construction authorization on state land is retroactively indefensible.
The Producer Agreements Still not binding contracts. The producers — who built safety nets precisely because they have been here before — now evaluate their precedent agreements against verified project economics. If the cost doesn't support the gas pricing their agreements assume, the agreements don't convert. The gas stays stranded. Again.
The Borough Tax Revenues The North Slope and Kenai Peninsula boroughs gave up property tax certainty in exchange for a volumetric alternative. That alternative was sized against unverified project economics. When verified costs arrive, the boroughs discover what they actually traded. They have no recourse. The deal is done.
The 2029 Gas Delivery Promise Alaskans were told gas would flow by 2029. The construction prerequisites that don't exist today — FID, ROW conversion, financing, binding contracts — were never completed on the timeline that would make 2029 possible. The year comes and goes. The gas does not flow. The tax concessions remain in place regardless.
Glenfarne's Position A $48.5 million private company extracted generational tax concessions from Alaska based on a cost number it controlled and withheld. When the real number arrives in mid-2027, Glenfarne returns to the legislature. The economics don't work at the tax structure already agreed. More concessions are needed. Alaska negotiates from a position of zero leverage — the concessions are already law, the ROW is already converted, the commitments are already made.

The Question Alaska Should Have Asked

This series has documented seven distinct failures — the statutory betrayal, the shell game contradictions, the unused ROW lever, the producer safety nets, the AS 43.82 bypass, the securities exposure of public company partners, and now the impossible 2029 timeline. Every one of those failures traces to a single point of origin.

Alaska never asked — and was never allowed to ask — what this project actually costs to build.

Not the 2015 number. Not the 2020 number. The Worley number. The one Glenfarne commissioned in May 2025, received by late 2025, and has refused to release to the legislature, to AGDC, to the producers, to its own public company partners, or to the Alaskans whose land, tax structure, and energy future depend on it.

That number is the foundation of every promise Glenfarne has made. It is the basis of every threat it has delivered. It is the denominator of every calculation the governor has cited. It is the fact that the Resources Committee was sidelined today for continuing to demand.

It will become public in mid-2027. By then the tax deal will be law. The ROW will be converted. The special session will be a memory. And Alaskans will read the number for the first time and understand — in a single moment of sticker shock — what was agreed to in their name, without their knowledge, in a special session convened to prevent the question from being answered.

What Was Built Here — And Why It Matters

This is the seventh post in a series that began with a simple observation: Alaska has been here before. In 2006 Frank Murkowski negotiated a secret deal with energy producers. The legislature rejected it. The public repudiated it. Alaska built a statutory framework — AGIA, SB 138, AS 43.82 — specifically designed to prevent it from happening again.

Every statute in that framework has now been bypassed, misapplied, or ignored. AGIA's transparency architecture was replaced with a confidentiality agreement. SB 138's "appropriate separation" language was stretched beyond its intended meaning. AS 43.82's structured pathway for tax certainty was never used. The ROW conversion lever was never activated. The Resources Committee was sidelined today on the day it mattered most.

The argument in these posts was not anti-pipeline. It was pro-transparency. Alaska deserves to know what this project costs before committing to tax certainty, ROW conversion, and generational concessions built on arithmetic nobody has been allowed to check.

The Worley estimate exists. Glenfarne has it. When it becomes public in mid-2027, Alaska will finally know what it agreed to.

That is the sticker shock. And every Alaskan paying it will have a right to ask: why didn't anyone demand the number before signing the check?

Some of us did.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Dark Money Media Machine
Campaign Finance · Media · Democracy · 2026

The Dark Money
Media Machine

How undisclosed political money flows through partisan media and social platforms — and who profits from the transaction

Thomas Lamb · Analyzing Politics That Control Our Lives · May 2026

The campaign finance disclosure debate has always focused on the wrong end of the pipeline. We argue about who gave the money. We rarely ask who made money from it — or how the message traveled from an anonymous donor's checkbook to a voter's Facebook feed without a single disclosure requirement along the way.

The answer is a three-layer system that is entirely legal, largely invisible, and extraordinarily effective. Understanding it requires following the money not just to the political groups that spend it, but through the media infrastructure that amplifies it and the technology platforms that monetize it.

The Pipeline: How Dark Money Reaches Voters
1

Anonymous Donor

Wealthy individual, corporation, or industry group writes a check to a 501(c)(4) nonprofit. No public disclosure required. No FEC filing. No name attached.

2

Dark Money Group

The 501(c)(4) — Last Frontier Action, Majority Forward, One Nation, etc. — uses the funds for "issue advocacy." Buys TV and digital ads. Issues press releases. Files FEC complaints. Generates news hooks.

3

Partisan Media Amplification

Aligned outlets — operating as "news" sites — cover the press releases, amplify the complaints, and frame the messaging as journalism. No disclosure. No "paid for by." Readers believe they're reading news.

4

Social Media Distribution

Facebook, Google, and connected TV platforms distribute both the paid ads and the "organic" partisan content. They collect revenue from the paid placements and engagement from the shared content. Algorithms amplify what generates reaction.

5

The Voter

Receives the message — possibly as a paid ad, possibly as a "news" article shared by a friend, possibly as an algorithmically surfaced post. At no point does the voter see the original donor's name.

$1.9 Billion in the Dark

The numbers alone are staggering — and they almost certainly understate reality.

$1.9B Dark money in 2024 federal races — a new record (Brennan Center)
$4.3B Total dark money in federal elections since Citizens United in 2010
45% Of online political ad spending in 2024 came from groups concealing some or all donors
$10.8B Projected total political ad spend in 2026 — up 20% from 2022

But the Brennan Center notes that even $1.9 billion "necessarily — and perhaps substantially — underestimates the true scale." Categories of undisclosed spending simply cannot be reliably tracked. The dark money that flows through partisan media outlets, for instance, never appears in any FEC filing at all.

"Citizens who are barraged with political messages paid for with money from undisclosed sources may not be able to consider the credibility and possible motives of the wealthy corporate or individual funders behind those messages."

— OpenSecrets, Dark Money Basics

Partisan Media: News as Cover

The most underexamined layer of the dark money ecosystem is also its most powerful: partisan websites that look, feel, and present themselves as independent journalism.

These outlets are not required to disclose funding sources. They carry no FEC disclaimers. They present advocacy as news, and readers — particularly in information-scarce local markets — have few tools to tell the difference.

Why Local Media Collapse Matters

The United States has lost thousands of local newspapers over the past two decades. The communities most affected are often smaller states and rural areas — precisely the places where Senate races are decided. Alaska has lost significant local journalism capacity. Must Read Alaska fills part of that void — but with an undisclosed editorial agenda and direct ties to Republican political operatives.

When a reader in Fairbanks or Juneau who once relied on a neutral local paper now gets their political news from a partisan outlet, they don't receive a disclaimer. They receive framing — and they often share it on Facebook, where the algorithm treats it identically to neutral journalism.

Alaska Case Study

Must Read Alaska and the Three-Layer Operation

In the 2026 Alaska Senate race, the amplification ecosystem is operating almost as a textbook illustration of the system:

Layer 1

Last Frontier Action

501(c)(4) registered in Alabama, led by Virginia-based DC operative, founded by former Sullivan staffers with oil and cruise industry ties. Runs six-figure ads. Zero donor disclosure.

Layer 2

NRSC Press Operation

Files FEC complaints against Peltola. Issues press releases characterizing Democratic outside spending as "smear campaigns." Creates news hooks requiring no paid ad buy.

Layer 3

Must Read Alaska

Covers NRSC complaints as news. Amplifies Sullivan messaging as "reports." Characterized the Senate Majority PAC's $10.6M buy as a "smear campaign" — language indistinguishable from a campaign press release — while never applying the same label to Last Frontier Action.

None of the three layers need to legally coordinate. They simply all point in the same direction. The voter sees "news." The donor remains anonymous. The message travels for free.

The same structure exists on the Democratic side, with aligned progressive outlets amplifying Majority Forward's messaging as news. The system is bipartisan. The transparency problem is universal.


The Platforms: Profiting From Every Layer

Here is the piece of the dark money story that is almost never told: the technology platforms — Meta, Google, connected TV networks — make money from every layer of the pipeline simultaneously.

They collect revenue from the paid dark money ads. They collect engagement data from the organic partisan content those ads generate. And they profit from the algorithmic amplification of outrage, which is what political content reliably produces.

$553M Google political ad revenue in 2024 — up 215% from 2020
$3.46B Total digital political ad spend in 2024 — up 156% from 2020
$2.4B Connected TV political spend projected for 2026
$20M Meta spent lobbying against disclosure requirements in 2023 alone

The Disclosure Conflict of Interest

This is where the systemic problem becomes acute. The platforms that would be most affected by stronger disclosure requirements are the same platforms spending millions lobbying against them. Meta spent nearly $20 million in 2023 — including specifically on dark money transparency efforts — while simultaneously collecting hundreds of millions in revenue from dark money political ads.

The National Association of Broadcasters — representing TV networks that collect the largest share of political ad revenue — spent $11 million lobbying lawmakers last year, in part to block disclosure requirements that would expose who is funding the ads their stations air.

"Broadcasters think that if there's greater transparency of money being spent on campaign ads, it's going to cost them. That's why they oppose it."

— Craig Holman, Public Citizen ethics lobbyist, via Jacobin

The Fake News Site Problem

The opacity goes deeper still. A NewsGuard investigation found that Meta's own platform was being used to run political ads disguised as local news articles — paid for by entities with names like "The Main Street Sentinel," which didn't appear in any state business registry. Meta requires political ads to name their funding source — but lets sponsors create and manage their own disclosures. The result, as NewsGuard found, is that dark money operators simply invent plausible-sounding local news outlets as their disclosure label.

Platform Disclosure Policy Enforcement Reality Revenue Interest
Meta (Facebook/Instagram) Requires "paid for by" label — self-managed by advertiser Sponsors can use invented entity names; minimal verification Hundreds of millions in political ad revenue per cycle
Google/YouTube Requires disclosure for election ads; AI deepfake labeling added 2024 Better than Meta; still limited for 501(c)(4) issue ads $553M in political revenue in 2024 alone
Connected TV (streaming) Varies by platform; often mirrors broadcast rules Growing channel with limited regulatory framework Fastest-growing political ad channel — $2.4B projected 2026
Broadcast TV Required to maintain public file of political ad purchases Most transparent layer; still doesn't reveal ultimate donor source Still commands ~50% of political ad spend

Why Nothing Has Changed

The campaign finance framework was built for a simpler era — paid TV ads with disclaimers, donor lists filed with the FEC, clear lines between candidates and outside groups. None of that framework anticipated the current landscape.

The FEC cannot regulate editorial content. The IRS 501(c)(4) rules are barely enforced even with a functioning commission — and the FEC has been without a quorum since April 2025, meaning it cannot investigate new complaints at all. The DISCLOSE Act, which would require organizations to publicly report donations over $10,000, has never passed despite years of bipartisan public support. And social media platforms have in recent years rolled back even the modest fact-checking programs they once maintained.

Meanwhile, the 2026 Alaska ballot measure that Dan Sullivan supports would repeal not just ranked-choice voting but also the campaign finance disclosure requirements Alaska voters passed in 2020 — making the state's dark money landscape even more opaque than the federal baseline.

"The FEC is allowing a whole bunch of potentially harmful activity, just green-lighting that essentially by not having a quorum. And it's not the FEC's fault. It's the administration's fault for not submitting nominations."

— Aaron Scherb, ethics and democracy lobbyist, via NOTUS

Who Benefits From the Status Quo

The system persists because nearly every powerful actor benefits from it. Dark money donors get influence without accountability. Political operatives get employment. Partisan media outlets get traffic and relevance. Technology platforms get revenue. Broadcast networks get ad dollars. And the lobbying arms of all these industries spend collectively hundreds of millions of dollars per year ensuring that the disclosure rules that might change this calculus never pass.

Voters get the bill — in the form of a political information environment they cannot trust, saturated with messages from interests they cannot identify.


The Question Voters Aren't Being Asked

The next time you see a political ad on Facebook, or read a "news" article that happens to align perfectly with one candidate's messaging, or watch a TV spot with a vague "paid for by" disclaimer — ask the question the system is designed to prevent you from asking:

Who actually paid for this? And what do they want in return?

The dark money system's greatest achievement is not the money itself. It is the infrastructure — the partisan outlets, the social algorithms, the lobbying apparatus — built to ensure that question never gets a straight answer.

In Alaska, that question runs through Last Frontier Action, Must Read Alaska, Meta's ad platform, and every television station in the state. The money is anonymous. The pipeline is not.

Sources: Brennan Center for Justice · OpenSecrets · NOTUS · Jacobin · NewsGuard · AdImpact · Brennan Center Online Political Spending Report 2024 · Public Citizen · Alaska Public Media

Thomas Lamb · Analyzing Politics That Control Our Lives · thomasalamb.blogspot.com

Dark Money in the Last Frontier: Alaska's 2026 Senate Race

Dark Money in the
Last Frontier

Outside groups, hidden donors, and the race for Alaska's Senate seat

May 2026
Dark Money Dan Sullivan Mary Peltola

Alaska's 2026 U.S. Senate race has become one of the most closely watched contests in the country — and with that attention has come an influx of outside money from organizations that are not required to disclose where their funding comes from. Two 501(c)(4) nonprofits, one on each side of the aisle, are now shaping the airwaves of the Last Frontier while keeping their donor lists hidden from the public.

On the Republican side, Last Frontier Action is running six-figure ad campaigns boosting incumbent Sen. Dan Sullivan. On the Democratic side, Majority Forward, linked to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, is spending heavily to weaken Sullivan ahead of the November election. Neither group is legally required to tell Alaskans who is paying for the ads.

"No Lower 48 special interest group should be telling Alaskans how to vote."

— Mary Peltola, Democratic challenger, while benefiting from Majority Forward's spending

The irony runs deep on both sides. Peltola is actively campaigning against dark money while outside groups spend on her behalf. Sullivan, meanwhile, has used the phrase "dark money" to attack his opponents — while accepting the support of a group with no donor transparency whatsoever.

✦ ✦ ✦

Two Groups, Same Playbook

The structure is nearly identical on both sides: a 501(c)(4) "social welfare" nonprofit that can raise unlimited, anonymous funds, paired with a super PAC that can spend more aggressively but must disclose donors. The result is a layered system designed to maximize political impact while minimizing transparency.

Detail Last Frontier Action Majority Forward
Type 501(c)(4) nonprofit + companion super PAC 501(c)(4) nonprofit
Side Pro-Sullivan (Republican) Pro-Peltola (Democratic)
Key figure Brock Lowrance, former NRSC senior advisor Linked to Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY)
Registered Mountain Brook, Alabama Washington, D.C.
Known spending Six-figure digital & TV ad buy (exact total undisclosed) $1M+ on ACA/health care ads (Nov. 2025); mid-six-figure buy on gas prices (Mar. 2026); Senate Majority PAC (affiliated) reserving $10.6M in TV time
Donor disclosure None required None required
Founding ties Former Sullivan staffers; Hilcorp PR, cruise industry PR Senate Democratic leadership network

Last Frontier Action: A Closer Look

Despite its Alaska-first branding — a mountain logo, a star, the tagline "pro-America, pro-Alaska" — Last Frontier Action is not an Alaskan organization in any meaningful sense. It was incorporated in Alabama, is led by a Virginia-based Montana operative, and was founded by former Sullivan staffers with ties to industries that have direct financial interests in Sullivan's reelection.

The group's leader, Brock Lowrance, is one of the Republican Party's most prominent Senate campaign strategists. At the NRSC in 2024, he designed and executed a $100 million paid media effort that helped Republicans retake the Senate. He was later named a Resident Fellow at Harvard's Institute of Politics. In early 2025, he co-founded S2R Public Affairs, a DC-based firm, with two other former NRSC colleagues.

By the Numbers
$100M NRSC media spend led by Lowrance in 2024
$10.6M Senate Majority PAC TV ad reservation supporting Peltola
$8.9M Peltola Q1 2026 fundraising — a state record
$2.1M Sullivan Q1 2026 fundraising
$15M Senate Leadership Fund committed for Sullivan
$1M+ Majority Forward health care ad buy targeting Sullivan (Nov. 2025)
✦ ✦ ✦

Where Each Candidate Stands

The two candidates have taken sharply different public positions on campaign finance — even as both benefit from outside spending they cannot legally control.

Republican

Dan Sullivan

Incumbent U.S. Senator · Seeking third term
  • Publicly attacked Democratic outside groups running ads against him as "far-left-wing affiliated Democrat groups" running "blatantly false attack ads" — but framed as partisan attacks, not a principled stand against dark money
  • Used "dark money" specifically to attack Alaska's ranked-choice voting system, calling it something dark money "installed" in Alaska
  • In 2014, refused to sign a campaign disclosure pledge, with his spokesman calling it "disingenuous" — an early signal of his position on transparency
  • Now supports a 2026 ballot measure to repeal RCV that would also eliminate Alaska's donor disclosure requirements passed by voters in 2020
  • Benefits from Last Frontier Action's anonymous ad campaigns without calling for any transparency
  • Outside group founded by former Sullivan staffers with oil and cruise industry ties
Democrat

Mary Peltola

Former U.S. Representative · Challenger
  • Actively campaigns against dark money as a central platform plank
  • Supports the DISCLOSE Act — requiring disclosure of donations over $10,000
  • Backs a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United
  • Benefits from Majority Forward's anonymous spending while criticizing the system
  • Raised $8.9M in Q1 2026, with 95% of donations under $100

"Sullivan has never been in the ranked-choice voting scenario — which he characterized as something dark money installed in Alaska."

— Must Read Alaska, on Sullivan's announcement speech

Sullivan's "Dark Money" Attack — On Ranked-Choice Voting

Sullivan's use of the dark money label deserves closer scrutiny. When he announced his reelection bid in March 2025, the framing around his campaign noted that this would be his first race under ranked-choice voting — a system Sullivan has characterized as one installed by dark money. The 2020 ballot measure that enacted ranked-choice voting in Alaska also included tougher campaign finance disclosure requirements, which Sullivan and his allies now seek to repeal.

In April 2026, President Trump called Alaska's ranked-choice voting system "disastrous" and "very fraudulent" — without evidence — and specifically named Sullivan among the Alaska Republicans he praised for working to repeal it. Sullivan responded on social media, saying he was "proud to stand on principle for free and fair elections in Alaska." If the 2026 repeal ballot measure passes, it would eliminate not just ranked-choice voting and open primaries, but also the campaign finance disclosure requirements voters approved in 2020 — the very transparency rules that would make outside spending like Last Frontier Action's more visible to the public.

"A ballot initiative would repeal requirements to disclose the true source of contributions, as well as the state's top-four ranked-choice voting system — both approved by voters in 2020."

— OpenSecrets, on the 2026 Alaska repeal ballot measure

In other words: Sullivan invokes dark money to attack the voting system, while simultaneously supporting a ballot measure that would strip away donor disclosure rules — making dark money harder to track, not easier.

The Hypocrisy Problem — For Both Sides

The Alaska Senate race offers a textbook illustration of why campaign finance reform stalls in Washington: both parties use the same tools they publicly denounce, because unilaterally disarming is seen as political suicide.

Sullivan's silence on dark money is the simpler case. He has never advocated for transparency in outside spending, and his campaign benefits directly from a group built by his own former staffers. There is no contradiction between his stated positions and his actions — because he has stated no position at all.

Peltola's situation is more complex and politically riskier. She has made campaign finance reform a central campaign message, calling on voters to reject the influence of "Lower 48 special interests" in Alaska politics — while accepting the support of Majority Forward, a Washington D.C.-linked group spending mid-six figures in the state. She could, in theory, publicly ask Majority Forward to stand down. She has not done so.

The bottom line: dark money is legal, it's bipartisan, and in a race this competitive, neither side is likely to voluntarily give it up. The question for Alaska voters is whether they find that acceptable — and whether the candidates' positions on changing the system carry any weight when neither is willing to act on them unilaterally.

Sources: Axios · Alaska Public Media · Harvard Political Review · S2R Public Affairs · lastfrontieraction.com · Native News Online · Reporting from Alaska (Dermot Cole)

This post is for informational purposes. All facts drawn from publicly available reporting as of May 2026.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Trump Didn't Drain the Swamp — He Drained the SPR. And Dan Sullivan Has Nothing to Say About It.

You remember the promise. It was the rallying cry of a movement, the chant that echoed through arenas from 2016 all the way through Trump's second inauguration: Drain the swamp.

Well, Donald Trump didn't drain the swamp. He drained something far more consequential — America's Strategic Petroleum Reserve. And the senator who spent years thundering that the SPR was a sacred national security asset, Alaska's own Dan Sullivan, has gone completely, utterly, inexplicably silent.

"We will fill our strategic reserves right to the top."
— Donald Trump, Inauguration Day, January 2026

The Promise

On his first day back in the White House, Donald Trump stood at the podium and declared a "national energy emergency." He promised to slash energy prices, supercharge domestic production, and — critically — fill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve "right to the top." It was a direct shot at Joe Biden, who had drawn down the reserve during the Ukraine energy crisis. Trump's message was clear: Biden left us exposed. I will fix it.

The Department of Energy issued a formal Secretarial Order making "Refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve" an official department-level priority. By December 2025, the White House was still touting its efforts, calling Biden's drawdown "irresponsible" and claiming they were "gradually" refilling it.

Gradually. That word would age very badly, very fast.


Then Came the War

On February 28, 2026, Trump launched Operation Epic Fury — coordinated U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran. Within days, Iran shut down traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, triggering what the International Energy Agency called the largest oil supply disruption in the history of global energy markets. Oil prices rocketed from the $70s to over $114 a barrel in weeks.

By March 2026 — just two weeks into the war — the Strategic Petroleum Reserve was still less than 60% full. The promise to fill it "right to the top" had gone nowhere. And then it got dramatically worse.

172 million barrels Released by Trump from the U.S. SPR alone — part of a record 400-million-barrel coordinated international drawdown through the IEA, the largest emergency reserve release in world history. The previous record was 182 million barrels across all IEA nations combined during the 2022 Ukraine crisis. The U.S. share this time exceeds that entire global response.
9.9 million barrels in one week The largest single-week SPR drawdown ever recorded — confirmed by the U.S. Energy Information Administration for the week ending May 15, 2026. The prior week saw 8.6 million barrels drained. Back-to-back record weekly draws.
45.2 million barrels in one month The Department of Energy's first contract batch alone — awarded March 20 — covered 45.2 million barrels. Combined with accelerating weekly draws, the Iran war has produced the largest monthly SPR drawdown in the reserve's 50-year history.
Under 375 million barrels — and falling Current SPR inventory, approaching what commodity analysts at Standard Chartered warn are "operational stress limits." The statutory minimum is 150 million barrels. The reserve is now 44% below its 2009 peak of 727 million barrels.
238 million barrels Projected SPR level by 2028 — a 66% collapse from the 695 million barrels held in 2017, and dangerously close to the statutory operational floor.

Trump ordered the release of 172 million barrels as part of a coordinated 400-million-barrel international drawdown through the International Energy Agency — the largest emergency reserve release in the history of global energy markets, more than double the response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Experts warned it would not fix the underlying problem. "The war is driving up prices on the world market," said one Cornell professor who studies the economic impact of wars, "and there isn't an easy way out."

Morgan Stanley estimated global oil stockpiles dropped by about 4.8 million barrels a day between March 1 and April 25 — far exceeding the previous peak for any quarterly drawdown in IEA history. The administration is now so desperate to replenish the reserve that it is reportedly exploring drilling for oil beneath U.S. military bases. The swamp remains. The SPR does not.


What Sullivan Said Then

To understand how remarkable Sullivan's silence is today, you have to understand how loud he was before.

When Biden tapped the SPR in 2022, Sullivan didn't just criticize — he made it his signature issue. He called Biden's drawdown "political window dressing." He called it "a desperate political maneuver." He said Biden had "depleted the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to a level we haven't seen in 35 years." He introduced the ROAR Act — the Replenishing Our American Reserves Act — and declared on the Senate floor:

"The Strategic Petroleum Reserve is meant to support our nation through major security crises — not to bail out a President's catastrophic energy policies."

He introduced companion bills to stop SPR oil from being sold to China. He co-sponsored legislation with Ted Cruz and Joe Manchin. He issued press release after press release. He held hearings. He gave interviews. He ROARed.

Sullivan's own words defined the standard clearly: the SPR is for major security crises — and draining it for political reasons is a national disgrace.


What Sullivan Has Said Since

Nothing.

As of this writing, Senator Dan Sullivan has not issued a single public statement addressing the historic collapse of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve during the Iran war. Not one press release. Not one floor speech. Not one tweet. Not one interview.

His colleague Senator Tom Cotton — no friend of Democrats — was firing off letters to the Energy Secretary as recently as March 2026, demanding accountability for Biden's 2022 drawdown even as Trump's war was actively making things worse. Cotton at least had the consistency to stay on the issue.

Sullivan? Gone. Silent. Missing in action on the very issue he built his energy brand around.

The reserve he spent years vowing to protect is now draining toward a 40-year low — because of a war he voted seven times to keep going.

We're Draining the Reserve and Exporting the Oil

Here is the detail that should make every Alaskan's blood boil.

While the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is being drained to historic lows, and while Alaskans are paying $5-plus at the pump and rural villages face fuel prices approaching $20 a gallon — the United States is simultaneously exporting oil abroad at record levels.

That is not a typo.

With Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz cutting off roughly 20% of global oil supplies, the world turned to America as the supplier of last resort. And the Trump administration answered — by opening the export taps wider than they have ever been opened in American history.

6 million barrels per day U.S. crude oil exports hit a record high during the Iran war — up from 3.9 million bpd before the conflict began. A 30%+ surge.

The Port of Corpus Christi in Texas — previously the third-largest oil export terminal in the world — became the busiest port on earth as tankers from Europe, Asia, and beyond lined up to load American crude. March 2026 was its busiest month ever. The first quarter was its busiest quarter ever.

Meanwhile, American domestic crude stocks dropped for four straight weeks to below historical averages. U.S. distillate stockpiles hit their lowest point since 2005. Gasoline stockpiles fell to their lowest seasonal levels since 2014. And the SPR — the emergency reserve built specifically to protect American consumers from exactly this kind of crisis — was drained at the fastest pace in its history.

The picture this paints is stark: American oil is being pumped out and shipped overseas at record rates, American consumers are paying record prices at the pump, and America's emergency reserve is being hollowed out — all at the same time, all because of the same war.

We are exporting oil to the world while Alaskans can't afford to fill their tanks.

This is Trump's "energy dominance" agenda in action. And it is costing Alaskans dearly. Rural communities are staring down $17-20 a gallon. An Anchorage driver's tank costs $100 to fill. A Wasilla man spends $150 a week on fuel just to commute.

Where is Dan Sullivan on any of this? The senator who built his brand on Alaska energy, American energy independence, and protecting the SPR — the senator who introduced the ROAR Act and roared about every barrel Biden released — has said nothing about record oil exports draining domestic supplies while his own constituents can't afford to heat their homes.

Nothing.


The Math Sullivan Won't Do in Public

Let's do it for him.

Biden drew down roughly 180 million barrels from the SPR in 2022 — during a genuine global energy crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Sullivan called it a disgrace, introduced legislation, and made it a centerpiece of his political identity.

Trump has now released 172 million barrels from the SPR — during a war Trump himself started, without congressional authorization, that Sullivan voted seven times to continue. The SPR is now on a trajectory toward 238 million barrels by 2028 — a level that would leave America dangerously exposed to the next shock, whether that's a hurricane, a Chinese move on Taiwan, or a new conflict in the Middle East.

By Sullivan's own stated standard, this is a catastrophe. A national security emergency. Exactly the kind of reckless political decision-making he spent years warning Alaskans about.

But it's Trump doing it. So Sullivan says nothing.


Drain the Swamp. Fill the Reserve. Pick One.

Trump's "drain the swamp" slogan was always more metaphor than policy. But the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is not a metaphor. It is 695 million barrels of salt caverns along the Gulf Coast, built after the 1973 oil embargo, designed specifically so that America would never again be held hostage by a foreign power's control over energy supplies.

Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz was exactly the scenario the SPR was built for. And instead of meeting that moment with a full reserve — as Trump promised — the country went in with a tank that was already less than 60% full, thanks in part to the fact that Congress, including Sullivan, never funded or passed a serious refill plan.

The ROAR Act died in committee. Twice. Sullivan ROARed and got nothing done. And now the reserve is heading toward its worst level in decades, Alaskans are paying $5-plus at the pump, rural villages face a survival scenario at $17-20 a gallon — and Sullivan is sending fundraising emails asking Alaskans for gas money.

Trump didn't drain the swamp.

He drained the SPR.

And the senator who said that was the one thing he'd never let happen hasn't said a word.

Alaska deserves a senator who ROARs for them — not one who only ROARs at the other party.

The Bottom Line

Dan Sullivan built a political brand on protecting America's emergency oil reserve. He named legislation after it. He gave it a battle cry. He made it a test of patriotism and national security seriousness.

Then his party started a war that drained that reserve to historic lows. And he went silent.

That silence has a cost. It is measured in dollars at the pump in Anchorage. It is measured in gallons at $17 in Bethel. It is measured in 13 flag-draped coffins coming home from a war nobody voted to authorize. And it is measured in a Strategic Petroleum Reserve that, by 2028, may hold barely a third of what it held a decade ago.

Sullivan says Alaska needs you.

Alaska needs a senator who shows up — even when it's his own party doing the damage.

Sources: 24/7 Wall St., Fortune, Fox News, Alaska's News Source, Alaska Beacon, Congressional Research Service, International Energy Agency, Center for Strategic and International Studies, U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan official press releases, National Taxpayers Union Foundation.