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On a Tuesday morning, Nick Puglia — regional press secretary for the National Republican Senatorial Committee — posted what he clearly thought was a killshot. A photo of Democratic Alaska Senate candidate Mary Peltola on a fishing boat with California Rep. Eric Swalwell. "Here's @MaryPeltola fishing with sexual predator Eric Swalwell in Alaska," Puglia wrote. "Will Peltola denounce her fishing buddy and political ally?"

It was a neat piece of political theater. Swalwell is radioactive right now — the Manhattan DA's office has opened a sexual assault investigation following allegations from multiple women, and the timing couldn't be worse for any Democrat photographed smiling next to him. Puglia's instinct to pounce was understandable. The problem is the glass house he's throwing stones from.

Meet the Man Puglia Works to Re-Elect

Nick Puglia's job is to get Senator Dan Sullivan re-elected. That's the context for everything he says and does. And Senator Sullivan — the man Puglia is running cover for — is one of Donald Trump's closest Senate allies. The two were photographed together in the Oval Office. Sullivan has voted with Trump's agenda consistently, endorsed him, and staked much of his 2026 re-election strategy on that relationship.

Which makes Puglia's "sexual predator" framing rather extraordinary when you consider what federal courts have established about the man Sullivan embraces as his political patron.

A federal jury found Trump liable for sexual abuse. The verdict has been upheld — twice — by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump, affirmed December 2024 & June 2025

This is not an allegation. This is not a political attack. This is an adjudicated legal finding. In 2023, a jury found Donald Trump liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll and awarded her $5 million. The presiding judge later clarified that the jury's finding of sexual abuse met the common definition of rape. When Trump appealed, the Second Circuit upheld the verdict. When he appealed again, they upheld it again.

Then came a second trial. A second jury. An additional $83.3 million in damages for defamation — upheld by the Second Circuit in September 2025. Courts have now upheld judgments against Trump in this matter on three separate occasions.

The Legal Record

Trump Sexual Misconduct: What Courts Have Found

  • Jury Verdict May 2023: Found liable for sexual abuse and defamation of E. Jean Carroll — $5 million awarded.
  • Upheld December 2024: Second Circuit affirms $5 million verdict on appeal.
  • Upheld June 2025: Second Circuit rejects en banc hearing request; verdict stands again.
  • Jury Verdict January 2024: Second jury awards Carroll $83.3 million in additional damages for continued defamation.
  • Upheld September 2025: Second Circuit upholds $83.3 million judgment despite presidential immunity arguments.
  • Additional At least 28 women have publicly accused Trump of sexual misconduct since the 1970s, including the Jill Harth lawsuit settled out of court.

The Sullivan Connection Puglia Doesn't Want You to Think About

To be clear about what's actually happening here: Puglia is using a fishing photo to demand Peltola denounce a colleague whose misconduct allegations are, as of this writing, still being investigated. Meanwhile, Puglia's own candidate has spent years cultivating a close political relationship with a man who has been found liable for sexual abuse by two separate juries, with judgments totaling nearly $90 million — upheld through multiple rounds of appeals.

Sullivan was so close to Trump that the two appeared together in the Oval Office. Sullivan voted to acquit Trump at both impeachment trials. He endorsed Trump for re-election. He has, by his own admission, enthusiastically supported the policies of the second Trump administration.

What NRSC Demands of Peltola

  • Denounce Swalwell — accused of misconduct, under investigation, no verdict
  • Explain a fishing trip photo
  • Distance herself from a political ally

What Sullivan Has Never Done

  • Denounce Trump — found liable for sexual abuse by two juries, $88M+ in upheld judgments
  • Explain Oval Office photo ops
  • Distance himself from his central political patron

The Epstein Shadow That Won't Go Away

And then there's the Jeffrey Epstein dimension — the one that makes the Swalwell fishing photo look like small potatoes. Trump repeatedly promised during the 2024 campaign to release Epstein files. His administration then refused to release them in full. Elon Musk, during his public break with Trump in June 2025, stated that Trump appeared in the Epstein files — suggesting that was the "real reason" the files hadn't been made public. The DOJ later released FBI files detailing multiple, largely unverified tips to federal authorities regarding alleged Trump conduct connected to Epstein.

None of this constitutes a criminal conviction. That must be stated plainly. But Puglia's "sexual predator" label for Swalwell — a man not charged with any crime — exists in a political universe where the man he is protecting has faced adjudicated civil liability for sexual abuse, $88 million in upheld court judgments, and ongoing public questions about his relationship with a convicted sex trafficker.

Puglia calls Swalwell — not charged, not convicted — a "sexual predator." His candidate's patron has been found liable for sexual abuse in federal court. Twice.

The Alaska Equation Is Shifting

This double standard would be merely hypocritical in a normal political environment. In Alaska in April 2026, it may be something more costly. Trump carried Alaska by 14 points in 2024. But national polling now has his approval rating in the low-to-mid 40s nationally — down sharply from the 47% he enjoyed at inauguration — driven by the Iran war, rising fuel costs, and economic anxiety. Independent voters, a significant bloc in Alaska, have soured on him particularly fast.

Sullivan has bet his re-election on the Trump relationship. That bet looked smart in January. It looks more complicated now. And when the NRSC's own communications strategy hands Peltola's supporters a readymade counter-punch — "you're outraged about a fishing photo while your candidate poses in the Oval Office with a man found liable for sexual abuse" — it raises the question of whether Puglia's political instincts are as sharp as he thinks they are.

There's a rule in opposition research and political communications that has held up across decades of campaigns: before you throw the glass house stone, check what your own foundation is made of. Nick Puglia checked something. It just wasn't that.


Sources: E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump, Second Circuit opinions (Dec. 2024, Jun. 2025, Sep. 2025); Donald Trump sexual misconduct allegations, Wikipedia compilation; NRSC press releases (nrsc.org); Nick Puglia post on X, April 2026; Anchorage Daily News coverage of Sullivan-Peltola race; Silver Bulletin presidential approval averages, April 2026. All legal references reflect civil liability findings, not criminal charges or convictions.

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