Same Enemy
vs
Different Wars
Dan Sullivan and Mary Peltola have fought the same battle against China's illegal fishing fleets — but from fundamentally different vantage points, with different tools, and on behalf of different constituencies. As they prepare to face each other for Alaska's Senate seat, those differences matter more than ever.
```"Russia and China are flooding the market with cheap fish produced using forced labor and poor environmental standards. Alaska fishing families know all too well that federal law overseeing our fish is almost 20 years out of date."
"Chinese and Russian trawl fleets ignore basic seafood harvest rules and best practices, and ravage fish stocks without regard for any other users or future generations. These fleets, which literally utilize slave labor in many cases, are a cancer on fisheries throughout the world."
In the history of Alaska's congressional delegation, few issues have generated more genuine bipartisan alignment than China's illegal fishing practices. Dan Sullivan and Mary Peltola — a Republican senator and a Democratic congresswoman — spent much of 2022–2024 using nearly identical language about the threat Chinese and Russian fleets posed to Alaska's waters, its fishermen, and its communities.
```Yet beneath that surface agreement lay two fundamentally different frameworks for understanding the problem — and two different visions of what solving it would actually require. As Peltola challenges Sullivan for his Senate seat in 2026, those differences are becoming the heart of the debate.
```Head to Head — How They Framed the Issue
```A cultural and tribal rights crisis. Empty fish racks. Families who can't fill freezers. The slow erasure of Alaska Native ways of life that depend on healthy, accessible fish stocks. Federal law hasn't protected what it promised to protect.
A geopolitical and military challenge. China's fleet is not a commercial enterprise — it's a weapon. A state-subsidized armada operating in coordination with the Chinese Navy to achieve maritime dominance and control global food supply chains.
Introduced the FISH Act to update the Magnuson-Stevens Act — the foundational U.S. fisheries law that hasn't been reauthorized since 2006. Pushed to close the Russia/China reprocessing loophole. Added Alaska Native seats to the North Pacific Fishery Management Council.
Co-authored the Fighting Foreign Illegal Seafood Harvest (FISH) Act — a vessel blacklist and sanctions regime. Chaired Senate hearings on IUU fishing as a national security threat. Worked directly with the Trump administration on the April 2025 Restoring American Seafood Competitiveness executive order.
Zero Coast Guard interdictions in Alaska waters over two years is not a resource problem — it is a federal government failing its legal obligation to tribal communities. The trust responsibility requires action, not budget negotiations. This framing demands a legal remedy, not just more funding.
Sullivan has pushed for expanded Coast Guard resources, noting that new cutters are billions over budget and years behind schedule. His framing is that the Coast Guard needs more — more ships, more personnel, more authority. The failure is institutional underfunding, not broken obligation.
Peltola's background running the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission gives her unique standing to make a tribal rights argument. The federal government's trust responsibility to Alaska Native tribes could be the most powerful — and least used — legal tool to compel action against foreign IUU fleets.
Sullivan has not substantively developed the tribal trust angle. His legal and legislative arguments run through trade law, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, sanctions authority, and national security statutes — powerful levers, but ones that require international cooperation or executive action to deploy.
Record of Action — A Chronology
```Campaign
Senate
The Accountability Gap Sullivan Can't Escape
Dan Sullivan has spent four years building the most comprehensive congressional record on Chinese IUU fishing of any senator in Washington. He has chaired hearings, co-authored legislation, worked with two administrations, and successfully passed the FISH Act through committee. By any measure of effort and legislative activity, his record is substantial.
But the Inspector General's June 2025 report created a problem that rhetoric cannot solve: zero interdictions in Alaska waters over two years, on his watch, in the subcommittee he chairs. The Coast Guard devotes four percent of its mission hours to IUU enforcement nationwide. In Alaska specifically, it is functionally absent.
"The geopolitics of the North Pacific and the Arctic are changing dramatically, with Russia and China increasing their aggression and ruinous activities near Alaska's waters."
— Sen. Dan Sullivan, 2025Sullivan's framing — China as a geopolitical weapon, the fishing fleet as a military instrument — is accurate and well-documented. But it routes the solution through national security budgets, Pentagon priorities, and international diplomacy. These are slow, contested, and dependent on an executive branch that may or may not share his urgency. In the meantime, the fish keep disappearing.
The Argument Peltola Hasn't Fully Made Yet
Peltola's strongest potential argument is also her least developed one: the federal government's trust responsibility to Alaska Native tribes.
"Growing up, Alaska was a place of abundance. Now we have scarcity. The salmon, large game, and migratory birds that used to fill our freezers are harder to find."
— Mary Peltola, January 2026As a Yup'ik woman who ran the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Peltola understands the subsistence crisis in personal and institutional terms that no other candidate can match. What she has not yet done is connect that personal understanding to the legal framework that could make it actionable: the binding federal trust responsibility that requires the U.S. government to protect the resources Alaska Native communities depend on.
That framework transforms the debate entirely. Sullivan argues that China must be stopped through sanctions, blacklists, and military posture — measures that require cooperation, appropriations, and time. Peltola could argue that the federal government is already legally obligated to stop it in Alaska waters specifically — and that documented Coast Guard failure to enforce in those waters is not a budget conversation, it is a breach of a legal duty owed to specific communities.
The Coast Guard is the only U.S. agency with law enforcement authority throughout the Exclusive Economic Zone. If it is not enforcing in Alaska, the trust obligation is going unfulfilled — regardless of what any executive order says or what any Senate hearing concludes.
```The Bottom Line
Sullivan and Peltola have fought the same enemy — but Sullivan has fought it as a national security problem requiring Washington to act on the world stage, while Peltola has fought it as a community survival problem requiring the federal government to fulfill the promises it has already made to Alaska Native peoples.
The first framing produces hearings, executive orders, and legislation that moves slowly through a divided government. The second framing — fully developed — produces legal obligations that exist independent of political will, enforceable in court, grounded in a century of tribal rights law, and impossible to dismiss as partisan positioning.
In a year when Trump's approval has fallen net-negative in Alaska for the first time, when grocery prices remain punishing, and when fish racks in Western Alaska remain empty, which framing lands harder at the kitchen table is a question neither candidate has yet fully answered.
Sources: Congressional testimony, DHS OIG June 2025 report, SeafoodSource, Native American Rights Fund, NOAA Fisheries economic data, Morning Consult state-level approval tracking.
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