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Kelly Chaundel Tshibaka (/ʃɪˈbɑːkə/ shib-AH-kə; born September 5, 1979)[1][2][3] is an American attorney who served in the federal government from 2002 to 2019 in several inspector general offices. Upon moving back to her home state of Alaska in 2019, she served for two years as the commissioner of the Alaska Department of Administration until 2021. Tshibaka was a Republican candidate for the United States Senate in the 2022 election.[4] She lost to the incumbent, Republican Lisa Murkowski, by about seven percentage points.[5][6] Thereafter, she became a leading opponent of ranked-choice voting in Alaska, as well as head of the Trump 2024 campaign in that state.
Kelly Tshibaka | |
---|---|
Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Administration | |
In office 2019–2021 | |
Governor | Mike Dunleavy |
Preceded by | John Quick |
Succeeded by | Paula Vrana |
Inspector General of the Federal Trade Commission | |
Acting | |
In office June 1, 2014 – March 29, 2015 | |
President | Barack Obama |
Preceded by | Scott Wilson |
Succeeded by | Roslyn Mazer |
Personal details | |
Born | Kelly Chaundel Hartline September 5, 1979 Alaska, U.S. |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse |
Niki Tshibaka (m. 2001) |
Children | 5 |
Education | |
Website | Campaign website |
Tshibaka was born in Alaska to Bill and Michele Hartline. Her father, a Vietnam veteran, worked as a union electrician, and her mother worked at Alaska's largest oil field, Prudhoe Bay.[7][8][9][10]
She was raised in Wasilla and Anchorage, graduating in 1995 from Steller Secondary School in Anchorage. She attended University of Alaska Anchorage and graduated from Texas A&M University in 1999.[11][12]
Tshibaka earned a Juris Doctor degree from Harvard Law School in 2002. While at Harvard, she wrote an article for the Harvard Law Record in which she stated "Unlike race or gender, homosexuality is a choice".[13] She later apologized, and said she was assigned the article as a counterpoint piece, and that "I don't hold that view today".[14]
Tshibaka has said that she was the first in her family to graduate from college.[8] At least one member of her extended family also attained a college degree, her maternal grandfather, the late Edward Allsup.[9]
Tshibaka worked for the federal government from 2002 to 2019, and for Alaska's state government from 2019 to 2021. Following her government work, she became a candidate for U.S. Senate.
From 2002 to 2005, Tshibaka served as a special assistant in the United States Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General. She then joined the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, serving as advisor to the inspector general of the intelligence community and senior advisor in the Civil Liberties and Privacy Office. A controversy arose as to whether or not she had improperly recorded about 600 working hours for which she was paid $36,000, but the matter was closed in 2011.[9]
Tshibaka joined the Federal Trade Commission in 2013, serving as chief investigator and senior advisor to the inspector general until 2014. She then served as that Commission's acting inspector general from 2014 to 2015.
From 2015 to 2019, she served as assistant inspector general and chief data officer in the United States Postal Service Office of Inspector General.[15] In that position, she relied heavily upon data analytics to monitor post offices, in order to reduce the time spent on audits and investigations, and to increase the return on investment in each of those cases.[16][17]
In 2019, Alaska Governor Michael Dunleavy hired Tshibaka as a senior policy advisor.[18] Dunleavy then appointed Tshibaka commissioner of the Alaska Department of Administration in January 2019, after his first nominee to that position withdrew.[19][18]
While commissioner, Tshibaka was involved in negotiating an end to the 2019 Alaska ferry workers' strike.[20] She also took action against nazi-themed license plates.[21]
She served as commissioner until stepping down in March 2021 to run for U.S. Senate.[4]
In Alaska's election for U.S. Senator, all candidates regardless of their political parties ran in a single Alaska primary in 2022, because of Alaska's new system of ranked choice voting. The top four candidates advanced to the general election, with Murkowski and Tshibaka in the lead.[22] The Alaska Republican Party endorsed Tshibaka.[23] One of the top four candidates (Buzz Kelley) withdrew and also endorsed Tshibaka,[24] leaving the following three candidates: Murkowski, Tshibaka, and (Democrat) Pat Chesbro. As of September 2022, Tshibaka and Murkowski were virtually tied in an AARP poll.[25][26]
In August 2022, Tshibaka participated in a series of questions and answers with the Anchorage Daily News in which she criticzed President Biden's economic and environmental policies.[27] She claimed that She recognizes Joe Biden as president, and says that people who broke the law on January 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol "should be held responsible", but also believes that "legitimate questions about the 2020 election....deserve answers".[27]
Tshibaka criticized several votes cast by Murkowski in the Senate.[28][29] In addition to her candidacy being endorsed by Buzz Kelley and the Republican Party of Alaska, Tshibaka was also endorsed by former President Donald Trump.[30] Former Trump administration officials Bill Stepien, Justin R. Clark, and Tim Murtaugh worked on the campaign.[31][32]
A super PAC called the "Senate Leadership Fund" associated with Republican Senator Mitch McConnell, spent $5.5 million running attack ads against Tshibaka.[33] Alaska's Republican Party censured McConnell on October 23, 2022, for "directly contradicting" the party's July endorsement of Tshibaka.[34][35]
Tshibaka ultimately lost the election to Murkowski by about seven percentage points.[6]
In 2023, Tshibaka joined the movement to end ranked-choice voting in Alaska, launching a group called Preserve Democracy.[6][36] And, in 2024, she was appointed head of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign in Alaska.[37]
Tshibaka and her husband Niki, whom she met while she was in law school, have five children.[8][26] In 2006, the couple founded a congregation associated with the Foursquare Church, an evangelical Pentecostal denomination.[9] She is a member of the National Rifle Association of America and of hunting organization Safari Club International.[11]