Tuckerman Babcock | |
Office: | Chief of Staff to the Governor of Alaska |
Governor: | Mike Dunleavy |
Term Start: | December 3, 2018 |
Term End: | July 31, 2019 |
Predecessor: | Scott Kendall |
Successor: | Ben Stevens |
Office1: | Chair of the Alaska Republican Party |
Term Start1: | April 30, 2016 |
Term End1: | November 8, 2018 |
Predecessor1: | Peter Goldberg |
Successor1: | Glenn Clary |
Birth Date1: | 24 October 1960 |
Party: | Republican |
Spouse: | Kimberly Waychoff (div. 2005) Kristie Babcock |
Children: | 8 |
Relatives: | Lyda Green (mother-in-law) |
Education: | Wesleyan University (BA) College of William and Mary |
Tuckerman Babcock (October 24, 1960)[1] is a political strategist who served as chairman of the Alaska Republican Party from 2016 to 2018.[2]
Babcock has been living in Alaska since 1966.[3] In 1983 he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Government from Wesleyan University. In 1986, he attended the College of William and Mary.[4]
As executive director of the Governor's Reapportionment Board, Babcock oversaw the redistricting of the Alaska legislature during the 1991-1992 cycle. He then worked as special assistant of constituent relations and director of Boards and Commissions for Governor Wally Hickel.[5] Babcock was a Commissioner at the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission between 1993 and 1996.[6]
Together with Co-Chairman Frank Murkowski, Babcock managed the Dole presidential campaign in 1996. He was also part of the State Leadership Team for the presidential campaign of Steve Forbes in 1996 and 2000. In 1997, he worked in the staff of his later mother-in-law, State Senator Lyda Green[7] and advised Sarah Palin in all of her campaigns between 1996 and 2008. However, the relationship between them stalled after Palin became a national public figure.[8] Twenty minutes after Governor Dunleavy took office, Babcock fired enured elections attorney Libby Bakalar. The Alaska American Civil Liberties Union sued for unlawful firing of employees. Babcock left his position without prior notice in 2019.[9] In 2022, federal Judge John Sedgwick found in favor of the terminated employees, though he ruled that Babcock could not be held personally liable for damages in the action.[10] Between 1999 -2009, Babcock was the Manager of Government and Strategic Affairs at the Matanuska Electric Association (MEA),[11] [12] and later was its Director of Human Resources[13] as well as Assistant Manager.[14] The MEA board of directors ordered General Manager Wayne Carmody to fire Babcock "without cause."[14] His tenure had been marked by substantially increased litigation costs, anti-union issues and discomfiture amongst employees.[14]
Babcock has served as precinct officer and district chairman of Alaska Republican Party. He also was state vice chairman and also briefly served as the party's chairman in the year 2000. In 2016, he again ran for this office. During the Alaska Republican Party convention in Fairbanks April 28–30, 2016, Babcock ran against Fairbanks trial attorney Ann Brown to succeed Peter Goldberg.[15] [16] Babcock won the election and also became a delegate for the 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland in the summer of 2016.
In the situation concerning three state Representatives who ran on the Republican ticket but afterwards joined in a centrist coalition with Alaska Democrats, thereby creating a bipartisan majority in the State House, he sent a critical open letter to the three lawmakers.[17] He also supported an attempt of the Alaska GOP to block those three Representatives from running again in the primaries of the Republican party.[18]
Regarding the decision of Senator Murkowski and Senator Dan Sullivan of Alaska to vote against the abolition of the Affordable Health Care Act (ACA) and its replacement by the GOP substitute, the American Health Care Act of 2017, Babcock stated that he was dismayed.[19] He reminded Murkowski and Sullivan in a letter, that the American people were promised by Republicans, on non-negotiable terms, that the ACA would be repealed.[20]
Babcock was divorced from Kimberly Waychoff in 2005. He later married Kristie Babcock, the daughter of former Alaska State Senate President Lyda Green. Kristi owns a State Farm Insurance agency in Kenai. He has eight children and became a full-time parent after he was fired from MEA. The family lives on the Kenai Peninsula.