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We don't know if G. Gordon Liddy can help to open ANWR to oil drilling.
But it's clear that the G-man can do no worse with five days in July than Arctic Power has done in 16 years with $11 million of state money.Arctic Power has been working Congress since 1992, and has spent most of its money lobbying to open ANWR. The coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge remains closed to oil exploration.State enthusiasm for Arctic Power's efforts has waxed and waned. In 2005, when Republicans had the White House and both houses of Congress, Arctic Power had $1.2 million in state money. The result? Victory in the House, narrow defeat in the Senate. Close doesn't count.For fiscal year 2008, Arctic Power's state subsidy was only $120,000. For the coming year, the Legislature, blessed by billions in budget surplus, has voted $250,000, even though prospects for ANWR development are dim. All three major presidential candidates are opposed.Can G. Gordon Liddy, broadcasting from Prudhoe Bay and Kaktovik, rouse his 1.5 million listeners to call for ANWR oil? Can Liddy move the masses, or at least enough votes in Congress, to do what neither Sen. Ted Stevens nor President George W. Bush could do?Don't make book on it.The Liddy play is a great gig for the G-man, who will see some of God's country. It's a public relations splash for Arctic Power; the outfit may not be opening ANWR but it can say it's doing something.But G. Gordon Liddy? The man who masterminded (if words like "master" and "mind" fit the caper) the break-in of Democratic national headquarters in 1972, a blunder followed by more blunders, including the criminal variety, that eventually led to the only resignation of a U.S. president? This is our resource development champion? Liddy has long since served his time in prison. Watergate debt paid. He's found his radio niche on the right and made a lucrative living at it. If corporate sponsors want to pick up the tab for Arctic Power to bring Liddy here, that's their business. But lawmakers and the governor should make clear to Arctic Power: not a dime of state money for this show. Liddy will be preaching mostly to the choir, and the state doesn't have enough surplus to waste on the converted.Now, if Arctic Power can get Deborah Williams, Sen. Barbara Boxer and the ghost of John Muir to do five days of radio for opening ANWR, let's talk.BOTTOM LINE: G-man in the North? Not on the state's dime.