








General Election
Voters choose the office holder.
Current roleFormer State Senator
PartyRepublican
Political ideologyModerate Republican
Age68 years old (Jul 25, 1957)
GenderMale
LocationAlaska
BackgroundPolitician
EducationLathrop High School (Fairbanks, Alaska), graduated 1974
Notable personal detailsClark "Click" Bishop is an American politician and Republican who served in the Alaska State Senate from 2013 to 2025. Before elected office, he worked in heavy construction and workforce training, and served as commissioner of the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development under Governors Sarah Palin and Sean Parnell. In 2025 he entered the 2026 Alaska governor’s race and later selected Greta Schuerch as his running mate.
Click Bishop has supported tax changes both to raise and to reduce revenue: he voted for major oil tax reform (SB21) that reduced taxes on the oil industry and has proposed measures to raise revenue for state services such as a small employee “education” head tax and a gasoline/registration fee increase to fund road maintenance. His positions show a pragmatic, issue-specific approach rather than a consistent single-axis stance on taxes.
Supports targeted expansions of Medicaid and voted in favor of bills that extend Medicaid-covered services (including postpartum coverage and school-based mental health services). Has shown support for using state programs to increase access to health services for vulnerable populations.
Opposes abortion except in cases necessary to save the life of the mother. No public campaign position page on reproductive rights was found on the candidate’s campaign site.
The candidate emphasizes cheap, reliable energy and lowering energy costs for Alaskans while supporting development of the state’s oil and gas resources. He has supported oil-industry–friendly policies (including backing SB 21 tax changes) and criticized federal limits on drilling and EPA regulations, while prioritizing energy independence and resource development over aggressive emissions restrictions.









Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
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