Donald Rose "Don" Wright was an American politician from Alaska.
Background
Donald Rose Wright was born in Nenana, Alaska, one of seven sons of Episcopal missionaries Arthur and Myrtle Wright. His mother was white. His father was Gwich"in, with familial origins in Old Crow, Yukon, and was one of numerous Alaska Natives recruited for and mentored in the ministry by Episcopal bishop Peter Trimble Rowe.
Education
He graduated from Fairbanks High School in 1947.
Career
As a missionary family, they lived all over Interior Alaska, but mostly in Nenana, Minto and Fairbanks. Wright was a former president of the Alaska Federation of Natives, serving from 1970 to 1972 during the height of activity over passage of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Acting. Wright has run for statewide office in Alaska fifteen times between 1968 and 2010, eleven of those times for governor of Alaska.
Of his gubernatorial campaigns, he was most notable as the gubernatorial nominee of the Alaskan Independence Party in 1978, 2002, 2006 and 2010.
In addition to serving as president of AFN, he also served as president of the Bartlett Democratic Club and of the Cook Inlet Native Association. Besides multiple runs for office under the AIP banner, he has also run for office numerous times as both a Democrat and Republican.
Wright also ran for the Republican nomination for president of the United States in 1988. Wright ran his 2010 campaign without a running mate.
Wright died on July 5, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.
Politics
Most of his notoriety in Alaskan politics has come as a perennial candidate for statewide office in Alaska over several decades. The 1978 campaign was the only time in the party"s early history in which party founder Joe Vogler was not the gubernatorial nominee (Vogler ran for lieutenant governor instead in this election).