Abortion Eastman is against
abortion in all forms. He tried to add a
right-to-life amendment to a non-controversial resolution in 2017 that designated April as Sexual Assault Awareness Month, and filed a complaint when the committee wouldn't consider his amendment. In May 2017, Eastman was involved in a controversy regarding his remarks suggesting that
Alaska Native women in villages try to get pregnant on purpose to get a "free trip to the city" for abortion. He claims there are too many "incentives" to get an abortion and said, "We have folks who try to get pregnant in this state so that they can get a free trip to the city, and we have folks who want to carry their baby past the point of being able to have an abortion in this state so that they can have a free trip to Seattle." He provided no evidence for these statements, but asserted, "a number of people have come to (his) office with stories, experiences." The Alaska House of Representatives voted to
censure Eastman because of his remarks. It marked the first time in Alaska history a politician had been censured.
Racial equity recognitions In April 2017, Eastman voted against a bill to honor Hmong veterans and the more than 100,000
Hmong people who died supporting the United States in the
Vietnam War. Eastman has also voted against bills honoring black soldiers who constructed the
Alaska Highway and the recognition of
Black History Month.
Lifetime membership with the Oath Keepers In late September 2021, following a hack of the group's internal data, it was revealed that Eastman's name was among the some 38,000 people whose names appear on a lifetime membership roster of the
Oath Keepers; a far-right militia organization. Records show that Eastman is a lifetime member of the
Oath Keepers, as reported by
BuzzFeed News and other organizations. As a consequence of his membership, on January 31, 2022, five members of the seven-member Committee on Committees, two Republicans, two Democrats and an Independent, all members of the House majority coalition, voted to remove Eastman from his membership on some committees. In December 2022, following his re-election to the Alaska House, a lawsuit was filed barring Eastman from serving in the House. The suit alleged that his membership in the Oath Keepers and the group's role in the
January 6 United States Capitol attack ran afoul of a disloyalty clause in the
Alaskan Constitution. The initial court ruling found that Eastman was not disqualified on First Amendment grounds because he did not himself actively participate in the Oath Keepers' attempt to overthrow the U.S. government.
2021 United States Capitol attack Following
Donald Trump's loss in the
2020 United States presidential election, Eastman posted on his website that, "The election process that has been observed thus far by the American people has been abused to such a degree that, in my view, it can no longer be called an election. To call what the American people have observed 'an election', under the United States Constitution, would be fundamentally dishonest." Eastman traveled to
Washington, D.C., on January 6, 2021, to protest the
Electoral College vote count which confirmed
Joe Biden's victory, and to see Trump speak at the "Stop the Steal" rally. He spoke to Alaska Public Radio as he walked from the rally to the Capitol and was photographed a few hundred feet from the Capitol building. He later described the
storming of the Capitol building as "pretty terrible." The next day he promoted the false claim that the attack on the Capitol was the work of
antifa. On November 11, 2021, 69 local and other graduates of
West Point wrote a letter published in
Mat-Su Valley Frontiersman, Eastman's local paper, to demand that he resign from the legislature since, though he had stressed his military credentials and training at the
United States Military Academy, he had dishonored the ideals of
The Long Gray Line, that is, those who had matriculated at the USMA.
Reviewing efforts to contest 2020 presidential election results In June 2021, Eastman traveled to Arizona to observe the
2021 Maricopa County presidential ballot audit ordered by the Arizona state senate.
Russian invasion of Ukraine During the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, Eastman was the sole vote in the Alaska House of Representatives against a
non-binding resolution to supply military aid to Ukraine.
Economic benefit of abused children's death In February 2023, at a meeting of the House Judiciary Committee, Eastman said "It gets argued periodically that [fatal child abuse is] actually a cost savings because that child is not going to need any of those government services that they might otherwise be entitled to receive and need based on growing up in this type of environment." His statements have been critiqued by fellow representatives and constituents as callous and hypocritical, as he is adamantly opposed to abortion. He was
censured for his remarks by the Alaska State House in a vote of 35–1, with Eastman himself as the sole vote against the censure. ==Electoral history==