The Alaska Supreme Court on July 16 ruled that the recall against Gov. Mike Dunleavy can go forward. A recall committee filed an application to remove the governor, alleging he lacked fitness, was incompetent, and neglected his duties. The Alaska Division of Elections denied the application, saying that it was not legally or factually sufficient. The recall committee challenged the division’s decision in the state’s superior court, which ruled the recall application was valid. The state appealed the court decision to the Alaska Supreme Court, which ruled on Friday that the allegations in the recall petition “are legally sufficient and satisfy the particularity requirement.” Dunleavy, a Republican, has 17 months left in his term. Whether Dunleavy’s detractors have made their case that his alleged shortcomings—that he is incompetent and corrupt—justify his removal from office is up to the voters, the court said. “The people asked to sign petitions must decide whether …