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Guest Columnist Idaho Senator Christy Zito: When Politics Turns Poisonous, And Why Idaho Must Be Better

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April 15, 2026

When Politics Turns Poisonous, And Why Idaho Must Be Better

ID Senator Christy Zito (photo credit: Christy Zito)

I have been involved in Idaho politics for a number of years now, and I say this plainly: I have never seen a year as nasty as this one.

Campaign season has always had its rough edges. That’s not new. Mailers get sharp. Ads take shots. Opponents draw contrasts. That’s the nature of politics in a free society.

But what we are seeing right now is something different.

We are seeing a flood of flyers, television spots, and radio ads that go far beyond drawing distinctions on policy or record. These messages are designed not just to persuade—but to tear down. To distort. To make good, hardworking people look as bad as possible, whether the claims hold water or not.

One recent example makes the point clearly. A campaign flyer cites bill number S1157 as supposed evidence against a candidate—but the bill itself has nothing to do with the subject being claimed. Even more concerning, the vote count presented on the flyer is simply wrong. The actual vote was a straightforward party-line vote, not what is being portrayed. When basic facts like the content of a bill and the recorded vote are misrepresented, that is not political debate—that is deliberate misinformation.

That level of vitriol is not normal for Idaho.

And neither is the degree of deceit.

There has always been a line, an understanding, even in disagreement, that we are still neighbors, still members of the same communities, still Idahoans first. That line is being crossed more frequently and more aggressively than I have ever witnessed.

It should concern all of us.

When campaigns become less about truth and more about destruction, voters are not informed; they are manipulated. And when that happens, the integrity of our elections begins to erode, not from the outside, but from within.

I have always trusted the people of this state.

Idaho voters are thoughtful. They are independent. They take their responsibility seriously. Most people who make the effort to vote also make the effort to understand what and who they are voting for. They ask questions. They look deeper. They don’t simply accept what shows up in a mailbox or flashes across a screen.

That gives me confidence.

But it also raises the stakes.

Because the volume of misinformation we are seeing this year is designed to overwhelm that instinct, replacing careful consideration with emotional reaction. It is designed to create doubt where clarity should prevail.

And that only works if we let it.

So I would ask something simple of every Idahoan:

Slow down.
Look closer.
Ask one more question.

Who is behind the message?
What is their motive?
Does the claim actually hold up?

Truth still matters, but it requires effort.

This moment is bigger than any single race, any single candidate, or any single election cycle. It is about what kind of political culture we are willing to tolerate in our state moving forward.

Do we reward honesty, even when we disagree?
Or do we reward whoever is willing to go the lowest, the fastest?

Idaho has never been a place that chases the worst instincts of politics. We have prided ourselves on being grounded, direct, and fair-minded—even in tough debates.

We should expect that standard to hold.

Not because politics will ever be perfect—but because we should demand that it be better than this.

The responsibility doesn’t just fall on candidates or campaigns.

It falls on all of us.

I believe Idaho is up to that challenge.

With grit, faith, and unwavering resolve,

God bless,

Senator Christy Zito,
Idaho State Senate
District 8,
Protecting Freedom for Future Generations

P.S. If you haven’t already, subscribe to my Substack (zitoforidaho.substack.com) for straight talk from the Capitol and updates you won’t get from the mainstream press. Let’s stay connected and stay strong. See you at the polls on May 19!

Guest Columnist Brent Regan’s Common Sense: Wisdom of the Committee

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April 13, 2026

Common Sense: Wisdom of the Committee

By: Brent Regan, Kootenai County GOP Chairman

Kootenai County GOP Chairman Brent Regan (photo credit: Brent Regan FB)

The wisdom of the crowd is a well-documented and demonstrated phenomenon. If you ask a group of people a question, say, to guess the number of M&Ms in a jar, and then average the guesses, you will arrive at an answer startlingly close to the truth. While you may be the smartest person in the room, you are not smarter than the collective intelligence in the room. Properly guided, this is the power of committees.

I previously wrote about how progress requires “unreasonable men.” While the unreasonable man ignites progress, the committee is where that progress is forged into something durable. Committees transform solitary sparks into collective fire. They are not the enemy of conviction; they are its necessary anvil.
Consider the invention process itself. Edison’s laboratory in Menlo Park was no solitary workshop. It housed a team of machinists, chemists, and mathematicians who systematically tested filaments, recorded failures, and refined materials. The lone-genius myth persists, yet Edison’s notebooks reveal a committee of specialists arguing over voltages, budgets, and safety. Tesla’s alternating-current breakthrough succeeded only after Westinghouse’s engineers, financiers, and patent attorneys hammered the technology into a commercially viable system. The unreasonable vision required reasonable collaboration to survive contact with reality.
The same dynamic operates in republican government. The Constitution deliberately routes legislation through committees precisely because majority rule alone is insufficient. In the House and Senate, committees force extremists to defend their ideas before colleagues who represent different districts, different industries, and different lived experiences. This friction does not dilute principle; it distills it. A bill that survives markup has been stress-tested against practical objections, constitutional limits, and competing priorities. The result is rarely pure ideology, but it is almost always more resilient than any single activist’s demand.
Committees also perform an essential tempering function. They compel the unreasonable to articulate their case in language others can accept. The most effective committee members are those who arrive with strong convictions yet possess the humility to listen. They recognize that compromise is not capitulation but a force multiplier. A conservative who refuses every amendment isolates himself; one who negotiates minor concessions while holding the line on core principles expands his coalition.
The power of a committee lies in this collaboration among its members. Ideas are brought forth and vigorously debated; and, when debate is over, the body then votes to determine the course of action. The minority has its say and the majority has its way. The committee then acts as a unified body. It is a compact among the members that all support the will of the body, even if the outcome was not what they personally wanted.
Committee members do not need to personally believe or internally “adopt” the majority’s position in the sense of surrendering their convictions. That would contradict the very value of diverse perspectives. What matters is that they operationally accept and advance the majority’s decision once the vote is taken. This distinction is what makes committees functional engines of governance rather than debating societies that never produce results.
Operational adoption enforces accountability and reciprocity. Every committee member knows the minority position today may become the majority position tomorrow. If today’s losers refuse to “adopt” the outcome procedurally, tomorrow’s winners will do the same and gridlock will follow. This is why Robert’s Rules of Order requires members to treat a committee vote as binding on the committee’s official action.
Someone who joins a committee but then treats it as nothing more than a stage for their own opinion is not participating; they are performing. They have mistaken the committee for a soapbox or a personal megaphone, and that defeats every practical reason anyone should ever serve on one.

It’s just common sense.

Pocatello Pet Licenses Will Be Half Price in May; Now Available Only at Animal Services

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, April 15, 2026)

The City of Pocatello is reminding residents that the 2026 pet licensing season is quickly approaching, with an important change this year. All pet licenses will now be available exclusively at Pocatello Animal Services, 3100 Avenue of the Chiefs (Upper Ross Park).

All 2025 pet licenses will expire June 1, 2026, and new licenses will be available for purchase beginning May 1, 2026. Pet owners living within Pocatello city limits are required to license both cats and dogs.

Licensing fees for 2026 are as follows:

  • Unaltered dogs are $25
  • Altered dogs are $15
  • First-time cat licenses (which include a microchip) are $22.50
  • Cat license renewals are $5

To encourage early compliance, all licenses will be offered at half price throughout the month of May. Senior residents receive half off licensing fees year-round.

Pet licenses, multi-animal housing permits, livestock permits, and commercial kennel permits are due by June 1. A $5 late fee will be applied to all overdue licenses after June 30.

Licensing pets helps reunite lost animals with their families, supports local animal services, and ensures compliance with City ordinances. Residents are encouraged to license early and take advantage of the discounted rates in May.

In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, it is the policy of the City of Pocatello to offer its public programs, services, and meetings in a manner that is readily accessible to everyone, including those with disabilities.  If you are disabled and require an accommodation, please contact Skyler Beebe with two (2) business days’ advance notice at sbeebe@pocatello.gov; 208.234.6248; or 5815 South 5th Avenue, Pocatello, Idaho.  Advance notification within this guideline will enable the City to make reasonable arrangements to ensure accessibility.

Sen. Risch: Senate Wins Mean Lower Taxes for You

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(From the Desk of Senator James E. Risch, April 15, 2026)

This Tax Day, Idahoans can expect to keep more of their hard-earned paychecks.

I was proud to help my Republican colleagues pass the Working Families Tax Cuts Act last year.

This legislation delivered the largest-ever tax cut to working-class households in U.S. history and will save the average Idahoan $3,517 in federal taxes this year.

We eliminated taxes on tips and overtime, expanded the Child Tax Credit, made the small business tax deduction permanent, and provided relief for seniors on Social Security.

We aren’t done yet. I’ll continue working to lower taxes for Idaho families and scrutinize every federal budget to ensure our taxpayer dollars are used responsibly.

For the latest press releases and constituent services visit risch.senate.gov.

To receive email updates on what I’m working on as your Senator, click here.

To connect with me on Twitter, visit my Twitter page.

To connect with me on Facebook, visit my Facebook page.

Idaho Freedom Foundation Releases 2026 Freedom Index

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Idaho Freedom Foundation

April 16, 2026

Boise–The Idaho Freedom Foundation released this year’s Freedom Index on Tuesday.  Both digital and print copies can be requested on the IFF’s website, here.

Released annually after the legislative session, the Freedom Index provides a snapshot of every legislator’s voting record.  The IFF explains, “IFF’s analysts rate hundreds of bills each year to give lawmakers and the public a holistic view of how bills affect your wallet, your family, and your business.  Lawmakers’ scores reveal if a legislator regularly votes for liberty or more government.”

Guest Columnist Brian Parsons – Correcting The Record: Mean Girl Politics

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April 9, 2026

Correcting The Record: Mean Girl Politics

By: Brian Parsons

“Calling somebody else fat won’t make you any skinnier. Calling someone stupid doesn’t make you any smarter. And ruining Regina George’s life definitely didn’t make me any happier. All you can do in life is try to solve the problem in front of you.” – Cady Heron, Mean Girls

We’ve been in Pocatello for 12 years now. Not much remains consistent.  Unlike restaurant or retail operations, the politics here are consistent and consistently toxic.  We’re on our 7th Pocatello election, and what remains unchanged is the mean girl politics.  It goes something like this… Extremist… Nazi… Supremacist… Bigot… Fascist… Nationalist… MAGAT… and the latest is to use “Christian” as a pejorative.  Mean girl politics are shallow and catty and prioritize labels and fear over substantive debate. I’m pretty much over it. The churches would be wise to recognize it for what it is.

In our recent mayoral election, this was on full display as the mean girls brought the full quiver of labels and hurled their pejoratives at the uninitiated Greg Cates, who was lured into the Kafka trap.  This is how the Kafka trap works… any acknowledgment of the insult is an admission of guilt.  And acknowledge it they did. The mean girl politics weren’t limited to any one party or the extremes of Pocatello either; it was fully deployed by the good old boys of the genteel class, who had hoped to maintain control by proxy.

Mean girl politics is as much a Pocatello staple as potatoes.  My response remains to encourage people to start talking again.  Social Media is toxic, but if you take a moment to sit down and talk to people, you will find you have more in common than you think. Given our failure to do so, I’d like to correct the record on some of the latest targets:

Most recently, my wife had a conversation with a friend who passed on the town gossip that they heard former Commissioner John Crowder was a mean or nasty person.  Who in the world started that rumor?  Nobody who actually meets and speaks with John Crowder finds him to be anything but soft-spoken and often agreeable, assuming you’re not asking the public to fund a boondoggle.  Perhaps they mistook his hearing loss for a personality defect?  You will be asked to repeat yourself on occasion, as he points to the hearing aids.  On the contrary, John Crowder is nothing if not a good man, a reasonable man, and the sole reason that I had a modicum of success in getting legislation to fix Idaho Medicaid heard when the elected legislators of Southeast Idaho refused to take it up themselves.

John came from California as an accomplished retiree. He attended both the U.S. Coast Guard Academy and SUNY Maritime College, worked as a merchant marine navigator, and eventually became a shipping executive with a $300 million budget. Later, John founded a private Christian school.   He moved to Pocatello to be closer to his children, and when he found the local government unresponsive, he took action.  He started a Conservative Coalition to give a voice to the residents of Bannock County who were unheard.  They now count more than 500 residents among their ranks.  More than five years in, he has been elected to the County Commission and to the GOP Legislative District 29 Chair, and has been awarded the State Republican Party’s Most Outstanding Chair award.

As the Vice Chair of the County GOP, I have had the distinct honor of working closely with Bannock GOP Chair Craig Yadon.  I like to refer to Craig and his wife Mariya as the Chip and Joanna Gaines of Pocatello.  What they did to transform the Petersen Building into the Purpose Center is nothing short of marvelous.  They renovated the space in keeping with historic traditions and were awarded the Orchid Award by Preservation Idaho for staying true to the architecture’s roots. Many of the public have attended events there or stopped in for boba tea by now.  It is a gem in this community.

Craig is a Pocatello native, an ISU graduate, a veteran, an associate pastor, and a successful businessman. He and Mariya are former missionaries to Thailand, and if you get past the quiet exterior, Craig has incredible stories to share, including surviving a plane crash and complete facial reconstruction.  When not surviving plane crashes, Craig has quietly led the Bannock County GOP in a resurgence that saw Pocatello host hundreds of state delegates at the 2025 Idaho GOP Summer meeting.  Just last weekend, they hosted more than 200 guests, including elected officials from Pocatello Mayor Mark Dahlquist to United States Senator Jim Risch, at their annual Lincoln Day fundraising dinner.

Finally, let’s address David Worley.  In 2023, Pocatello made headlines when local librarian Vicki Christensen brought inappropriate material in the children’s section of the Marshall Public Library to the attention of then-Pocatello Mayor Brian Blad.  Amongst the material were graphic novels demonstrating to children how to perform oral and anal sex on their friends.  David Worley voiced his opposition on social media and led a peaceful demonstration to remove “Drag Queen Story Hour” from the library. As a result of his public defense of Christian values, a subordinate in Worley’s Idaho National Guard unit filed a complaint, and Worley was removed from his command. A formal investigation cleared Worley of the claims made against him, but Worley was never reinstated. This is the thanks of an ungrateful state and nation that denied Worley the First Amendment he fought to defend.

David Worley is a Pocatello native, a 23-year Army veteran, and a businessman. I worked closely with David’s wife, Barbara, who is the 2nd Vice Chair of the Bannock County Republican Party, to revise the county party bylaws to align them with state bylaws.  When she isn’t serving in her GOP capacity, Barbara helps put on an annual summer camp to teach the children of Southeast Idaho about our nation’s founding. When David isn’t busy fighting for the children of Pocatello, he’s stopping violent woman beaters in the streets.  David made local news in 2024 when he drove up on a man beating a woman on the side of the road in Pocatello and held the assailant at gunpoint until local law enforcement arrived. He even received an award from the Pocatello police for his actions.

So there you have it, these are the local extremists according to the mean girls.  A gaggle of military service veterans, decorated public servants, a pastor, and a defender of the least of these.  That is what the mean girls call extreme. Public service is a thankless job, so I guess it’s par for the course. Where did we go off the rails?  If you haven’t had a chance to sit down with any of these gentlemen, please do.  Ask them about their background, beliefs, or motives.  If you’ve been led to believe that this is extreme, you’ll find you agree; you’ve been misled.

Brian Parsons is a locally and nationally published columnist and the current vice chair of the Bannock County Republican Party. He’s a proud husband and father, saved by Grace, and an unabashed paleoconservative. You can follow him at WithdrawConsent.org or find his opinion columns at the American Thinker, in the Idaho State Journal or in other regional publications.

PCSD 25 Announces New Leadership for Century High School

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(Pocatello/Chubbuck School District 25 Press Release, April 14, 2026)

CHS Principal Benjamin Cody

Pocatello/Chubbuck School District 25 (PCSD 25) is pleased to announce the selection of Benjamin Cody as Principal of Century High School. Cody will succeed Sheryl Brockett, who is retiring following years of dedicated service to the Century High School community. This administrative change will take effect July 1, 2026.

Benjamin Cody currently serves as the Assistant Principal at Century High School. He brings fourteen years of experience in education, including four years in school leadership. During his time at Century, Benjamin has been a key member of the administrative team, contributing to the development of school culture, strengthening special education systems, and building aligned instructional practices.

Benjamin began his career as an English teacher, where he developed a strong foundation in literacy, learner engagement, and classroom instruction. His transition into administration has been marked by a focus on creating systems that support both learner achievement and strong professional collaboration among staff.

A lifelong member of the Pocatello/Chubbuck School District 25 community, Benjamin was born and raised in Pocatello and is a graduate of Highland High School. He earned both his Bachelor’s degree in English and his Master’s degree in Pre-K–12 Education Administration from Idaho State University. He has served the district for 12 years, and his connection to the community continues through his two children who attend district schools.

Benjamin expressed his enthusiasm for the role, stating: “Century has always been a special place to me—not just professionally, but personally. I’m honored to step into this role and continue building systems that support our learners, align our staff, and ensure every learner has access to meaningful opportunities for success.”

PCSD 25 Superintendent Dr. Douglas Howell shared his confidence in Cody’s leadership, stating: “Benjamin’s deep roots in our community, combined with his commitment to strong systems and collaborative leadership, make him the right choice to lead Century High School. He understands what it means to be More Together, and I am confident he will continue to build on the strong foundation already in place.”

Swan Falls Powerhouse Museum Opens for Free Self-Guided Tours This Saturday, April 18

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(Idaho Power News Brief, April 14, 2026; Cover photo credit: Idaho State Historic Preservation Office)

Idaho Power’s Swan Falls Powerhouse Museum will open for self-guided tours this Saturday, April 18. The museum, housed in the historic Swan Falls powerhouse adjacent to the current hydropower plant, will be open each Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., through Sept. 5. The museum features a variety of displays that appeal to kids as well as seasoned history buffs. Admission is free!

Located south of Kuna, the Swan Falls Dam was the first hydroelectric dam on the Snake River and has been generating electricity since 1901 and remains a key part of Idaho Power’s hydroelectric system, which is the company’s largest energy source. Idaho Power acquired the plant in 1916 and built a new powerhouse in 1994, adjacent to the old powerhouse, which now houses the museum.

Visitors can plan a day trip to Swan Falls Park, which includes a picnic shelter and interpretive panels describing early life at the dam site, as well as the natural features in the area. Geocaching, fishing, boating, and birdwatching are all popular activities at the park.

For directions and more information, visit idahopower.com/swanfalls. You can also get a sneak preview by watching the Swan Falls Museum video on youtube.com/idahopower.

White House: President Trump’s Powerful Leadership Highlights American Strength as Energy Dominance Delivers Global Stability

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(White House Press Release, April 14, 2026)

President Donald J. Trump has directed a bold and decisive U.S. naval blockade to counter Iranian aggression and restore safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz — a masterstroke of American leadership that showcases a level of power and strength the world has never before witnessed.

As this historic action unfolds, America’s record-breaking energy production is providing a critical lifeline to the world. Thanks to President Trump’s American energy dominance agenda, the U.S. stands as the world’s top energy producer and exporter — ready to supply reliable, abundant energy to nations cut off from Middle Eastern crude.

Signs of American energy leadership are immediate:

  • As of yesterday, 167 crude tankers had declared U.S. destinations, with 103 empty vessels heading to American ports to load U.S. crude.
  • Of those, 54 were Very Large Crude Carriers, each capable of carrying approximately two million barrels.
  • Many had recently unloaded elsewhere and are now steaming to the Gulf of America — including 20 empty tankers under European flags and 20 under Asian flags.

After just one year back in office, President Trump’s pro-energy policies have shattered records and secured America’s position as the undisputed global energy leader:

  • U.S. natural gas production hit a record 118.5 billion cubic feet per day, with new record highs forecasted in both 2026 and 2027.
  • America became the first nation in history to export more than 100 million metric tons of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in a single year — reversing years of Biden-era restrictions.
  • Oil production reached an all-time high of 23.6 million barrels per day.
  • U.S. offshore oil production also set a new record.
  • The Trump Administration opened vast new areas for oil, gas, and coal development, approved nearly 6,000 drilling permits on federal and Native American lands (a 55% increase over the prior year), and advanced multiple new LNG export terminals.
  • Today, the United States produces more oil than Saudi Arabia and Russia combined and more natural gas than Russia, Iran, and China combined—securing its role as the undisputed global energy leader.

President Trump’s energy dominance agenda is more than policy; it is American strength. While adversaries weaponize energy, America delivers it.

First Lady Melania Trump Authorizes Landmark Art Loan to Spotlight American Master, James McNeill Whistler

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(Office of the First Lady Press Release, April 14, 2026)

“It is with great honor that I share Whistler’s masterpiece, Nocturne, to be enjoyed by art lovers all over the world,” asserted First Lady Melania Trump. “It is important for the international art community to experience America’s extraordinary wealth of talent in fine art. Certainly, Mr. Whistler is one of America’s greatest.”

James McNeill Whistler’s Nocturne will be removed from the Treaty Room and included in a comprehensive exhibition devoted to the great American painter by Tate Britain and the Van Gogh Museum. The two museums are planning the first full-career exhibition devoted to James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) in Europe in thirty years.

The loan to Tate Britain and the Van Gogh Museum would mark an exceptionally rare international loan from the White House Collection, which is typically shared only with select U.S. institutions, such as the Smithsonian and National Gallery of Art.

First Lady and President Trump hosted King Willem-Alexander, Queen Maxima, and Prime Minister Rob Jetten of the Netherlands for dinner at the White House this past Monday evening.

The Whistler retrospective launches in London, Amsterdam, and Washington in May 2026. The important painting will be returned to the White House Collection in summer 2027.