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Guest Columnist ID SOS Phil McGrane – A Cold Beer, and a Master Craftsman: Honoring Dirk Kempthorne

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April 29, 2026

A Cold Beer, and a Master Craftsman: Honoring Dirk Kempthorne

By: Idaho Secretary of State Phil McGrane

Most people called him Governor Kempthorne. Years ago, I started calling him “Mr. Secretary,” since it is my title now and his highest title was United States Secretary of the Interior. From then on, whenever we saw each other, it was always the same greeting.

“Mr. Secretary.”

“Mr. Secretary.”

Always with a knowing smile.

Like so many Idahoans, I grew up admiring Dirk Kempthorne. I grew up in southeast Boise, close in age to his son Jeff, and I watched his career from nearby, first as mayor, then as United States senator, governor, and finally as Secretary of the Interior. His career was extraordinary, and there will rightly be many tributes that tell the story of all he accomplished.

This one is a little different.

This is a story about a cold beer, a late-night drive, and the unexpected gift of learning from someone I had admired for most of my life.

Governor Kempthorne was an extraordinary public speaker. His daughter, Heather, once wrote that her dad was the best speaker she had ever heard. She was right. He had a rare ability to command a room, but more than that, he could make a room feel. He used his hands, his pauses, his emphasis, and his words with such intention. He could paint a picture, lift a crowd, and call people toward something bigger than themselves.

That was one of the great gifts of his leadership. It was not simply the work he did. It was the work he inspired others to do.

In 2024, I had the opportunity to drive with him to Twin Falls, where he was the keynote speaker for the Twin Falls County Republican Lincoln Day dinner. I had spoken at the event the year before, and they invited me back to say a few words. I was not sure I could make the time, until I learned Governor Kempthorne would be speaking.

Then the answer was easy.

As someone whose own children have grown up around public service and politics, Heather Kempthorne Myklegard’s piece from last fall about her father deeply resonated with me. In it, she reflected on the moment their family chose to hit pause and focus on his battle with cancer. It is a moving reminder to slow down, hold close the people we love, and appreciate the time we have together.  I encourage you to read Heather’s reflections in her own words.  Click here.

If Dirk Kempthorne was speaking, I wanted to be there. And if we were both going to Twin Falls, I figured we might as well ride together.

I picked him up at his home that afternoon, and we spent the two-hour drive getting to know each other better. For me, it was already a special opportunity. He was someone I had admired from a distance for years, and now there I was, driving across southern Idaho with him, talking about life, public service, and the state we both love.

When we arrived, a high school student was waiting to interview him for a school project. In true Kempthorne fashion, he made her feel important and fully seen. At one point, he gave her the state seal lapel pin I had just given him. It was a small gesture, but it said so much. He did not just meet people. He noticed them.

That evening, I spoke first. I introduced myself as the Governor’s Uber driver, and of course, worked in my usual “Mr. Secretary” reference. I felt good about my remarks. As a speaker, you can feel when something lands.

Then Governor Kempthorne stood up.

He started with a few jokes that played off mine, even offering me a tip for my work as his driver. Then he delivered one of those speeches that reminded everyone in the room why he was Dirk Kempthorne. Sitting there, I felt like a pretty good minor leaguer watching an All-Star hit it out of the park again and again.

He was at his best that night.

But the speech was not the part I will remember most.

After the dinner, we still had a two-hour drive back to Boise. Having just watched and listened to each other speak, we began comparing notes. We talked about our openings, our jokes, the pacing of the room, what worked, and what could have been stronger.

Then he began coaching me.

He told me what I had done well, where I could have done a little more, and where I could have done a little less. Then he reached into his breast pocket, pulled out his notes, and began walking me through how he prepared. How he organized his thoughts. How he marked his remarks. How he thought about a room. How he had learned, over decades, to connect with people in a way that was both disciplined and deeply human.

It felt like being invited into the workshop of a master craftsman.

There was a joy in it. There was energy in it. There was the excitement that comes when two people who love the same craft start talking about the tools, habits, instincts, and small details that make the work come alive.

For a political nerd like me, it felt like a dream.

We got back to Boise a little before midnight. As I was about to drop him off, he mentioned that Patricia was at their cabin. Then, almost casually, he said he was enjoying the conversation and asked if I wanted to come in for a beer.

I could hardly believe it.

This was someone I had grown up admiring. Someone who had always seemed larger than life and, in some ways, just out of reach. And now there we were, two friends sitting together late into the night, enjoying a cold beer and talking about life, leadership, speeches, Idaho, and the calling of public service.

I will never forget that night.

I still try to incorporate the lessons he shared with me. Every now and then, when I am speaking and I feel the room lean in, I think of him. I think of his hands, his pauses, his warmth, and his remarkable ability to make people feel seen.

Governor Kempthorne’s leadership shaped Idaho in countless ways. But for me, his legacy is also found in that late-night drive home from Twin Falls, in a conversation between two “Mr. Secretaries,” and in the generosity of a master craftsman willing to share his trade.

My life is better because I knew him. Idaho is better because he served it.

Patricia, Heather, Jeff, and the entire Kempthorne family are in my prayers. May we honor him not only by remembering what he accomplished, but by carrying forward the way he made people feel, seen, valued, and called to something greater.

Phil McGrane

ABOUT SECRETARY PHIL McGRANE

Phil McGrane was elected Idaho’s twenty-eighth Secretary of State and took office on January 2, 2023. McGrane served as elected Clerk of Ada County from 2019-2022.McGrane holds a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, a juris doctorate, and a Master of Public Administration. As a fourth-generation Idahoan, Phil has dedicated his career to making elections in the state of Idaho accessible, secure and transparent.

Guest Column: Councilman Bates Responds to Martin Hackworth

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May 4, 2026

By: Pocatello City Councilman Dakota Bates

I enjoy reading Martin Hackworth’s perspective on Pocatello issues, even when I don’t fully agree with his conclusions. I believe Martin’s take on my recent call for less negativity deserves to be read and shared. However, there are a few things he writes in his article that I feel mischaracterize my video and my position. I will briefly address a few.

Martin writes, “Locals pay taxes for lackluster services and for government officials’ salaries, who deride critics as “negative” and who imagine that the necessary step on the road to prosperity is to require that we all hold hands and sing “Kumbaya.” He also often refers to the “Sunshine and Rainbows crowd” who proclaim everything is perfect even when there are obvious failures. To say this is what I am advocating for is false. Here are exact quotes from my video: “People that love Pocatello aren’t always honest about bad things that happen… When we sugarcoat things and we put on rose-colored glasses we lose trust… We need to be positive, positive as can be, but we also need to be honest. When bad things happen, let’s just be honest about it.” What I am actually suggesting is that we choose to focus on those things that truly deserve to be criticized, such as the examples Martin uses in his article, as opposed to complaining about everything, even good things.
Martin also wrote, “Councilman Bates’ jeremiad about local negativity, which he claims is our most pressing issue, isn’t even original.” First, I had to look up what a jeremiad is and while I am long-winded, if I sounded mournful that’s really just a delivery problem. My family might say I sound that sad and boring all the time. Regardless, I did not say nor do I believe this is our most pressing issue. I don’t know that I could honestly pick one thing as the most critical problem to be addressed. I also state in the video this concern over negativity isn’t new, but that it is time we start to openly address it.
Finally, I feel it’s necessary to address the following, “Councilman Bates actually invokes “woe is us” regarding the burden of being an elected leader in such a sea of negativity in his video. That’s not going to fly. No one bends anyone’s arm up behind their back to run for local public office—you run as a volunteer. Being an elected civic leader requires listening to all constituents, not just the smiley ones. He should come to grips with that (I think that he will).”
I assume that Martin is referring to my point that constant and unnecessary negativity results in discouragement for the people who are trying to make Pocatello a better place. That is a true and unfortunate statement. I don’t think anyone that runs for public office is under the illusion that it will be all smiley people all the time and I certainly don’t need time to come to grips with it. I’ve had my share of non-smiley people since becoming a Council Member and I listen to them. Perhaps though, Martin should consider how his disappointment with the quality of local civic leaders may, at the very least, have a casual relationship with the “sea of negativity” that we swim in. I meet and talk with many, many people far more qualified than myself to be on the City Council who would never consider running for public office. Why? Because of the “sea” they would be required to swim in. As I wrote in the introduction to my video “Criticism is always allowed and is necessary, but needless negativity only makes it harder to shape the future we want.” My goal in suggesting we be a little less negative wasn’t driven by self-interest. I can handle the negativity. What I want is the same thing Martin wants, Pocatello to live up to its potential. Anything that makes that more likely to happen I’m going to push for… including a collective better attitude.

I ended my video by saying we should all personally try to practice more gratitude. I can say with sincerity that I am grateful that Martin took the time to both watch and write about my video. I am grateful someone as smart and experienced as him cares enough to tell me what he thinks.

Pocatello Man Sentenced to 11 Years in Federal Prison for Receiving Child Pornography

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(FBI Press Release, April 22, 2026)

POCATELLO – U.S. Attorney Bart M. Davis announced today that Clint Layne Lusk, 34, of Pocatello, Idaho, was sentenced to 135 months in federal prison for receiving child pornography.

According to court records, in November 2024 the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Idaho Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force conducted an undercover operation on the Whisper messaging application. An undercover officer posed as a 13-year-old girl. Lusk initiated contact, identified himself as a man in his early thirties, and quickly steered the conversation in a sexual direction. He proposed meeting to engage in sexual intercourse, and officers arranged a meeting at a hotel in Pocatello. Officers arrested Lusk when he arrived. Law enforcement then executed search warrants at his residence and on his electronic devices. A forensic review of his phone uncovered 52,543 images of child sexual abuse material. Investigators also found videos of voyeurism involving known adult victims, conduct for which the Idaho Attorney General’s Office prosecuted Lusk separately.

U.S. District Judge David C. Nye ordered Lusk’s 135-month prison sentence to run consecutively to any sentence imposed on his pending video voyeurism charge, which awaits sentencing in Bannock County District Court. Judge Nye also ordered Lusk to pay $45,000 in restitution and to serve 15 years of supervised release after his prison term. Lusk must register as a sex offender. He pleaded guilty on October 21, 2025.

U.S. Attorney Davis commended the work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Homeland Security Investigations, the ICAC Task Force, and the Pocatello Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin Paskett prosecuted the case.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. As part of Project Safe Childhood, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Idaho and the Idaho Attorney General’s Office partner to marshal federal, state and local resources to better locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit http://www.justice.gov/psc.

Idaho Adopts “Ready, Set, Go” as Standard Wildfire Evacuation Messaging

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(Idaho Department of Lands Press Release, May 4, 2026)

Boise, ID — The State of Idaho is adopting the “Ready, Set, Go” wildfire evacuation program as the statewide standard for public evacuation messaging, establishing a unified, consistent approach to communicating evacuation risk and action levels across all jurisdictions.

This messaging aligns with the statutory authority of Idaho’s county sheriffs, who retain responsibility for issuing evacuation orders within their respective counties.

“We believe standardizing this message will improve public understanding and reduce confusion during fast-moving incidents when timely response can save lives,” said Jeff Lavey, Executive Director, Idaho Sheriffs’ Association. “It will also strengthen the coordination among local, state, and interagency partners.”

This statewide adoption responds directly to recommendations outlined in Governor Brad Little’s 2024 wildfire response report, which called for improved evacuation planning, clearer public messaging, and more consistent interagency coordination during wildfire events.

Interagency implementation is underway, led collaboratively by Idaho Department of Lands, Idaho Office of Emergency Management, Idaho Fire Chiefs Association, Idaho Sheriffs’ Association, Idaho Emergency Managers Association and in coordination with other public safety partners.

“The goal of Ready, Set, Go is to give every Idaho community a clear, consistent wildfire evacuation process that protects lives, improves service to the public, and reduces confusion,” state officials noted. “In recent years, the proliferation of varying evacuation messaging has at times created unnecessary uncertainty during high-risk incidents, underscoring the importance of a unified standard.”

Under the Ready, Set, Go framework, evacuation messaging is structured into progressive action levels designed to clearly communicate risk and required public response:

  • Ready — Prepare for possible evacuation
  • Set — Be prepared to leave at a moment’s notice
  • Go — Evacuate immediately when directed by the county sheriff

Officials emphasized that as wildfire activity increases in intensity and the wildland-urban interface continues to expand across Idaho, evacuation frequency and complexity are also increasing. A consistent statewide standard is intended to improve public safety outcomes and operational clarity for incident management teams and local responders.

The implementation effort will focus on training, public education, interagency coordination, and alignment of messaging protocols across counties to ensure consistent application during emergency incidents.

For more information on evacuation standards and wildfire preparedness in Idaho, residents are encouraged to follow guidance from their county sheriff’s office and local emergency management authorities.

Bannock County to Expand Advanced Life Support Ambulance Services to Southern Communities

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(Bannock County Press Release, May 4, 2026)

BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho – The Bannock County Commissioners are pleased to announce a significant expansion of emergency medical services for rural residents. Acting as the Bannock County Ambulance District, the Commissioners voted on Thursday, April 30, to establish an Advanced Life Support (ALS) crew to better serve the southern portion of the county.

The new ALS crew will be based at the recently constructed McCammon Fire Station. This strategic location will provide critical medical coverage to Inkom, McCammon, Lava Hot Springs, Arimo, Downey, and Swan Lake.

“Adding an ALS system for our rural residents will improve response time and patient care, helping us save lives when a heart attack or stroke occurs,” said Shane Grow, Acting Director of the Bannock County Ambulance District.

Beginning July 25, 2026, the McCammon station will be staffed by two full-time paramedics for four out of every six days. To streamline resources and maximize efficiency, equipment currently located in Inkom will be repurposed for use at the new centralized McCammon station.

This expansion introduces a “hybrid” model designed to supplement existing volunteer efforts with professional paramedic care. While the Inkom Volunteer Ambulance will be retired due to declining availability, volunteer Basic Life Support (BLS) services in Lava Hot Springs and Downey will remain active to support the new ALS team.

  • Volunteer BLS Units:Will continue providing essential care, including CPR, oxygen administration, and the use of automated defibrillators.
  • New ALS Crew:Will consist of paramedics capable of heart monitoring, starting IVs, administering emergency medications, and providing advanced trauma care.

“Our volunteers have dedicated countless hours serving their neighbors, making sure rural residents are well taken care of in their time of need,” said Commissioner Ken Bullock. “I’m grateful we found a way to maintain the volunteer system while enhancing the service our residents deserve by adding ALS to south Bannock County.”

“I’m excited to have found a path forward after two years of work trying to find the best way to bring quality, fast care to residents while being responsible with our taxpayer dollars,” said Commissioner Jeff Hough.

The Commissioners also thanked the City of Pocatello and the Pocatello Fire Department for their collaborative leadership and dedication to finding the best solution for all county residents and volunteers.

For Fiscal Year 2026, the operation of the full-time ALS system will be sustained through existing ambulance district funding. The transition was further made possible by federal grants to build the McCammon Fire Station, and equipment grants. Ground Emergency Medical Transport (GEMT) funding will provide funding for future budgets.

City to Host Groundbreaking Ceremony for Connections Credit Union Clubhouse at Riverside Golf Course

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, May 4, 2026)

The City of Pocatello will host a groundbreaking ceremony for the new Connections Credit Union Clubhouse at Riverside Golf Course Wednesday, May 6, at 11 a.m.

The event will take place at Riverside Golf Course, located at 3500 Bannock Highway, and will mark the start of construction on the new clubhouse facility. This project represents an exciting investment in one of the community’s premier recreational amenities and will enhance the overall experience for golfers and visitors alike.

City officials, project partners, and community members are invited to attend and celebrate the beginning of this project.

Please note, this is an active construction site. Attendees are encouraged to wear appropriate footwear.

For more information, please contact Parks & Recreation at 208-232-3901.

PRESS RELEASE (04/07/2026): Construction Underway for New Connections Credit Union Clubhouse at Riverside Golf Course

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.

Pop-Up Pet Licensing Coming to City Hall

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, May 1, 2026)

Pocatello Animal Services is making it easier to get your pets licensed this May with two convenient pop-up events at Pocatello City Hall, 911 7th Avenue.

Community members can stop by during the following times:

  • Thursday, May 7 – 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
  • Tuesday, May 19 – 12:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Cash, check, and card will be accepted, with a transaction fee on all cards. Licenses for dogs and cats will be available at half off standard pricing, making this a great opportunity to get pets properly licensed while saving money.

Half-Off License Pricing During May:

  • Unaltered Dog License: $12.50
  • Altered Dog License: $7.50
  • First Cat License (includes microchip): $11.25
  • Cat License Renewal: $2.50

*Senior residents 65 and older discount during May: Unaltered dogs are $9, altered dogs are $2.50, and cats are $2.50

Licensing helps reunite lost pets with their families quickly and supports important animal services in our community. Residents are encouraged to take advantage of these limited-time pop-up events to ensure their pets are licensed and protected.

For more information about pet licensing, please contact Pocatello Animal Services at 208-234-6156.

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.

Jobs Available with Bannock County

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May 5, 2026

Deputy Prosecutor III
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Assistant Parks Coordinator
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

On-call Juvenile Detention Deputy
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Maintenance Technician, Level 2
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Accounts Payable Technician – Deputy Auditor
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Facilities Assistant
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Security Officer Level 1
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Shop Supervisor
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

For a complete list of available jobs, visit Bannock County’s career site at: https://bannockcounty.applicantpro.com

Guest Columnist ID Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld: When Good People Go Quiet, Bad Politics Grow Bold

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May 3, 2026

When Good People Go Quiet, Bad Politics Grow Bold
A call for Idahoans to stand firm and speak out, because when we stay silent,
we quietly hand our liberties away.

By: Idaho Dist. 24 State Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld

ID Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld (Photo Credit: Glenneda Zuiderveld0
My Politics Are Simple

My politics are simple: I will not sell out Idaho families, our Constitution, or our rule of law to keep a paycheck or please a lobby. The Idaho Dairymen’s Association and a handful of powerful dairies don’t like my politics, and when they couldn’t get me to change my principles or my votes on policy, they came after my livelihood instead. I am a lifelong Idaho farm girl who has spent decades in and around the dairy industry, and I will not apologize for standing up for secure borders, parental rights, health freedom, fiscal discipline, and an agriculture policy that serves the people of Idaho, not the political class or the special interests that think they own this state. If the price of standing firm is losing 80–85% of our income, then so be it, my job is not to make Big Dairy comfortable; my job is to tell the truth, defend your liberty, and refuse to bow to anyone who believes they can bully a senator into silence.


Are These the Politics They Want Silenced?

  • I keep my oath to the Constitutions of Idaho and the United States, even when it costs me personally. I don’t treat my oath as a slogan for campaign season; it is the standard I use on every vote, whether lobbyists and politicians like it or not.
  • I oppose any government growth that is not clearly constitutional or necessary. If a program or agency can’t be justified by the Constitution and real need, I won’t vote to grow it just because “that’s how Boise has always done it.”
  • I will not support spending money we do not have or bloated budgets padded with pork, favors, and slush funds. Idaho families have to live within their means, and government should have to do the same instead of stuffing budgets with projects that benefit insiders.
  • Illegal immigration is breaking the law, for those who enter unlawfully and for those who knowingly hire them. We cannot claim to be a nation of laws and then look the other way when it is politically or economically convenient.
  • Life begins at conception, and I will defend the unborn without apology. Every child is a human life deserving protection, and I will stand for policies that respect and safeguard that life.
  • Government must be accountable; I oppose “blind appropriations” and demand detailed audits of how every single dime is spent. Before we hand agencies more money, they should have to prove how they used the last dollar and what results Idahoans actually got.
  • State sovereignty must be protected from federal overreach; the states created the federal government, not the other way around. I will resist schemes that bribe Idaho with federal dollars in exchange for surrendering our rights, our land, or our self‑government.
  • The federal government is supposed to be defined, confined, and checked, and Idaho must have the backbone to say “no” when D.C. goes beyond its limits. Saying “no” to unconstitutional mandates is not extreme; it is exactly what our system expects of strong states and strong legislators.
  • No governor, lieutenant governor, agency, canal company, union, or industry group gets to buy my vote or silence my voice with threats to my livelihood. If I can be intimidated into breaking my principles, then any legislator can and that would be a direct threat to every Idahoan’s freedom.
  • I support the Second Amendment as an individual, God‑given right to keep and bear arms, and I oppose attempts to chip it away through “common sense” gun control. “Shall not be infringed” means something, and I will stand against back‑door restrictions that punish law‑abiding citizens instead of criminals.
  • I believe income and property taxes are abusive and fundamentally wrong; I support shrinking government and shifting to a fairer system that does not threaten people with losing their homes. Government should not have the power to tax you out of your land or confiscate your labor at will; we must rethink how we fund essential services.
  • Education should serve parents and students, not unions and bureaucrats. I support parental rights, school choice, and getting indoctrination and political agendas out of Idaho classrooms so parents have transparency and real options when their local school refuses to respect their values.

Remembering What the Founders Risked

Our Founding Fathers gave us a constitutional republic and pledged their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor to secure it. They fought for freedom of religion, speech, the press, assembly, and the right to petition our government, liberties that have kept America free for nearly 250 years. I am learning firsthand that if we intend to keep that republic and stand on the same principles, it will cost us, too.

The Declaration of Independence listed grievances against a king who taxed without true representation, used regulations to crush livelihoods, ignored petitions, and concentrated power far from the people living with the consequences. Today, we have turned a blind eye as those same patterns creep back in: unelected bureaucrats making rules that feel like laws, politicians treating taxpayers as a bottomless ATM, agencies punishing dissenters, and leaders listening more to big donors than to the citizens they swore to represent.


Our Grievances in Idaho Today

So in our day, here in Idaho, we have our own grievances:

  • When government agencies retaliate against citizens for their beliefs instead of protecting their rights, we have turned a blind eye.
  • When lobbyists and big donors decide what happens, and too many elected officials just go along instead of thinking for themselves, we have turned a blind eye.
  • When families are taxed out of their homes while budgets grow and bureaucracies expand, we have turned a blind eye.
  • When illegal immigration is tolerated because it is convenient for cheap labor and political power, we have turned a blind eye.
  • When parents are treated as threats for wanting a say in their children’s education, we have turned a blind eye.
  • When federal “grant money” is used to drag our state into programs and policies we never voted for, we have turned a blind eye.

The Founders wrote their grievances to warn the king and awaken the people. I am writing ours to warn the political class, and to awaken Idahoans, before we lose the very freedoms they bled and died to secure.


The Price My Family Is Paying

When I talk about “lives, fortunes, and sacred honor,” that isn’t just a line from a history book for my family, it has become our daily reality. We have watched 80–85% of our income disappear almost overnight because I refused to bend my votes to satisfy powerful industries, political leaders, and agencies that expected obedience instead of integrity. My husband has lost work, our plans have been upended, and every month now comes with a question mark where there used to be stability and predictability. We have had some very hard conversations at the kitchen table about what we can cut, what we can sell, and how far this will go if the pressure keeps coming.

And yet, in the middle of all that pain and uncertainty, my family and friends has stood with me and said, “We are not for sale.” We know that if those who still believe in the Constitution back down whenever the cost gets high, then the people who use money and power to control our government will never be challenged. I would rather my children and grandchildren watch me lose work for doing what is right than watch me live comfortably after compromising what I know is true. That is the real test in front of us, not just whether we can quote the Founders, but whether we are willing, in our time, to pay a price to preserve what they left in our care.

It has been deeply grieving to watch businesses threatened because they supported me and to see others stay silent or hide their support out of fear of Big Ag’s retaliation. I’ve watched individuals in the agriculture industry, on boards, and in key community positions tell me they agree with me, but they cannot say so publicly because they know their job, their farm, or their business could be next. That is not the way a free state behaves; that is the way a captured system behaves, where a few powerful interests believe they have the right to punish anyone who steps out of line. The fact that ordinary Idahoans feel they must hide their convictions to protect their livelihoods is exactly why I refuse to bow. If they are being forced into silence, then I have a responsibility to speak louder, not softer.


A Call to Pray, Speak Up, and Vote

Now I am asking you to stand with me.

Pray, for courage, for protection over every family and business under pressure, and for leaders in Idaho who will fear God more than they fear losing power or income. Speak up, at your school board, in your church, in your neighborhood, and in your circles of influence, so that those who are trying to control this state with fear hear from more than just lobbyists and insiders. Support those who are paying a price for standing on principle; don’t leave them to fight alone while others enjoy the benefits of their courage.

And on May 19th, vote. Vote as if your children’s and grandchildren’s liberties depend on it, because they do. Vote for candidates who are willing to lose their livelihoods before they will lose their integrity. Vote to send a message to Big Ag, big government, and big unions, and to a Governor and Lt. Governor who try to use their influence to punish dissent, that Idaho is not for sale and its people are not easily intimidated. And vote for those who have already proven they will stand in the gap, like the Gang of 8, the State Freedom Caucus, who have taken the heat, paid the price, and refused to back down from defending your liberty.

If we will pray, speak up, vote, and stand together behind those who refuse to bow, then the price my family is paying and the price others are paying, will not be wasted. It will be an investment in preserving liberty in Idaho for the next generation.

Guest Columnist Martin Hackworth: Pocatello’s Culture Problem

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May 4, 2026

Pocatello’s Culture Problem
According to Councilman Bates, Pocatello has a culture problem.
We do. It’s just not what he thinks.

By: Martin Hackworth

There has been a video circulating recently on local social media, promoted by city council members Dakota Bates and Ann Swanson and made by Councilman Bates, concerning an alleged culture problem in Pocatello. I agree that Pocatello has a culture problem. It’s just not what Dakota and Ann claim it to be.

I happen to like Dakota Bates and Ann Swanson. If I lived within city limits, I’d have supported them in the last election along with Greg Cates for mayor. I don’t generally consider party affiliation particularly relevant in local politics. I’m for the people I think can best do the job. Sometimes these people are quite different from each other.

It takes a village, or so I’ve heard.

Councilman Bates’ jeremiad about local negativity, which he claims is our most pressing issue, isn’t even original. The people who I think are the culture problem in Pocatello—the established gentry and sunshine-and-rainbows crowd—have a rich history of blaming negativity for their failures to deliver much in the way of good news.

Between these two groups are a great number of the most unselfconscious, unrealistic, clueless, inept, and delusional civic leaders that bad dreams are capable of conjuring.

Councilman Bates actually invokes “woe is us” regarding the burden of being an elected leader in such a sea of negativity in his video. That’s not going to fly. No one bends anyone’s arm up behind their back to run for local public office—you run as a volunteer. Being an elected civic leader requires listening to all constituents, not just the smiley ones. He should come to grips with that (I think that he will).

Promoting Pocatello should be one of the easiest gigs on the planet. Pocatello, based on location, quality of life, and physical beauty, should be the equivalent of a luxury SUV. We are, instead, a rusty subcompact with a slipping clutch and a transmission that, when engaged, only works in reverse. We are shedding jobs and our tax base at an alarming rate due to a lack of a coherent vision about what constitutes a rational future and competent leadership—not criticism on social media.

The doom spiral in Pocatello isn’t caused by negativity. No business has ever passed over Pocatello because of comments on Facebook. They pass on Pocatello because of what they find when they get here—the not-ready-for-prime-time players running the show. The track record is painfully obvious.

It’s not critics on social media who promised the moon over Northgate, Hoku, and ISU’s “Gallium Valley of Pocatello” and then failed to deliver. It’s not critics who stood by silently while a series of incompetent administrations drove the area’s largest employer, Idaho State University, off a cliff. Negative comments on social media are not responsible for the now years-long Center Street Underpass debacle, currently exacerbated by the ill-timed West Benton Street bridge replacement project.

Social media posts didn’t land Pocatello in national headlines for firing a lunch lady days before Christmas for giving a free lunch to a needy kid or for inviting thousands of ill-qualified students from the Middle East to wreak havoc and then deem anyone who objected a racist. Facebook posts did not cause Main Street in the very heart of downtown to close for three months one summer, nor did they lead to vital road maintenance equipment being quietly loaned to another city.

Not a single person living in the large homeless encampment on our city’s north side this past winter came here because of critics of the local gentry or sunshine and rainbows crowd on Facebook. They might have used social media to figure out how to run electricity to their small, unzoned city encampment, complete with holiday lights. But that’s about it.

And social media posts did not kill Victor Perez in his front yard, nor did they bungle the city’s response to the subsequent international outrage and concern.

Incompetent and self-dealing local leadership, not bad luck or negativity, has caused Pocatello to fail in achieving its aspirations, despite having many of the attributes needed for success. The good news is that changing people is easier than changing attitudes. One generally precedes the other anyway.

And that needs to happen here. In Pocatello, we have traditionally had two classes of equally low-octane public officials: those chosen by the dominant local clique and the sunshine-and-rainbows crowd, who use every trick in the book to ignore the elephant in the room posed by the dominant local clique.

The only thing that seems to unite these two disparate groups is the belief that accepting nonsense with a smile is a necessary step in the alchemy required to transform prospects that repeatedly sink like a lead balloon on Jupiter into future gold.

This is why people don’t much care for our local government and aren’t bashful about saying so. Locals pay taxes for lackluster services and for government officials’ salaries, who deride critics as “negative” and who imagine that the necessary step on the road to prosperity is to require that we all hold hands and sing “Kumbaya.”

Think I’m wrong? Think I’m too negative? Think that passing an ordinance mandating smiles will remedy everything that’s wrong here and lead to growth and prosperity more effectively than better leaders?

Prove it.

 

 

Associated Press and Idaho Press Club-winning columnist Martin Hackworth of Pocatello is a physicist, writer, climber, skier, motorcyclist, musician, and retired Idaho State University faculty member who now spends his time raising four kids. Follow him on X at @MartinHackworth, on Facebook at facebook.com/martin.hackworth, and on Substack at martinhackworthsubstack.com.