March 22, 2026
The Law of Compensation
What service requires of those who choose to stand
By: Idaho Dist. 25 Representative David Leavitt

There are two very different ways people approach public office, and over time, that difference becomes impossible to ignore.
Some enter into it with the expectation that it will give them something. It may not be stated that way, but the reality shows itself in how they operate. Relationships are protected, difficult issues are avoided, and decisions are shaped by what maintains stability rather than what challenges it. The position becomes a place of security, influence, and access. Something to preserve.
Others step into it with a different understanding. They recognize from the beginning that the role is not designed to benefit them personally, and that if they are doing it honestly, it will likely cost them something.
There are always those who will try to dismiss that reality. They will reduce it to self-interest or convenience, as if the cost only matters when it becomes personal. What they fail to understand is that when a stand begins to carry a real cost, that is not when principles begin. That is when they are proven.
Here is Glenneda’s story.
There is a natural law that applies here just as much as it does anywhere else. You do not receive something without giving something in return. Every benefit carries a cost, whether it is recognized or not. Like Newton’s Third Law of Motion, every action carries an equal and opposite reaction. That is the law of compensation, and it does not disappear in public office.
This principle is not new. It is woven into the foundation of this country.
At the close of the Declaration of Independence, the men who signed it pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. They understood exactly what that meant. Many of them paid that price in full. They lost businesses, homes, and security. Some lost their lives. They were not reckless men. They were disciplined, deliberate, and fully aware of the cost, and they chose it anyway.
The law of compensation has not changed. What has changed is the willingness to acknowledge it.
In public office, the question is not whether there is a cost. The question is what someone is willing to give.
For some, the exchange is subtle but consistent. They accept comfort, stability, and protection, and in return they give up independence. Over time, those decisions accumulate. A vote here, a relationship preserved there, a line that is never crossed. Eventually, the position is no longer about representing the people. It can become about maintaining the system that benefits them.
For others, the exchange moves in the opposite direction. They give up comfort in order to keep their independence. They accept risk so they can stand on principle. They understand that doing the job honestly may carry financial, professional, and personal consequences.
Before I ever stepped into this role, I understood that reality. One of the first decisions I made was to give up my Social Security Disability Insurance, something I had earned through my military service and the injuries I carry from it. That was not a symbolic gesture. It represented about a third of my income, along with medical insurance, and I knew that once I walked away from it, it was gone for good. I made that decision so that I could serve you without hesitation and without compromise.
At times, it would be easier to go along with a vote or stay quiet when difficult issues arise. Most people understand that. The difference is whether you act on it.
I don’t.
What we are seeing now makes that distinction clearer. When someone refuses to bend on issues like illegal immigration, when they choose to represent the people instead of the industries that benefit from the status quo, pressure follows. It does not always appear publicly. In many cases, it is quiet and targeted. Sometimes it is financial. Sometimes it affects business relationships or future opportunities. It is not driven by failure, but by refusal to comply.
That is not something to complain about. It is something to recognize and expect.
The law of compensation still applies. The only question is what someone is willing to give in exchange for what they receive. Some choose comfort and security, and in doing so they give up the ability to act independently. Others choose to give up that comfort so they can stand without compromise.
Understanding that, what are you willing to give?
I made that decision knowing it would come with a cost, and it already has. That is not unique, and it is not something I expect sympathy for. It is simply part of doing the job honestly.
We are not reckless. We understand exactly what this requires, and we accept it.
It takes discipline to stand when it would be easier to step aside. It takes conviction to hold the line when pressure builds behind the scenes. It takes a willingness to give something up in order to protect something greater.
Not everyone is willing to do it.
We are not here to accumulate power or preserve a system that feeds on the people it is supposed to represent. We are here to serve. To stand. To act as a barrier between the people and those who would take from them without restraint.
That requires strength. It requires resolve. It requires men and women who are willing to bear the cost without complaint and without compromise.
That has always been the standard.
It still is.
And we intend to meet it.






























