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Guest Columnist ID Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld: The Slow Fade of Freedom

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April 27, 2026

The Slow Fade of Freedom
History Doesn’t Repeat Itself—But It Rhymes

By: Idaho Dist. 24 State Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld

ID Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld (Photo Credit: Glenneda Zuiderveld0

America rarely loses freedom in one dramatic moment.

It fades when people are told that one more regulation, one more emergency power, one more surrender of local control is necessary “for the greater good.” History shows that liberty is usually not destroyed all at once; it is sliced away piece by piece until the people wake up and realize the system no longer belongs to them.

That is not a new pattern. It is exactly the kind of abuse our Founding Fathers knew firsthand. They had lived under a government that imposed taxes without consent, kept standing armies among the people in peacetime, quartered troops, and concentrated power far from the citizens who had to live under it.  James Madison warned that the accumulation of legislative, executive, and judicial power in the same hands is “the very definition of tyranny,” and Patrick Henry’s cry for liberty came in direct response to a government that had stopped listening to the people and started ruling over them.

The American Revolution was not fought over one tax or one isolated act. It was fought because the colonists recognized a pattern. They saw power centralizing, consent being bypassed, and government treating the people not as citizens to be respected, but as subjects to be managed. The men who signed the Declaration pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor because they understood that once freedom is surrendered by degrees, reclaiming it comes at a terrible cost.

History kept proving them right. In postwar Eastern Europe, communist parties did not always seize control in one obvious blow. In Hungary, communists entered coalition government, then took control of key institutions and dismantled their opposition “slice by slice,” a method that became known as salami tactics. Across Eastern Europe, similar patterns allowed Soviet-backed regimes to preserve the appearance of democratic process while hollowing out real political freedom.

Chile offers another warning. Salvador Allende came to power through an election, then pursued nationalization, state expansion, and deeper government control over the economy in the name of justice and reform. What followed was not stability or equality, but soaring inflation, shortages, social breakdown, and finally political collapse ending in the 1973 coup.

Venezuela may be the clearest modern example of the slow fade. Hugo Chávez was elected on promises to fight corruption and help ordinary people, but over time his government rewrote the constitution, expanded executive power, nationalized industries, and tightened state control over society and the economy. Under Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela descended into hyperinflation, mass emigration, and authoritarian rule, showing how a system can move from democratic language to centralized control step by step.

The lesson is not that every public program is communism or that every policy disagreement is tyranny. The lesson is that free people must learn to recognize patterns before they harden into systems. When government grows beyond its constitutional bounds, when unelected institutions dictate more of daily life, when speech is pressured, property rights are weakened, and citizens are trained to depend on centralized power, the warning lights are already flashing.

The slow fade depends on distraction. It depends on people dismissing one small step after another because each step, by itself, does not seem big enough to fight over. But history repeats itself in patterns, and the pattern is always the same: power accumulates, freedom shrinks, and those in charge insist it is temporary, necessary, and for your own good.

Our Founders gave everything to save us from exactly that kind of government. They did not build a constitutional republic so future generations would quietly trade liberty for comfort, security, or political convenience. They built barriers against centralized power because they knew human nature had not changed, and they understood that the greatest threat to freedom often comes wrapped in promises of order, fairness, and protection.

The question for our time is not whether history will repeat itself word for word. It won’t. The question is whether we are wise enough to recognize it when it rhymes. If we fail to notice the slow fade, we may one day discover that we have drifted back toward the very kind of rule our Founders risked everything to escape.


The Choice Before Idaho

At the end of the day, this race isn’t about personalities. It’s about whether Idaho keeps drifting toward the same big‑government mindset that has been running things for decades, or whether we turn and go the other way.

On one side, you have a man who has spent 35 years inside government, moving from one title to the next, comfortable with the way things are and convinced that more programs, more agencies, and more centralized control are just “how it’s done.” He talks about managing government. I am running to limit it.

When you’ve lived in that environment long enough, more regulations, more boards, and more top‑down control start to feel normal, even reasonable. I don’t see it that way. I come from the world that has to live under those decisions, the families trying to keep their land, the small businesses trying to survive another mandate, the parents fighting to protect their kids and their values.

I did not go to the Capitol to make friends with the bureaucracy. I went there to fight for families, for property rights, for local control, and for the God‑given freedoms our Founders risked everything to secure. I am not interested in going along to get along while Idaho drifts the same direction as every other bloated, top‑down government.

So here is the contrast in District 24:

  • He represents the system as it is.
  • I represent the people who are tired of being managed by it.

If you want another long‑time government insider who sees the answer in more of the same, my challenger is your candidate. If you want your sitting senator to keep standing in the gap, push back, draw a line, and say “No more slow fade of our freedoms,” then I am asking for your vote.

Not because I want a career in politics, but because I want my grandchildren to inherit an Idaho that still looks like the Republic our Founders fought for, and not the centralized system they warned us about.

I’m Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld, proudly serving Idaho’s District 24.
If you believe Idaho should remain a place where freedom is real, where local people make local decisions, and where the slow fade of liberty stops at our borders, then I’m asking you to stand with me.

Vote Glenneda Zuiderveld in the Republican Primary, May 19th.

Let’s send a message: Idaho is not for sale, not for control, and not for surrender.

Idaho Freedom Caucus: Idaho Needs Courageous Conservatives Who Stand Firm

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(Idaho Freedom Caucus, April 28, 2026)

Thousands of families across Idaho place a high value on freedom, personal responsibility, safe communities, limited government, and the right to chart their own future. It’s why they live here, because they understand these principles are the foundation of the true American way of life.

That is why the work of the members of the Idaho Freedom Caucus matters.

Our members believe elected officials should do more than campaign as conservatives; they should govern as conservatives. That means standing up for truth even when it’s not easy and standing up for lower taxes, even when it means making hard decisions. It means protecting constitutional liberties, defending parental rights, supporting law enforcement, preserving Idaho agriculture, securing elections, and keeping government accountable to the people.

All of our caucus members are once again stepping up to be re-elected on May 19th. These men and women have shown they are willing to stand firm, ask hard questions, challenge the status quo, and fight for the values Idaho families hold dear.

Idaho can continue to have a bright future being a leader in conservative values and promoting strong communities. That future requires legislators with courage, and leaders willing to vote the right way even when it is unpopular with the herd mentality in the Capitol. It also requires informed voters.

Today, labels alone are not enough. Some candidates know they cannot win in conservative Idaho districts by openly running as Democrats, so they attempt to run as Republicans while advancing very different policies once elected.

That is why voters must do their homework.

Look beyond campaign slogans. Study voting records, past and present social media posts and candidate statements. Evaluate their endorsements. Understand where they stand on taxes, spending, parental rights, public safety, and limited government.

Don’t be fooled by glitzy campaign mailers. Know the facts because you are informed. Mail pieces can be designed to create an image that does not match a candidate’s actual record or positions. Always look deeper than what arrives in your mailbox.

Across Idaho, strong conservative voices are working to preserve our communities and way of life. Idaho Freedom Caucus members continue that mission by protecting what makes Idaho special while preparing for the future. You can view our members and their websites HERE.

Thank you for joining us in this mission. Please continue to stay engaged and help educated others as Idaho is worth the effort!

In Liberty,

The Idaho Freedom Caucus

Celebrate Free Comic Book Day May 2 at Marshall Public Library

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, April 28, 2026)

Marshall Public Library is thrilled to announce its participation in the 24th annual Free Comic Book Day Saturday, May 2, 2026! Join us for a fun-filled day as we give away free comic books to readers of all ages (while supplies last).

Free Comic Book Day is a worldwide event where over 2,000 comic book shops and libraries open their doors to new and longtime fans, offering a selection of special edition comics at no cost. Thanks to our local comic book shop, Captain Bengal’s Comic Cove, the Marshall Public Library will be able to offer a number of this year’s titles, including Avatar the Last Airbender, Amazing Spider-Man, and Dungeon Crawler Carl.

This event is open to all ages and registration is not required. Giveaways will begin when the library opens at 10 a.m. and will continue throughout the day. In addition to grabbing one of this year’s free comics, you can look forward to a bonus bin of comics from previous years, a comic -themed craft project happening in our Exploration Center, and a Spider-Man community puzzle.

The library thanks Bob Beason, owner of Captain Bengal’s Comic Cove, for his help and support with this event. Mr. Beason helped provide the comics for giveaway, including the additional titles available.

For more information about Free Comic Book Day and a full list of available titles, visit freecomicbookday.com or contact the Marshall Public Library at (208) 232-1263.

Don’t miss out, mark your calendar and join us for Free Comic Book Day 2026!

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.

BLM Acts to Accelerate Geothermal Energy Development

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(Bureau of Land Management Press Release, April 28, 2026)

WASHINGTON — The Bureau of Land Management has approved a categorical exclusion to make it easier and faster to explore for geothermal energy on public lands. This action allows small-scale exploration projects—disturbing up to 10 acres of land—to move forward with less red tape.

“By setting consistent permitting expectations across public lands, we’re giving operators a clear, predictable path to delivering a reliable supply of geothermal energy,” said BLM Acting Director Bill Groffy. “This new categorical exclusion streamlines the process without compromising environmental review or quality standards. It will expedite the approval of new geothermal projects, ensuring operators across the West can provide more energy for the American people.”

Categorical exclusions are categories of actions that have been determined to not typically have significant environmental impacts, eliminating the need to do a full environmental review. Streamlining National Environmental Policy Act compliance through categorical exclusions removes regulatory burdens and speeds up the process, saving time, and resources.

Before relying on a categorical exclusion for a proposed project, an agency must verify that there are no extraordinary circumstances, such as potential impacts to endangered species or cultural resources, that may result in the project having any significant environmental effects.

With geothermal exploration operations, companies search for evidence of geothermal resources through geophysical operations, core drilling and temperature gradient wells, and related well pads, roads and trails. Exploration operations do not include the direct testing of geothermal resources or the production or utilization of geothermal resources.

The new categorical exclusion published today in the Federal Register and directly supports the goals of Executive Order 14154 and Secretary’s Order 3418, both titled “Unleashing American Energy,” by cutting red tape and accelerating the approval process for geothermal energy exploration. It also aligns with Executive Order 14156, “Declaring a National Energy Emergency,” and Secretary’s Order 3417, “Addressing the National Energy Emergency,” by helping to quickly advance domestic energy projects that can strengthen the nation’s energy supply and security.

Geothermal is an abundant resource, especially in the West, which the BLM has authority to manage geothermal leasing, exploration, and development on approximately 245 million surface acres of public lands and the 700 million acres where the United States owns the subsurface mineral estate.

The BLM manages about 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 western states, including Alaska, on behalf of the American people. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of subsurface mineral estate throughout the nation. Our mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.

Bestselling Author Eric Metaxis to Speak at Idaho Family Policy Center Event in Idaho Falls

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(Idaho Family Policy Center, April 27, 2026)

Here’s your chance to learn from one of today’s most influential Christian scholars — Eric Metaxas — at our upcoming IFPC Family Forum Night!

WHEN: Friday, June 12 | 6:30 – 8:30 pm

WHERE: Outwest Bible Church (located at Snake River Event Center, 780 Lindsay Blvd, Idaho Falls, ID 83402)

Eric Metaxas — who ABC News has called one of the most influential “ambassadors for faith in public life” — will join Blaine Conzatti and Dr. Kent DelHousaye to speak on how Christians can effectively engage in culture.

This is a FREE event, but seating is limited. You must register to attend. Invite your friends and family, but remember, they need to register too.

We will also have a special opportunity for Eric Metaxas to sign copies of his books Letter to the American Church, Religionless Christianity, and If You Can Keep It after the event. You must purchase books at the event if you want Eric to sign your books.

Don’t miss this special event—we’ll see you on June 12th!

Eric Metaxas is the #1 New York Times Bestselling author of Bonhoeffer, Is Atheism Dead?, Martin Luther, Amazing Grace, Letter to the American Church, and Religionless Christianity: God’s Answer to Evil. He is also the host of Socrates in the City and the nationally syndicated Eric Metaxas Radio Show.

Rachel Hazelip – Buried Without a Vote: The Secret Power of Committee Chairmen

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April 29, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: IFF)

Buried Without a Vote: The Secret Power of Committee Chairmen

By: IFF Policy Director Rachel Hazelip

Rachel Hazelip, IFF Policy Director (Photo credit: IFF)

It isn’t a power afforded in House or Senate rules. It isn’t written into Mason’s Manual of Legislative Procedure, and it certainly isn’t penned into the Constitution. Yet, during legislative sessions at the Idaho Capitol, it is utilized and treated as an authorized exercise of power.

We are, of course, talking about the chairman’s drawer.

You know, that convenient proverbial desk drawer where bills are placed until the clock runs out, and the legislation quietly dies without a vote. No headlines. No recorded support or opposition. No debate by our elected officials. No accountability.

Legislative committees exist for a simple reason: to review legislation efficiently before being debated by the body of the whole and to send bills to the House or Senate floors with a “do pass,” “do not pass,” or without recommendation.

In practice, however, the chairman’s drawer has transformed this intended mechanism of efficient review into an abusive leadership tool akin to gubernatorial veto power, allowing one person to silence debate and deny the full Legislature — and by extension, the people of Idaho — the opportunity to weigh in on some of the most critical issues facing Idaho.

Ironically, this abuse is most often put into practice with conservative legislation that reflects the principles of limited government, individual liberty, parental authority, and fiscal restraint. Liberal leaning bills, including those authored by Big Ag, the medical industrial complex, Idaho Power, or teachers unions, etc., are almost never drawered. During the 2026 legislative session, for example, House Bill 745, which sought to limit taxpayer subsidies to government unions, was held by Chairman Dan Foreman in the Senate Commerce and Human Resources Committee.

Similarly, House Bills 953954955, and 956 — which would restrain the Department of Health and Welfare and Child Protective Services — were denied hearings and held by Chairman John Vander Woude in the House Health and Welfare Committee, resulting in them being filed as personal bills. House Bill 669, which would have enacted a full repeal of all cloud-seeding operations and banned weather-modification activities in Idaho, was denied a hearing and held by both Chairman Vito Barbiari and Chairman Ron Mendive in the House Environment, Energy, and Technology Committee and the House Resources and Conservation Committee, respectively. This, too, was filed as a personal bill as a result.

Personal bills represent a little-understood procedural workaround legislators use when a committee chairman refuses to grant a hearing to a bill through their committee. Filing a bill as a personal bill creates a public record of the legislation and allows for a formal introduction on the floor. However, this process is largely symbolic — personal bills do not advance through committees, are not assigned hearings, and are effectively barred from consideration during a session. Filing a personal bill with the Clerk’s Office is a legislator’s last resort to document legislation leadership chooses to bury.

Senate Bill 1298, regarding self-defense, was held by Chairman Jim Guthrie in the Senate State Affairs Committee and immigration bills such as House Bill 592House Bill 656, and House Bill 660; Medicaid expansion repeal (House Bill 850) and eligibility (House Bill 912), and the ever-elusive grocery tax repeal (ultimately filed as a personal bill, House Bill 633) were all killed at the pleasure of the chairman.

The list could go on, but you get the idea: most of the best bills die in drawers. 

These bills are not fringe proposals by a select few Idahoans. They embody the conservative mandate Idaho voters have repeatedly given the legislature: enforcing immigration law as a matter of sovereignty and rule of law, protecting parents’ rights against state intrusion, reforming failing welfare and education systems, claiming sovereignty over our air and water, and cutting spending. Yet a handful of chairmen exercised power never granted by the people or the Constitution to kill these critical bills silently and unilaterally.

This practice stands in direct contradiction to the Founding Fathers’ design for republican government. Jefferson’s Manual of Parliamentary Practice (1801) presumed committees would deliberate and report, not disappear legislation into oblivion. According to Jefferson, the purpose of committees is to facilitate discussion, refine bill ideas and language, and organize legislation before reaching the body of the whole for proper debate and voting.

In Federalist 51, James Madison warned, “ambition must be made to counteract ambition” through structural checks, precisely to prevent the very concentration of power the chairman’s drawer enables. The Founding Fathers believed free speech in government needed to be accompanied by procedures to safeguard against the tyranny of the majority; however, procedure without virtue has largely become a different kind of tyranny. The Founders rejected rule by a privileged few; they established a system of open deliberation among elected representatives accountable to a sovereign citizenry.

Conservative philosophy insists on the rule of law over the rule of men, transparency over secrecy, and the consent of the governed over arbitrary gatekeeping. When a single chairman has the power to nullify the work of the legislature or the will of the people without a trace, it mocks the principles the United States was founded upon. The Founders instituted prudence through open institutions and respect for the inherited constitutional order; the drawer replaces both with unaccountable fiat.

The chairman’s drawer is a de facto veto power that subverts the legislative process, shields lawmakers from accountability, and disenfranchises voters. 

Committees were never meant to be legislative graveyards, yet increasingly they are becoming just that. Arbitrary rule is a dangerous thing that the Founders structured our government to largely avoid.

A chairman may hold a bill or refuse to grant a hearing (essentially holding, even before a bill is given a number) for any reason. This includes pressure from agencies or special interest groups, fear of a bill being on record, losing financial and endorsement support during elections, pressure from legislative leadership, the “gentleman on the second floor” (Governor) not liking it, or — possibly worst of all — perhaps the chairman simply does not like the legislator carrying the bill.

This is the evil genius of the chairman’s drawer — chairmen do not need to provide an explanation for killing legislation. Their power and authority are nothing short of an unconstitutional shadow veto. The practice of the chairman’s drawer kills debate, dodges accountability, and treats the people’s elected representatives as subservient to leadership authority. This is a top-down rather than a bottom-up authority structure, inconsistent with a republican government. If Idaho’s legislature believes in limited government and the consent of the governed, then it should abolish this precedential power granted to leadership and restore the Founders’ vision of open deliberation, recorded votes, and accountability to voters.

No more buried bills. No more silent tyranny. The drawer must die.

 

Guest Columnist Senator Tammy Nichols on Home Ownership

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April 27, 2026

Idaho Rejects “Own Nothing and Be Happy”

By: ID Senator Tammy Nichols

ID Senator Tammy Nichols (Photo Credit: Tammy Nichols)

There has been a lot of discussion about two housing bills passed this session that I co-sponsored: S1352a (Starter Home Subdivisions) and S1354a (Accessory Dwelling Units). Some people have claimed these laws take away local control or will dramatically change Idaho communities. I believe much of that concern comes from misunderstanding what these bills actually do.

These are not sweeping mandates. They are a light-touch response to a real housing challenge facing Idaho families, seniors, and young adults.

For years, Idaho has seen rising home prices, shrinking inventory, and fewer options for working families trying to buy their first home. At the same time, many of our children are growing up here, graduating here, and then leaving because they cannot afford to stay.

That should concern all of us.

My first home in Meridian was in a starter-home subdivision. It was a modest 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, just over 1,000 square feet, and I purchased it for $80,000 in 1996. It was not fancy, but it was attainable, and it was a sacrifice that we were excited, yet scared to make. It was a starting place, and it helped build a future. Too many young families today do not even have that kind of opportunity.

S1352a creates a path for starter-home subdivisions in larger cities. These are smaller, more affordable homes designed to help first time buyers enter the market. Just as important, the law still protects cities by allowing them to condition or deny approval if roads, water, sewer, or other infrastructure cannot support the project.

That means cities still have authority to manage growth responsibly.

S1354a is also modest and practical. It allows one accessory dwelling unit per lot, either inside the main home or one small, detached unit in the backyard, subject to setbacks. This could be a mother-in-law suite, basement apartment, garage conversion, or backyard cottage.

That is not overdevelopment. That is common sense.

These housing options can help seniors stay near family, help young adults get started, provide space for caregivers, or help homeowners offset rising costs. They create gentle growth without large apartment complexes or massive subdivisions.

Meanwhile, apartments are already being built across Idaho at much higher density, yet many critics say little. But when we talk about smaller homes, ownership opportunities, or a modest backyard cottage, concerns suddenly grow.

What Idaho families are facing is a growing housing squeeze.

Homeownership has always been part of the American Dream, the chance to build stability, raise a family, create equity, and own something of your own. Yet more Americans are missing out on that opportunity.

Today, only about 12% of Americans are married and own a home by age 30, compared with 52% in 1960. Here in the Treasure Valley, median home prices often range from the mid $400,000s to over $500,000 depending on location. For many young families, that dream feels farther away every year.

Because of that, many young couples delay marriage, delay children, or move elsewhere in search of affordable housing.

We see it in Idaho as many of our own kids leave because they cannot afford to stay. Seniors on fixed incomes are struggling as well. We cannot keep kicking the can down the road while the next generation loses opportunities previous generations once had.

These bills also align with President Trump’s recent executive order focused on increasing housing supply and affordability.

Idaho rejects the growing global mindset captured in the phrase, “You will own nothing and be happy.”

We still believe in private property, homeownership, strong families, and the freedom to build a future.

These laws are not about changing Idaho. They are about preserving what made Idaho strong in the first place, a place where ordinary people can still own a home, raise a family, and build a life.

These two bills are not the only answer. We also need lower taxes, reduced regulations, responsible growth planning, infrastructure investment, and an economy where wages can keep up with costs. But we cannot keep kicking the can down the road while the next generation loses opportunities previous generations once had.

In Liberty,

Sen. Tammy Nichols

Guest Column from Stop Idaho RINOs: The Map Is Red. The Votes Are Purple.

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April 26, 2026

The Map Is Red. The Votes Are Purple.
Why are RINOs squirming?

By: Stop Idaho RINOs

It’s been pretty fun seeing many of the RINOs squirm over the past several weeks because of the results of our “Votes With Dems” scorecard.

Several Idaho legislators are pushing back with their own spin. The arguments are nearly identical, almost like they had a Zoom workshop together. Same complaints, same percentages, same misdirection.

Here’s our response. Once. For everyone.

What this scorecard actually measures

Idaho is called a red state. The map says so. The registration numbers say so. The presidential results say so.

The voting record inside the Capitol tells a different story.

Bills that conservative voters expect their Republican representatives to support are dying or getting watered down because Republicans are crossing over and voting with Democrats (or are essentially Democrats themselves). Not occasionally. Not on close calls. Often enough that conservative legislation routinely fails in a state with a Republican supermajority.

The map is red. The votes are purple. This scorecard exists to show voters the difference.

That’s it. That’s the whole project. We’re not measuring party loyalty. We’re not measuring how nice someone is in caucus. We’re measuring whether the people Idaho elected to represent conservative values are voting like they actually hold those values.

How the scorecard is built

Before we get to their arguments, one thing needs to be clear, because every rebuttal we’ve seen depends on misunderstanding it.

This scorecard includes every single bill that received a recorded vote this session. Every single one. We didn’t pick favorites. We didn’t curate. We didn’t sort bills into “ones that count” and “ones that don’t.” We took the entire session.

Then we removed the unanimous votes from the percentage calculation, because a vote where every Republican and every Democrat agreed isn’t measuring anything ideological. More on that in a second.

That’s the entire methodology. Take every vote. Remove the ones where there was nothing to disagree about. Show voters how their legislator voted on the rest.

Their three arguments, and why all three fall apart

Argument one: “You should include unanimous votes.”

A bill that every Republican and every Democrat votes for isn’t a partisan bill. It’s a road name. A license plate design. A technical fix to existing code. There’s nothing conservative or progressive about it.

Asking voters to judge their legislator on those votes is asking them to evaluate a candidate based on bills with no ideological content at all. You can’t measure where someone stands on issues by counting votes that aren’t about issues.

There’s also something worth noticing here. Including unanimous votes in the calculation also raises their own “Votes with Dems” percentage. Democrats voted for those bills, too. The math doesn’t actually help them. They just hope nobody runs the numbers.

Argument two: “Compare Republicans to Republicans, not Democrats.”

This is the most popular line right now, and it’s also the most revealing.

It sounds reasonable until you think it through. Under this methodology, 40 Republicans could vote with Democrats on a bill, and all 40 would still score as loyal Republicans, because they voted together. The Democrat position won. The bill became law. The scorecard would say everyone passed.

That’s not a scorecard. That’s a participation ribbon. It lets the entire caucus drift left without consequence as long as they drift together. Voters aren’t that easy to fool, and they shouldn’t be.

Argument three: “Democrats only influenced the outcome a few times.”

This argument moves the goalposts from how someone voted to whether their vote changed the result. Those are not the same question.

“My vote didn’t change the outcome” is not an explanation of why you voted that way. It’s an excuse for voting the wrong way and getting away with it. A vote is a public statement of position. It is on the record forever. The bill passed or failed for a thousand reasons, but the only thing on a legislator’s record is how they personally voted.

If “outcome influence” became the standard for accountability, no Idaho legislator would ever be accountable for anything, because the math will usually work out one way or the other. That’s the goal of the argument, and that’s why we reject it.

The 5% problem

Some legislators are now publishing their own numbers. One representative announced he was “only against my party 5% of the time” and “95% with my party majority.” Others are running the same math on themselves and getting similarly flattering results.

Here’s how the trick works.

That 5% is calculated against every vote of the session, including the unanimous ones. When you put 237 road names and technical fixes in the denominator, every legislator’s “against the party” percentage gets crushed toward zero by simple arithmetic. On the contested votes that actually measure ideology, the same legislator’s numbers can be ten or twenty times higher. That’s not a coincidence. That’s the entire reason they’re presenting the math this way.

The same legislators are also pointing at Democrats who voted against the Democratic majority and saying, “See, even Democrats break with their party, so it doesn’t mean anything when Republicans do it.” Of course, Idaho Democrats sometimes vote with Republicans. They live in Idaho. They represent Idaho districts. Their constituents pull them rightward. That’s gravity, not equivalence. The fact that Idaho Democrats occasionally cross over doesn’t validate Idaho Republicans crossing over. It just confirms that Idaho is a conservative state, which is the whole point of measuring whether Republican legislators vote like it.

Some are closing with a rhetorical question: “How much against the Republican majority is allowable before we question whether someone belongs in a different party?” That’s the wrong question. The right question is: how often can a Republican vote against conservative bills before voters question whether they should be representing a conservative state?

And every number in this scorecard is auditable. Every bill is public. Anyone with a spreadsheet and an afternoon can check it. The legislators publishing their own counter-numbers are asking voters to trust their math instead of ours. Voters don’t have to. They can run it themselves.

What they’re actually doing

Notice what these legislators are not doing.

Not one of them has said “I voted against this bill, and here’s why I think conservatives should agree with my reasoning.” They’re not defending the votes. They’re attacking the math.

When someone changes the subject from “what did I do” to “how are you measuring what I did,” that’s the tell. The bills on this scorecard aren’t a hand-picked list of greatest hits. They’re all the recorded votes of the session. If a legislator has a problem with what’s being measured, the problem isn’t with us. The problem is that they don’t want their entire voting record made public.

There’s another giveaway. Their own arguments are full of contested-vote math. They tell us “Democrats only influenced 17 outcomes.” They tell us “Republicans were split 198 times.” Both of those numbers are about contested votes. The same kind of votes we’re measuring. They’re using contested-vote analysis to defend themselves while telling us we shouldn’t use contested-vote analysis to score them. Pick one.

Who they’re really talking to

The conservative base voter does not need an essay on methodology to know that voting with Democrats on contested bills is a problem.

The legislators making these arguments aren’t trying to convince conservative primary voters. They’re trying to convince donors, moderates, and the comfortable middle that this scorecard is unfair. They’re hoping the people who already weren’t going to vote for them in a primary will side with them in a public spat.

It’s a tell about who they think their real constituency is. And it should tell voters something, too.

The bottom line

We published every vote. The bill list is the entire session. The methodology is one sentence long: take every vote, remove the ones where nobody disagreed, and show voters the rest.

The legislators pushing back the hardest are the ones at the top of the scorecard. The “good Republicans” they’re holding up as examples are the same names that have been flagged as crossover voters for years. They are the same names that score poorly on every conservative scorecard out there, every session. Two metrics, same answer. They’re trying to relabel “moderate” as “loyal” and hope nobody notices.

Idaho voters can read.

That’s what this is really about. Not methodology. Not percentages. Not unanimous votes. It’s about whether the people elected to represent a conservative state are willing to be measured against their entire voting record.

If the answer is yes, the scorecard is a tool they should welcome. If the answer is no, voters deserve to know that too.

The map is red. The votes are purple. We’ll keep publishing the difference.

US Partnership Aligns Drone Innovation for National Security

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(Idaho National Laboratory Press Release, April 28, 2026)

From the skies over Ukraine to the southern U.S. border, drones are transforming the nature of global conflict and domestic security. Unauthorized unmanned aerial systems, and efforts to detect, track, identify and mitigate them, shape homeland security operations daily.

Drone-delivered kinetic attacks perfected in war zones are increasingly used to threaten critical infrastructure and mass gatherings at special events. At U.S. borders, transnational criminal organizations use UAS to transport illegal items and monitor law enforcement activities.

During the last six months of 2024, more than 27,000 drones were detected within 500 meters of the U.S. southern border, as reported in a recent Senate hearing on law enforcement, drone use and public safety. Further, interference from UAS operations – both intentional and unintentional – impacts safety and efficiency at airports.

A strategic alliance with national impact

A new partnership aims to ensure America is leading in UAS/counter-UAS capabilities even as the technology and corresponding threats rapidly evolve. In November, West Virginia University, Summit Point Training Facility and the Idaho National Laboratory signed a memorandum of understanding to create a collaborative framework uniting academia, national laboratory expertise and industry.

This partnership will establish a hub to develop, test and train UAS and counter-UAS technologies for national security.

The new collaboration will drive solutions focused on:

  • Early-phase UAS/counter-UAS system evaluations
  • High-fidelity data for smarter algorithms
  • Advanced sensor integration for real-time threat detection
  • Controlled, multi-environment testing to validate performance
  • Ensuring interoperability and readiness across systems
  • Border security applications
  • Air-based technology testing for layered defense

A national-scale effort

Together, WVU, SPTF and INL align the UAS/counter-UAS technology life cycle from early discovery at WVU, to applied science, engineering and validation at INL, to operational evaluation and industry engagement at SPTF.

Oversight and rigor: INL’s National and Homeland Security Testing Facilities, managed by Battelle Energy Alliance, support a wide variety of research, analysis, testing and validation opportunities for defense, federal and industrial collaborators.

“INL’s collective unmanned aerial system capabilities encompass a diverse range of UAS platforms with varying payload capacities,” said Bob Schumitz, director of INL’s Defense Systems Division. “The 8,000 square miles of airspace provide an opportunity to conduct comprehensive and integrated research, development, testing and evaluation of solutions.”

INL’s co-located test beds allow exploration of commercial and military drone platform integration with advanced sensors for radiation detection, hyperspectral imaging and encrypted communications. The site supports simulating congested and contested communications environments, and testing transmission, distribution and cybersecurity systems with the safety methods, rigor, data integrity controls and mission-risk focus of a national lab.

R1 Academic Research: As an R1 research institute — the highest classification of research activity in higher education — WVU’s department of mechanical and aerospace engineering brings nearly two decades of expertise in UAS research to the collaboration. Across five specialized groups focused on applied aerodynamics, flight control, flight safety, autonomous navigation and cooperative robotics, the department is shaping the autonomy science narrative and standards participation for the field.

Operations Readiness: Just over an hour from Washington, D.C., SPTF brings a unique blend of proximity to the capital region, infrastructure and operational readiness to the partnership. SPTF’s secure, adaptable range, unrestricted airspace, autonomous testing systems and connection to industry for quick solutions make it a go-to authority for government-sponsored live flight operations for homeland security applications.

“SPTF doesn’t require years of planning,” said National Security Programs Director Michael Norman. “It just requires a green light.”

The facility supports every phase of research, development, testing and evaluation. SPTF ensures swift technology transfer and intellectual property development from lab to field, accelerating solutions for the nation’s most pressing security challenges.

The partnership combines a DOE national laboratory’s test infrastructure, an RI research university’s autonomy expertise and a D.C.-proximate operational range to accelerate field-ready UAS and counter-UAS solutions.

Securing the skies

The partnership is positioned to deliver innovation in response to policy directives, technological advancement and imminent historic events. Recent federal executive orders related to drone technology advancement, airspace sovereignty and state and local preparedness underscore the urgency for states and interagency partners to strengthen UAS and counter-UAS capabilities. State, local, tribal and territorial governments are on the front lines of protecting critical infrastructure and must be equipped with tools to monitor and secure their airspace against evolving threats.

The Department of Homeland Security’s newly established Program Executive Office for Unmanned Aircraft Systems and Counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems is supporting investment at all levels with industry engagement, expanded authorities for enforcement partners and rapid grant deployment to develop capabilities.

This imperative coincides with a historic wave of innovation driven by artificial intelligence, which is transforming both technology and regulatory frameworks, enabling proactive security measures while introducing new creative risks.

Looking ahead, major national events, including the FIFA World Cup, America’s 250th anniversary and the 2028 Olympics, will demand cutting-edge solutions to ensure safety and resilience. Investing in drone research and development today positions the United States to meet these challenges, securing its skies and its future.

“Outside of defense applications, which are primarily focused on overseas threats, the partnership between WVU, SPTF and INL, combined with government investment, is the most significant coordination of UAS/C-UAS efforts in support of domestic national security we’ve ever seen, said INL’s Chief Homeland Security Advisor Ollie Gagnon. “This is a great opportunity to deliver impact at an important and exciting time for our country.”

About Summit Point Training Facility | Summit Solutions Group
Summit Point Training Facility and its expeditionary division Summit Solutions Group (SSG) are a premier training, testing, and operational support platform serving government and commercial partners. Located an hour outside of Washington D.C., SPTF provides a uniquely scalable environment for tactical training, emergency response, mobility and driver training, and applied technology evaluation. With extensive ranges, specialized training venues, and diverse terrain, SPTF/SSG delivers integrated solutions that combine mission-focused expertise, operational realism, and responsive support for complex homeland security, defense, and public safety requirements.

About West Virginia University
West Virginia University is a public land-grant research university located in Morgantown, West Virginia. Founded in 1867, it offers over 350 undergraduate, graduate, and professional degree programs across 13 colleges and schools.

About Idaho National Laboratory
Battelle Energy Alliance manages INL for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy. INL is the nation’s center for nuclear energy research and development, and also performs research in each of DOE’s strategic goal areas: energy, national security, science and the environment. For more information, visit www.inl.gov. Follow us on social media: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and X.

Paula Mason Appointed Executive Director for Idaho Educational Services for the Deaf and the Blind

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(ID Department of Education Press Release, April 27, 2026)

Paula Mason

(BOISE) The Idaho Educational Services for the Deaf and the Blind (IESDB) Board announced today that Paula Mason has been named Executive Director after filling the role on an interim basis following long-time Director Brian Darcy’s departure in April of last year.

Mason’s appointment comes in the wake of a year-long search for an administrator who combines a track record of providing effective support for student success with the specialized education and skills needed to lead daily operations at one of a handful of schools nationwide offering residential services for students who are deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or low-vision.

As Director, Mason will transition from her interim leadership position for IESDB, the agency that provides statewide services for students with vision and hearing loss and impairment, including those with co-occurring conditions. She will also head up the Idaho School for the Deaf and the Blind, whose residential campus in Gooding has served students in pre-K through grade 12 since 1906. The school proudly calls itself the “Hogwarts of Idaho” for its unique residential setup and close-knit community of faculty, staff, and learners.  It is the only school called out for establishment in the state constitution.

In her nearly two decades serving Idaho schools and students in various leadership roles, Mason has built a reputation as an administrator willing to put the time and effort in to ensure that success is within reach for everyone around her. She graduated from Idaho State University with a bachelor’s degree in elementary education before going on to earn her master’s degree in education of the deaf/hard of hearing and her specialist degree in educational leadership. She began her teaching career in the Twin Falls School District in 1998 before taking a role at the Idaho School for the Deaf and the Blind in 1999. Since then, Mason has served the school and organization in both teaching and administrative roles, including Post-secondary Transition Coordinator and Director of Outreach.

Her leadership position at IESDB represents one of the most unique education roles in Idaho – and beyond. She plans to make the most of the opportunity to make a direct, daily difference for students and the wider deaf and blind community statewide. For Mason, the opportunities that come with this important role are significant.

“It is an honor to serve as Director of Idaho Educational Services for the Deaf and the Blind,” she said. “This role carries both responsibility and purpose. I will continue to work alongside families, educators, and communities to ensure every student who is deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or low vision has real access to a high-quality education, meaningful communication, and the tools they need to thrive. I’m committed to listening closely, learning continuously, and working across Idaho to strengthen services and expand what’s possible for every student.”

“Not only does Paula have a track record of serving some of Idaho’s most vulnerable students with skill and compassion, she has also spent years fostering trusted relationships with parents, the community, and state partners,” said Superintendent of Public Instruction Debbie Critchfield. “Ultimately, Paula brought everything to the table we needed to hire with confidence, and I’m pleased that she’ll continue to serve her students and community in this leadership role.”

More than anything, Mason says she’s excited to continue to serve a community she cares for deeply with dedication, passion, and strong leadership skills.