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Guest Columnist Brian Almon: What Does Citizenship Really Mean?

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(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

July 1, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

What Does Citizenship Really Mean?

On Tuesday, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the Court’s three liberal justices in ruling that any child born on American soil, regardless of the circumstances of their birth or the citizenship of their parents, is an American citizen. This decision in Trump v. Barbara stemmed from a modern interpretation of the 14th Amendment, one that, according to Justice Clarence Thomas’s 91-page dissent, is out of line with the original intent of the amendment’s authors.

Rewind to 1868. The Civil War is over, and lawmakers face the difficult task of not only reintegrating the defeated Southern states but also figuring out what to do with the roughly four million former slaves who inhabited them. Congress had built on Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation by passing the 13th Amendment to abolish slavery, but now it needed to ensure that those freed slaves could enjoy the same rights and privileges as any other American citizen. Lawmakers feared that the Southern states might eventually pass laws restricting the rights of former slaves, and their solution was the 14th Amendment.

The 14th is one of the longest and most complex amendments to the Constitution, as it was trying to accomplish many things at once. In the more than 150 years since its ratification, it has become something of a skeleton key to the Constitution, having been used to justify everything from affirmative action to abortion. For our purposes today, we can focus on the very first sentence of the amendment:

All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.

Many very intelligent people have debated the precise meaning of that sentence, particularly the phrase “and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” Chief Justice Roberts believes it means that anyone born on American soil is subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, while Justice Thomas disagrees. His dissent begins by attempting to understand the original purpose of the 14th Amendment, rather than using its words to support a more modern interpretation:

Blacks were entitled to citizenship because they were Americans. They had no other homeland, owed no allegiance to any foreign power, and were subject to no other authority. They ‘fought and bled in the same battles,’ ‘gained and gloried in the same victories,’ and were ‘liable to be called upon to defend [America] in time of war’ alongside every other citizen.

The quotations in that excerpt come from the writings of Frederick Douglass, the former slave who became one of the nation’s greatest advocates for emancipation.

Justice Thomas also pointed out that the 14th Amendment, like earlier laws upon which it was based, excluded certain people from the concept of birthright citizenship, including the children of foreign ambassadors, the children of enemy invaders, and Native Americans living under tribal governments. Indeed, the latter group was not granted automatic American citizenship until an act of Congress in 1924.

Many critics of the decision have circulated a screenshot of Senator Jacob M. Howard’s remarks during the debate over the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment, in which he clarified that it “will not, of course, include persons born in the United States who are foreigners, aliens, who belong to the families of ambassadors or foreign ministers accredited to the government of the United States, but will include every other class of person.”

Of course, this was obvious to the framers of the amendment in 1868. Nevertheless, Chief Justice Roberts’ majority opinion declares that anyone born within the territory of the United States is automatically an American citizen. Under that ruling, an illegal alien can cross the Rio Grande, walk into a hospital, and give birth to a child who, as a citizen, qualifies for public benefits. The parent may later become eligible for lawful status through existing immigration law. A Chinese oligarch could impregnate a thousand surrogates through IVF, raise those little Americans under the Chinese Communist Party, and request mail-in ballots when they turn eighteen. A foreign citizen on a student visa can give birth in the United States, and that child is an American citizen, with all the legal benefits that citizenship conveys. (This is Kamala Harris’s origin story.)

At the heart of this debate are questions about the very concept of citizenship. Does it mean something tangible, or is it simply a legal classification? Buried beneath that simple word are many complex ideas, including attachment to one’s home, culture, tradition, and heritage, as well as the nature of nations, borders, and sovereignty.

Citizenship carries both privileges and responsibilities. Aliens and sojourners passing through our land cannot vote in our elections, are not entitled to certain public benefits, and may be subject to removal to their country of origin under immigration law. On the other hand, they generally are not required to serve on juries when called, nor can they be drafted into the military. In short, there is a distinction between the citizen and the non-citizen.

Natural-born citizens often take citizenship for granted. Unlike those who are naturalized later, we do not have to take a civics test or swear an oath of allegiance to obtain citizenship. Most of us have pledged allegiance to the American flag in school, at civic events, or at public meetings, though I wonder how deeply we consider its words. I suspect many Americans do not fully reflect on what citizenship really means.

We can see this distinction between citizen and non-citizen even more clearly in antiquity. In the Roman Republic, citizenship was originally limited to the patricians, descendants of Rome’s original founders. Over time, more people were allowed to become citizens, though often at a cost—perhaps monetary, or perhaps through military service. The book of Acts in the Bible relates how the Apostle Paul used his status as a Roman citizen—inherited from an ancestor who had acquired it somehow—to further his mission of spreading the Gospel of Christ.

In AD 212, Emperor Caracalla issued an edict granting citizenship to everyone within the borders of the Empire. This had the effect of devaluing the concept of citizenship—if everyone is a citizen, then there is nothing special about it. The devaluation of citizenship contributed to the decline of the Roman Empire, as the idea of being Roman became no more distinctive than being human. It was no longer a marker of identity, but instead became something global and cosmopolitan.

The world that gave birth to the American Revolution was different. People in Europe were not citizens but subjects of their king. They certainly possessed rights and responsibilities, but those ultimately derived from the authority of a monarch. In the New World, thousands of miles away from kings and nobles, men and women had to work together to survive. It is no surprise that a republican form of government naturally arose in the colonies.

Justice Thomas explicitly rejected the idea that the 14th Amendment incorporated English feudalism:

The Court says that the Citizenship Clause incorporated the English feudal principle that subjects owed lifetime servitude to the King who owned the soil on which they were born, but Americans—unsurprisingly—rejected this feudal principle.

This debate centers on two competing legal concepts of citizenship. Jus soli, or “law of the soil,” holds that you are a citizen of the place where you are born, regardless of your parentage or circumstances. This is the principle Chief Justice Roberts’ opinion upholds. Conversely, jus sanguinis, or “law of the blood,” holds that citizenship is determined by the citizenship of one’s parents.

Many nations in the Western Hemisphere operate according to jus soli, while a large number of countries instead follow jus sanguinis. A few countries, such as the United Kingdom, use a hybrid system, granting citizenship to children born on their soil only if at least one parent is already a citizen.

This distinction was evident during the debate over Barack Obama’s birth certificate. As you surely recall, Obama’s father was a Kenyan national, while his mother was American. According to the official record, Obama was born in Hawaii, though critics contended that he was born in Kenya. That distinction matters greatly under jus soli. Under jus sanguinis, however, Obama would have been an American citizen either way because his mother was an American citizen.

The stories of Barack Obama and Kamala Harris only deepen the question of what it means to be a citizen. Obama was born in Hawaii (probably) but spent part of his childhood in Indonesia in the culture of his stepfather. Once back in America, he followed the typical cursus honorum—Occidental College, Columbia University, Harvard Law School—and brought a distinctly cosmopolitan perspective to American politics. Harris represents an even more cosmopolitan example. Her father was Jamaican, her mother Indian, and she spent much of her youth in Canada.

Is it a good thing for people who spend their formative years outside the United States to be elevated to positions of leadership in this country? I’m not necessarily making a judgment here. Perhaps this is simply the natural direction of an increasingly globalized and cosmopolitan future.

American law recognizes jus sanguinis when it suits us. George Romney, father of Mitt Romney and a former governor of Michigan, ran for president in 1968. The fact that he was born in Mexico to an LDS family whose ancestors had fled the country following a crackdown on polygamy did not stop him from running, though questions were raised at the time. A 2012 ABC News article, published during Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign suggested that American law recognized the elder Romney as a natural-born American citizen by virtue of his parentage, despite being born outside the United States.

John McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee, was born in the Panama Canal Zone to a Navy family, though one could argue that the Zone was technically American soil at the time. Senator Ted Cruz, who ran for president in 2016 and may do so again in 2028, was born in Canada to an American mother, and prevailing legal opinion holds that he is a natural-born U.S. citizen.

It seems clear that the modern conception of citizenship derives from both jus soli and jus sanguinis. The phrase “blood and soil” was, of course, tainted due to its use by the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s. However, the underlying concepts remain important to many people. Consider how important it is in our own state to declare one’s status as a fifth-generation Idahoan compared to those “cowbirds” from the West Coast who only arrived a decade or two ago. Clearly, we hold the belief that where you are born and to whom you are born matters in meaningful ways.

Gov. Brad Little, whose grandfather Andrew came to Idaho from Scotland in 1894, has deep roots in the state. Members of the Nez Perce or Coeur d’Alene Tribes have even deeper roots in this land, from before it was called Idaho, before America itself existed as an idea. On the other hand, having only been here for eight years, I recognize that my own roots are much shallower, though I hope my children and their children will continue living here and deepening those roots over time.

That question becomes far more controversial when applied at the national level, where it touches on sensitive issues of race and ethnicity. Yet it is not going away anytime soon. Four self-described socialists recently won Democratic congressional primaries, with several such candidates having gone on record calling for the destruction of the United States as it exists today. Three of these candidates were backed by New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani, who is a naturalized US citizen from Uganda. Many Somali refugees, some of whom with U.S. citizenship, continue to defraud American taxpayers and send their ill-gotten gains back home—to their real home, that is. Texas Congresswoman Delia Ramirez, daughter of illegal Guatemalan immigrants, uses her position to advocate for amnesty and other policies that encourage further illegal immigration.

The fact that four justices dissented from this week’s ruling shows how closely divided this issue remains. Justices Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch held that the 14th Amendment does not confer automatic citizenship on anyone born in the United States, while Justice Brett Kavanaugh held that, although President Trump’s executive order contradicts current U.S. law, Congress has the authority to modify that law at any time. Change just one of the five justices in the majority, and this decision could have gone the other way—and still might in the future. The Supreme Court has reversed itself many times—see Dred ScottPlessy v. FergusonChevronRoe v. Wade. Indeed, Justice Thomas concluded his dissent with a subtle prophecy that this too may eventually be overturned:

I am not sure that today’s opinion will stand the test of time. The Citizenship Clause ‘added greatly to the dignity and glory of American citizenship.’ Today’s opinion devalues that citizenship. I respectfully dissent.

Will the United States of America continue to be a nation with defined borders, a defined language and culture, and defined citizenship? Or will those things, as Justice Thomas said, be devalued, and will we follow the example of Rome in dissolving into a globalized miasma, the equivalent of a shopping mall food court? That is up to us, and to our posterity.

About Brian Almon

Brian Almon is the Editor of the Gem State Chronicle. He also serves as Chairman of the District 14 Republican Party and is a trustee of the Eagle Public Library Board. He lives with his wife and five children in Eagle.

Editor’s note:  This article originally appeared in the Gem State Chronicle.  I encourage our readers to visit their website and consider subscribing.  Find this and other informative articles at the Gem State Chronicle here: About – Gem State Chronicle

Dept. of Interior Seeks Nominations for Long-Distance Biking Trails on Public Lands

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(Department of the Interior Press Release, July 2, 2026)

WASHINGTON – The Department of the Interior  are seeking public input related to identifying and developing long-distance biking trails, as part of work underway to implement provisions of the Expanding Public Lands Outdoor Recreation Experiences Act.

The Biking on Long-Distance Trails Act, Section 121 of the EXPLORE Act, directs the Departments of Interior and Agriculture to identify no fewer than 10 long-distance biking trails that make use of existing trails and roads, and no fewer than 10 areas where there is an opportunity to develop or complete future long-distance biking trails. The Departments will ensure the appropriate tribal consultation takes place prior to the establishment of trails.

“Our public lands belong to the American people, and the Trump administration is fully committed to expanding access, supporting rural economies, and promoting robust multiple-use recreation on federal acreage,” said Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum. “By cutting red tape, harnessing the power of local partnerships, and utilizing existing infrastructure, this initiative will establish premier long-distance biking corridors that fuel local tourism while ensuring we remain responsible stewards of our nation’s abundant natural resources.”

Members of the public may nominate trails and areas for consideration using the Bureau of Land Management’s web-based National Biking on Long-Distance Trails Act Nomination Tool. Trail and recreation managers, partner organizations, and other parties with an interest in biking on public lands are especially encouraged to provide input. Nominations will be accepted through August 3, 2026.

The online nomination tool allows individuals to draw proposed routes on a digital map and input information about the routes in the system. People may nominate existing or potential trails using the following parameters:

  • The trail is at least 80 miles long and publicly accessible.
  • A majority of the trail is on federally managed public land (including lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Bureau of Reclamation).
  • The proposed route makes use of existing designated or otherwise officially available roads and trails.
  • The trail is primarily on dirt or natural surface (short connector routes on paved or improved roads may be acceptable).
  • The trail is open to bicycle use (not located within designated wilderness areas).
  • The trail avoids conflicts with other trail uses, specifically other bicycling, hiking, horseback riding or pack and saddle stock uses; and purposes for which a trail was established under the National Trails System Act, if applicable.
  • Ideally, nominated trails or areas have partner organizations or volunteer groups identified to assist with trail development and maintenance.

Nominations will then be evaluated to identify, develop and complete trails in a geographically equitable manner.  The trail identification process will consider potential concerns related to management of all public land resources, including cultural resources, and sacred areas to ensure tribal interests are incorporated to the maximum extent practicable.

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DOW Launches BuildFreedom.US, Announces $10M Skilled Trades Investment With Mike Rowe

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(Department of War Press Release, July 2, 2026)

The Department of War today announced the launch of the Build Freedom workforce development initiative. Under Secretary of War for Acquisition and Sustainment Michael P. Duffey will present a $10 million investment to skilled trades advocate Mike Rowe to support the mikeroweWORKS Foundation Scholarship program.

“On behalf of everyone at the mikeroweWORKS Foundation, I’m honored to accept this donation from BuildFreedom.US. Every penny will be spent on training the next generation of skilled workers for a long list of essential jobs – specifically the hundreds of thousands of good jobs currently open in the defense industrial base,” said Mike Rowe, CEO of the mikeroweWORKS Foundation. “Closing America’s skills gap has become a matter of national security, and initiatives like BuildFreedom.US are precisely what our country needs to meet the demands of a rapidly evolving workforce. I’m excited to participate in this effort and looking forward to helping thousands of Americans get the training they need to start a meaningful career in the skilled trades.”

Created through the Office of the Assistant Secretary of War for Industrial Base Policy’s Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment (IBAS) Program, BuildFreedom.US is a national initiative designed to address critical talent shortages across the defense industrial base. The program unites government, industry, and educational institutions to increase awareness of purpose-driven careers and provide scholarships for Americans pursuing high-paying, AI-proof jobs in the skilled trades.

“America’s strength has always been forged by people who build, manufacture, and innovate,” said Michael P. Duffey, Under Secretary of War for Acquisition and Sustainment. “BuildFreedom.US will bridge talent with opportunity to build meaningful careers, ensuring our workforce is ready for the challenges of tomorrow.”

This announcement marks a significant milestone in expanding workforce pathways for students, young adults, veterans, and transitioning service members. By empowering the next generation of American builders, makers, and innovators, the Department of War aims to directly bolster the nation’s manufacturing capacity, economic resilience, and long-term national security.

Pocatello Parks and Recreation Highlights: July

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July 5, 2026

Pocatello–The city’s Parks and Rec newsletter is now available.  Highlights include:

  • Zoo Idaho is offering day classes focused on different types of animals; click here for more information.
  • Teen Splash Dances are scheduled for July 9 and 23 at Ross Park Aquatic Complex; admission is $6.
  • Sensory Friendly Swim Day at Ross Park Aquatic Complex is July 25.
  • Pocatello Municipal Band has resumed Sunday evening concerts at Lower Ross Park bandshell. Concerts start at 7PM.

July Trout Stocking Schedule for the Southeast Region

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(Idaho Fish and Game, June 29, 2026)

Grab your fishing pole, pack the cooler, and don’t forget your fishing license (or the bug spray)! Personnel from Idaho Fish and Game’s hatcheries in the Southeast Region will be releasing nearly 10,000 catchable-sized rainbow trout at various locations during July. Have a happy and safe 4th of July! Fish on!

Blue-striped table showing different water bodies in southeast Idaho where trout will be stocked

Nearly 10,000 rainbow trout are headed to popular fisheries in the Southeast Region this July.

Here is a quick summary of what you need to know about some of these fun fisheries!

  • Cub River – 750 rainbow trout. This beautiful little river is located south of Preston. All fish will be stocked in and around the Willow Flat Campground area. Willow Flat is a popular USFS campground located at an elevation of 6,300 feet and surrounded by scenic mountain views. Visitors enjoy fishing the river and exploring numerous forested trails.
  • Kelly Park Pond (Upper) – 250 rainbow trout. Located in Soda Springs within Arthur Kelly Park, accessing this pond requires a short walk, but it offers a great fishing opportunity for anglers of all ages. Lace up the boots, grab the fishing poles, and take the kids on a nature walk!
  • Mill Creek – 250 rainbow trout. Located about 15 miles north of Malad City, this little creek flows in the shadows of Elkhorn Mountain. Fish will be stocked near the USFS Malad Summit Campground, so bring the whole family for an overnight camping adventure!
  • Montpelier Creek – 1000 rainbow trout. Only a couple of miles from Montpelier, anglers can enjoy good creek fishing and a variety of camping options at the Montpelier Creek KOA (campsites and cabins).
  • Montpelier Rearing Pond – 500 rainbow trout. This little fishing spot is tucked into a scenic high desert canyon at an elevation of 6500 feet in the hills east of Montpelier. It has very basic facilities but offers a variety of fish species in a peaceful setting. Anglers can fish the pond, or head ½ mile north up Crow Creek Road to Montpelier Reservoir.
  • Pebble Creek – 1000 rainbow trout. This pretty creek is home to both rainbows and cutthroat trout.  If you are looking to do some camping while you fish, Big Springs Campground is nestled along the banks of Pebble Creek at an elevation of 6,500 feet, just 16 miles from Lava Hot Springs. The multi-use Boundary Trail, for hiking, biking, horseback and off-road vehicle riding, begins in the campground and accesses several additional nearby trails.

Stocking of all waters is tentative and dependent on river/lake/pond conditions (angler safety concerns); dates may change due to weather or staffing constraints.

If you need detailed information about Idaho’s waters, fish species, facilities, maps and rules, check out the Idaho Fishing Planner on Fish and Game’s website.

Community Invited to Celebrate Grand Opening of New Fort Hall Fire Station

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(Shoshone-Bannock Office of Public Affairs, July 3, 2026)

FORT HALL — After years of planning and nearly two years of construction, the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes is excited to invite the community to celebrate the grand opening of the new Fort Hall Fire Station on Thursday, July 9, 2026, at 1 p.m. This event marks a significant investment in public safety and emergency services for the Fort Hall Reservation.

The new station, located at 70 Widowville Road, is across from the previous fire station, and represents a major milestone for the Fort Hall Fire Department (FHFD) and the community it serves. At 25,699 square feet, the modern, state-of-the-art facility was designed to support the department’s continued growth while enhancing emergency response capabilities for years to come.

The event will be emceed by Planning Director Alonzo Coby and will begin with an invocation, followed by the FHFD color guard and flag raising, the Flag Song and Honor Songs, and introductions of special guests and speakers.

Rather than a traditional ribbon-cutting, the celebration will feature two fire service traditions, the Fire Hose Disconnect Ceremony, symbolizing the transition from the former station to the new facility, and a Push-In Truck Ceremony, honoring the long-standing tradition of placing a fire engine into its new home. The celebration will conclude with an open house where community members can tour the facility and meet members of the FHFD.

The new station replaces a facility that no longer meets the department’s operational needs. As the department expanded, personnel and equipment were spread across multiple buildings with limited space for fire engines and daily operations. The new station brings everything together under one roof, providing six apparatus bays, expanded workspace, modern accommodations and improved efficiency for the department’s 18-line personnel and four administrative staff members.

Designed with the future in mind, the facility includes a state-of-the-art training room, energy-efficient building systems and low-maintenance features that will support daily operations while reducing long-term operating costs.

Construction began following a groundbreaking ceremony in September 2024. The $13 million project was made possible through a combination of federal and tribal funding, including $7 million secured through the efforts of Congressman Mike Simpson. The project was designed by JHS Architects and constructed by CM Company.

Fort Hall Business Council Chairwoman Donna Thompson said, “The new fire station reflects the Tribes’ continued commitment to protecting the health, safety and well-being of the community while investing in essential public safety infrastructure for future generations.”

FHFD Fire Chief Eric King said, “The new station provides firefighters with the space, equipment and resources needed to better serve the community, train effectively and respond quickly whenever emergencies arise.”

Community members are encouraged to attend the grand opening, tour the facility, and join in celebrating this important milestone for the Fort Hall Fire Department and all those it serves.

 

Idaho Secretary of State: A Republic, If We Can Keep It

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(Idaho Secretary of State, July 3, 2026)

[On Saturday], we celebrate one of the biggest milestones in our nation’s history.

But there’s another anniversary this weekend that is worth remembering.

Two hundred years ago, on July 4, 1826, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died within hours of each other, exactly fifty years after the Declaration of Independence was signed. Two of the men who had argued, debated, and ultimately helped bring an entirely new form of self-government into the world lived just long enough to see the republic reach its fiftieth birthday.

Two hundred years later, we get to see it reach 250. The republic they launched remains a work in progress. It has endured challenges, triumphs, and real setbacks. It continues because each generation has accepted responsibility for carrying it forward. As you celebrate tomorrow, whether at one of the hundreds of community events across the state, the Capitol Celebration in Boise, out in Idaho’s vast outdoors, or at home with people you love, I hope you’ll take a moment to appreciate just how extraordinary that is, and what it asks of us.

Happy Birthday, Idaho!

One more anniversary is worth celebrating. On July 3, 1890, Idaho officially became the 43rd state, joining the Union just one day before Independence Day. It’s a good reminder that our state’s history is woven into the larger American story.

Benjamin Franklin was asked, as he left the Constitutional Convention, what kind of government the founders had created. “A republic,” he said, “if you can keep it.” As someone fortunate enough to serve within that republic, I think about it a lot. What does keeping a republic actually look like?

From where I stand, it looks like county clerks processing ballots late into the night. It looks like Idahoans showing up to the polls every election, not just the big ones. It looks like neighbors running for school board or volunteering on Election Day. It looks like people who stay curious about how their government works and hold it accountable when it falls short. Idahoans do this well. But a republic isn’t something you finish, it’s something you keep choosing. If you’ve been thinking about getting more involved, there’s no better moment than the 250th to start.

Happy Independence Day, Idaho!

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.

Idaho GOP Announces the 2026 Patriot Games

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(Idaho GOP Press Release, July 3, 2026; Cover image credit: IDGOP FB)

America’s 250th birthday is just around the corner, and young athletes from across the country have an exciting opportunity to be part of the celebration.

Applications are now open for the 2026 Patriot Games, a nationwide athletic competition for students ages 14-17 that will test strength, endurance, agility, teamwork, and perseverance. Competitors from all 50 states, U.S. territories, and tribal nations will compete for the chance to be crowned national champions, with $250,000 in scholarships awarded to one male and one female winner.

The competition features challenges inspired by football, basketball, soccer, track, the Presidential Fitness Test, a military-style boot camp circuit, and a final obstacle course. The games will take place August 9-11, 2026, with the championship airing nationally on ABC after streaming on the ESPN App.

If you have a student athlete in your family, or know a young person who would be a great fit, we encourage you to apply or pass this opportunity along.

Learn more and apply at freedom250.org.

Guest Columnist Sen. Jim Risch: A Message on America250

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July 4, 2026

A Message on America250

By: U.S. Senator Jim Risch

Today, we celebrate 250 years of American Independence.

America is the greatest nation in the world – not by a little bit, but by a lot.

250 years ago, our founding fathers came together to create an independent nation rooted in liberty, faith, and the strength of the people.

Generations of Americans have defended those ideals in the face of unimaginable sacrifice. Thanks to their patriotism the United States remains a beacon of freedom and opportunity.

That spirit is alive and well here in the Gem State.

Idahoans are defined by ingenuity, grit, and courage.

Our farmers and ranchers feed the nation. Our small businesses fuel U.S. industry. Our law enforcement and service members keep our communities safe. Our families cultivate a quality of life unmatched anywhere in the world.

It my honor to represent the people of Idaho in the U.S. Senate and fight for our shared values.

As we celebrate the 250th anniversary of our nation’s founding, Vicki and I encourage every Idahoan to reflect on the sacrifices that secured our freedom and the principles that make America exceptional:

Liberty. Faith. Determination. The Rule of Law.

God bless Idaho and God Bless the United States of America!

U.S. Senator Jim Risch represents the people of Idaho in Congress.

  • For the latest press releases and constituent services visit risch.senate.gov.
  • To receive email updates on what I’m working on as your Senator, click here.
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City of Pocatello Releases Music Video in Honor of America250

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July 4, 2026

Pocatello–In connection with yesterday’s America250 Time Capsule dedication at the Marshall Public Library, the City of Pocatello has released a music video celebrating Pocatello’s history.  The video features an original song, “Pocatello–Gate City of the West,” written by local historian Michael Thiel.  It was filmed and edited by Cody Jones of Drone Perspective Services.