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Guest Column – ID GOP Chairwoman Dorothy Moon: Voters Must See Through the Lies

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April 2, 2026

Voters Must See Through the Lies

By: Dorothy Moon, IDGOP Chairwoman

Dorothy Moon, Chairwoman of the Idaho Republican Party

Everybody has an opinion, and that is especially true around election time. Voters are bombarded with signs, texts, mailers, and social media ads designed to change their views on one candidate or another. Some of these messages are substantive—sharing an incumbent’s voting record or explaining what a challenger will do differently—but others are nothing more than dirty, ugly mud.

Over the past few weeks, a group calling itself the “Conservative Accountability Project” has begun flooding mailboxes across the state. If you’ve seen these mailers, you know exactly what I’m talking about—dark red and black designs, ominous imagery, and over-the-top accusations aimed at conservative Republican candidates.

Some of these mailers claim that by opposing calls for an Article V Convention, legislators oppose a balanced budget. Others claim that by participating in a unanimous vote in 2025, conservative legislators voted to cut funding for law enforcement—which is a bald-faced lie.

Let me say this plainly: I hate liars. It’s one thing to criticize, and it’s one thing to campaign, but outright lying is wrong. These mailers are not about spreading the truth. They’re not about accountability. They’re about intimidation and manipulation.

As chair of the Idaho GOP, I have a responsibility to Republican voters—the grassroots foundation of our party and our political system. These are the people who pay the taxes, who show up, stay informed, and participate in the process. I don’t take kindly to big-money groups lying to their faces.

We’ve seen this before. Groups with slick branding and vague names show up during election season, spend large sums of money, and then disappear just as quickly. Their goal isn’t to build the party or strengthen our communities—it’s to pick winners and losers behind the scenes.

Big donors, powerful politicians, and special interests spend a lot of money trying to shape a legislature that will implement their priorities. In that process, voters can become little more than tools—chess pieces to be moved around by shadowy forces pursuing goals that are not always obvious.

No matter which side of an issue you’re on, or which candidate you support, that should raise your hackles.

Our republican form of government depends on honorable candidates and informed voters. The modern system of drive-by mailers filled with outrage and falsehoods does a disservice to our republic. Deception and sensationalism are no substitute for reasoned debate.

When you see an ominous-looking mailer denouncing your lawmaker, take a moment to think. Do your own research. Pick up the phone and have a conversation.

The ultimate power in our state belongs to you—not PACs, political nonprofits, or special interests. That’s why they work so hard to influence your vote. Guard that power wisely.

AMVETS Monthly Pancake Breakfast is Saturday, April 4, from 8-11; Everyone Welcome

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April 2, 2026

Skip the cooking this Saturday and enjoy the AMVETS of Pocatello’s “1st Saturday of the Month” Pancake Breakfast!  A Grand Slam breakfast will be served Saturday, April 4, from 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., at the Bannock County Veterans Memorial Building, 300 N. Johnson Avenue in Pocatello.

The menu includes pancakes, eggs, bacon, hash browns, sausage, biscuits & gravy, coffee, and orange juice.  Admission is $12.00; First Responders in uniform and kids 5 years old and younger eat free!  Nobody goes away hungry!

This month, the American Legion Auxiliary will be working the tables for tips and donations.

Pocatello/Chubbuck Senior Center: Lunch Menu, Activity Schedules Posted for April 2026

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April 2, 2026 (Cover Photo Credit: Pocatello/Chubbuck Senior Activity Center)

The April lunch menu for the Pocatello/Chubbuck Senior Center has been posted on their website, here.

Lunch is served from 11:30 to 12:30 from Tuesday through Friday at the Senior Center, located at 427 N 6th Avenue in Pocatello.

The April activity schedule has also been posted, and may be seen here.

Free Big Game Scoring Day To Be Held in Idaho Falls Monday, April 6

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(Idaho Fish and Game Press Release, March 25, 2026)

Ever wonder how that big buck you shot last year would score in the record books? Well, April is your chance to get big game antlers, horns or skulls measured and scored by official Boone & Crockett and Pope & Young scorers.

Idaho Fish and Game is hosting a free scoring event on April 6 at their Upper Snake Regional Office located at 4279 Commerce Circle in Idaho Falls. Measuring will be done according to official standards for North American game animals.

Skulls, antlers, and horns from all North American big game species will be accepted. Submissions can be submitted at the regional office beginning Wednesday, April 1, through April 3, and must be picked up on Tuesday, April 7, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

The service is free, and all submissions will be scored regardless of size.

“Every animal is a trophy to someone and has a memory attached to it,” Fish and Game’s Regional Communications Manager James Brower said. “We are happy to score any animal brought by, so bring it in if you are curious. All it will cost you is a hunting story.”

Items brought in for measuring must be free of flesh and must have air-dried for a minimum of 60 days. Please note that air-drying is not the same as freezer storage.

Information required at the time of drop-off includes:
  • Hunter or owner’s name
  • Date of harvest
  • Location of harvest, including big game unit, county and state
  • Address and telephone number
  • Guide’s name and address, if applicable.
  • Method of harvest: rifle or archery

For more information, contact the Idaho Fish and Game Upper Snake Regional Office at (208) 525-7290.

Census Release Shows Most of Idaho’s Counties Grew in Population in 2025

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(Idaho Department of Labor Press Release, April 1, 2026)

Thirty-six of Idaho’s 44 counties grew in population in 2025, with 20 growing faster than in 2024, according to annual U.S. Census Bureau population estimates. This translates to 80% of Idaho’s counties growing in population — much higher than the nation’s share of 60%.

Five of Idaho’s urban counties — Ada, Canyon, Kootenai, Bonneville and Twin Falls — added at least 1,000 new residents in 2025. The three most populous counties of Ada, Canyon and Kootenai collectively accounted for more than 75% of the state’s annual population growth and over 22,000 new residents.

Annual population growth rates ranged from a low of -1% in Franklin and Fremont counties to a high of 2.9% in Canyon. Ada had the highest total increase of over 10,000 new residents while Blaine had the largest decline of 184.

Figure 1. Top Idaho counties by annual population growth rate, 2024-2025Top Idaho counties by annual population growth rate, 2024-2025Source: U.S. Census Bureau, “Annual Population Estimates, 2020-2025.”

While annual population growth rates of the state’s urban counties held relatively constant between 2024 and 2025 at 1.8%, the rural areas slowed from 1% in 2024 to 0.5% in 2025. As a result, the state’s nine urban counties accounted for 90% of total population growth in 2025.

Of Idaho’s rural counties, eight experienced minor population declines in 2025, resulting in a combined loss of 700 residents. Three counties — Clearwater, Lewis and Elmore — have reported consecutive population declines since 2023.

From 2020-2025, the highest growth rates were in Camas, Canyon and Boundary counties at over 15%. However, the most populated counties of Ada, Canyon and Kootenai had the highest total growth and cumulatively added over 109,000 new residents while comprising 60% of statewide population growth.

Clark — Idaho’s least populated county — was the only county to report a cumulative population decline of 1% (-8 residents) from 2020-2025 and had flat population growth over 2025.

Idaho reported 16 counties with natural population declines (more deaths than births) in 2025 — 15 rural counties and one urban (Nez Perce). Similarly, there were 11 counties — nine rural, two urban — that experienced net migration declines.

No county in Idaho had both natural population and net migration decline simultaneously in 2025.

Population growth of Idaho’s Metropolitan Statistical Areas

More than one out of every five Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) in the U.S. lost population in 2025, but all six of Idaho’s MSAs experienced population growth.

Combined, Idaho’s six MSAs added over 26,000 new residents in 2025, which was 800 more than 2024. Together, they accounted for 92% of total statewide population growth during 2025.

One-year growth rates ranged from minimal growth in Lewiston to 2.2% in Boise, which had the 13th fastest MSA growth rate nationally and the second fastest in the western U.S. region behind St. George, Utah.

Boise and Coeur d’Alene reported population growth rates that exceeded the statewide rate of 1.4% while Idaho Falls matched it. These MSAs (Boise, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Falls) all ranked in the top 50 nationally for one-year population growth in 2025.

Figure 2. Idaho MSA annual population estimates, 2024-2025Idaho MSA annual population estimates, 2024-2025Source: U.S. Census Bureau, “Annual Population Estimates, 2020-2025.”

Population growth by labor market region

Nearly two out of every three new residents to the state in 2025 were located within the southwestern region.

Between 2020-2025, the top three regions by growth rate were southwestern, northern and eastern, contributing 80% of Idaho’s population growth combined. In 2025 alone, they comprised more than 90% of the state’s population growth.

Three out of every four new residents statewide were a result of in-migration over the past year. Net in-migration accounted for 93% of population growth in northern Idaho and 82% in southwestern. In the north central region, net in-migration accounted for all of the area’s growth and offset a natural population decline.

In contrast, in-migration accounted for less than 50% of total population growth for the south central, southeastern and eastern regions.

Figure 3. Labor market population growth, 2020-2025Source: U.S. Census Bureau, “Annual Population Estimates, 2020-2025.”

For more information on U.S. Census Bureau releases, visit census.gov/data.

Past census data for Idaho is available at lmi.idaho.gov/census.

PPD Serves High-Risk Arrest Warrant; Seven Individuals Arrested

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(Pocatello Police Department, April 2, 2026)

On April 2, 2026, during the early morning hours, the Pocatello Police Department Tactical Team served a high-risk search warrant in the 1100 block of E. Clark. The search warrant is part of an on-going narcotics investigation conducted by the Pocatello Police, Idaho State Police, and the Bannock County Sheriff’s Office. The warrant was served without incident.  Seven individuals were taken into custody and incarcerated at the Bannock County Jail. There is no threat to the public.

FSIS Issues Public Health Alert For Frozen, Dinosaur-Shaped, Ready-To-Eat Chicken Nuggets Due To Traces Of Lead

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(FSIS Announcement, April 1, 2026; Cover image: Canva AI)

WASHINGTON, April 1, 2026 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is issuing a public health alert for frozen, dinosaur-shaped, ready-to-eat chicken nuggets that may be contaminated with unsafe levels of lead. A recall was not requested because the products are no longer available for purchase. However, FSIS is concerned that some product may still be in consumers’ freezers.

The chicken nuggets were produced on Feb. 10, 2026. The following product is subject to the public health alert [view labels]:

  • 29-oz. plastic bags containing approx. 36 “GREAT VALUE FULLY COOKED DINO SHAPED CHICKEN BREAST NUGGETS” with “BEST IF USED BY” date “FEB 10 2027,” lot code” 0416DPO1215,” and establishment number “P44164” printed on the back of the bag.

These items were shipped to Walmart locations nationwide. FSIS is continuing to investigate this issue. Please check back frequently as additional products could be added.

The problem was discovered during routine surveillance sampling conducted by a state partner.

Lead is especially dangerous for pregnant women, infants, and young children because it can harm developing brains and nervous systems, sometimes causing lasting problems. There is no safe amount of lead exposure. Guidelines from the Food and Drug Administration provide an interim reference level (IRL) of 2.2 micrograms. The amount of lead found in these nuggets could be as much as five times higher than this IRL for children. Health experts also say these nuggets may be a risk for women who are pregnant or who could become pregnant. Visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website for information on the health effects of lead consumption.

FSIS is concerned that some product may be in consumers’ freezers. Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

Media and consumers with questions regarding the public health alert can contact John Patrick Lopez, Vice President, Strategy, Communications & Government Affairs, Dorada Foods, at john.patrick@lopezdorada.com

Consumers with food safety questions can call the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 888-MPHotline (888-674-6854) or send a question via email to MPHotline@usda.gov. For consumers that need to report a problem with a meat, poultry, or egg product, the online Electronic Consumer Complaint Monitoring System can be accessed 24 hours a day at https://foodcomplaint.fsis.usda.gov/eCCF/.

AG Raul Labrador: Supreme Court Should Restore Original Understanding of Birthright Citizenship

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(Attorney General’s Office Press Release, March 31, 2026)

Attorney General Raul Labrador (Photo Credit: Raul Labrador FB)

By Attorney General Raúl Labrador
Originally published November 7, 2025

For over a century, America has operated under an interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause that many now believe is the only constitutionally permissible reading. Automatic citizenship for anyone born on American soil, regardless of their parents’ legal status, has become so accepted that courts have treated it as settled law. Even I agreed with this interpretation for a while. But a closer examination of the text, history, and early precedent raises serious questions about whether this interpretation reflects what the framers intended.

Idaho joined 23 other state attorneys general in urging the United States Supreme Court to restore the original understanding of the Citizenship Clause. The issue is whether the Constitution actually mandates birthright citizenship in all cases, or whether the framers intended something more measured.

The text of the Amendment states that citizenship extends to those “born … in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” That second phrase matters. It was added deliberately, and it means something. When the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified in 1868, its primary purpose was clear: to constitutionally protect the citizenship rights of freed slaves after the Civil War. Senator Lyman Trumbull, who drafted the related Civil Rights Act of 1866, explicitly stated that the citizenship provision excluded “persons temporarily resident in [the United States] whom we would have no right to make citizens.” Representative John Bingham, the principal architect of the Amendment, emphasized that citizenship required parents who were residents of the United States.

Even those who advocate for automatic birthright citizenship acknowledge that the Citizenship Clause doesn’t apply in all cases. All parties agree it excludes children of foreign diplomats and certain others. The core dispute, therefore, is not whether location of birth alone determines citizenship—everyone agrees it doesn’t—but rather how broadly or narrowly the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” should be read.

The historical record is extensive. In the 1880s, two different Secretaries of State denied citizenship to persons born in the United States whose parents remained domiciled overseas. Legal commentators of that era consistently distinguished between the American approach, which required parental domicile or lawful residence, and the British rule of pure birthplace citizenship. Justice Joseph Story wrote in 1834 that citizenship “should not apply to the children of parents … who were abiding there for temporary purposes.”

The stakes here are significant. Over 9 million illegal aliens have entered our nation in recent years, overwhelming our infrastructure and challenging our capacity to assimilate newcomers. Many proceed to interior states after crossing the border illegally. Idaho and other states face real economic, health, and public safety challenges from policies that go beyond what the Constitution requires.

Some critics claim this interpretation is beyond debate, but the historical and legal record is more complex than that narrative suggests. The Supreme Court’s decision in Wong Kim Ark in 1898 involved a child whose parents were lawfully present and permanently domiciled in the United States. The Court repeatedly emphasized throughout that decision that the parents were “residents” and “domiciled within the United States.” That case did not address children of parents present unlawfully or temporarily.

Our amicus brief argues that conferring United States citizenship requires a more meaningful connection than mere physical presence by happenstance or illegality. The original understanding repeatedly pointed to parental domicile or lawful permanent residence as the measuring stick for the requisite connection to United States jurisdiction.

This is about respecting what the Constitution actually says and what its framers intended. It’s about protecting Idaho families from bearing the costs of a policy that encourages illegal immigration. And it’s about ensuring that citizenship remains meaningful, rather than being reduced to an accident of geography.

The Trump Administration is asking the Supreme Court to adopt an interpretation that aligns with the original meaning of the Citizenship Clause. Idaho stands with that effort because we believe the Constitution should be interpreted according to its text and original public meaning, not according to what is politically convenient or what later administrations may have preferred.

The Supreme Court now has the opportunity to provide clarity on this fundamental issue. Whatever the Court ultimately decides, Idaho will continue defending the constitutional principles that protect state sovereignty and the rule of law.

Bingham County Coroner – Standards Matter: Honoring Families by Getting It Right.

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(Bingham County Coroner’s Office, March 31, 2026)

Thanks to a grant from the Governor’s Children At Risk Task Force, our office has received funding to develop and deliver specialized training for coroners, law enforcement, EMS providers, and other professionals across Boise, Eastern Idaho, and Northern Idaho. This course is focused on the proper investigation of child and infant deaths, with an emphasis on identifying safe sleep environments and preventing future tragedies.
This training comes at a critical time for Idaho. Recent reporting by ProPublica has highlighted long-standing challenges within Idaho’s coroner system, including inconsistent investigations and limited access to autopsies. In fact, Idaho has ranked among the lowest in the nation for performing autopsies in unexpected child deaths, often leaving families without clear answers.
State leaders, including an advisory panel formed at the request of Governor Brad Little, are now actively working on legislation to improve standards. Proposed changes include requiring autopsies in certain cases, supporting coroners who achieve national certification, and creating more consistent expectations across counties.
While these efforts move forward at the state level, meaningful change also happens at the local level through collaboration, listening, and learning.
Recently, I had the opportunity to meet with the Cooley family who experienced firsthand the impact of gaps in the current system. Their willingness to share their experience provided insight that cannot be taught in a classroom alone. Their perspective will play an integral role in shaping how we educate investigators, law enforcement officers, prosecutors, EMS personnel, and coroners throughout Idaho.
Their input is helping us strengthen training in a way that keeps families at the center of what we do. It reinforces the importance of thorough scene response, clear communication, and a commitment to seeking answers in every case. These are not just professional standards, they are responsibilities we owe to every family we serve.
We are grateful for their courage in stepping forward and for their partnership in improving the future of death investigation in Idaho. Their voice will help ensure that other families receive the answers, respect, and professionalism they deserve.
As we continue to build and deliver this training, we remain committed to advancing standards, strengthening collaboration, and working toward a system that consistently meets the needs of Idaho families.

Standards matter. And so do the people we serve.

Justice Department Sues Idaho for Failure to Produce Voter Rolls

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(U.S. Department of Justice Press Release, April 1, 2026)

Today, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division announced it has filed a federal lawsuit against the state of Idaho for failing to produce their full voter registration lists upon request. This brings the Justice Department’s nationwide total to 30 states and the District of Columbia.

“The Justice Department will continue to fulfill its oversight role dutifully, neutrally, and transparently wherever Americans vote in federal elections,” said Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Many state election officials, however, are choosing to fight us in court rather than show their work. We will continue to verify that all States are carrying out critical election integrity legal duties.”

According to the lawsuits, the Attorney General is uniquely charged by Congress with broad authority to request  election records under the Civil Rights Act of 1960. This Act allows her to demand the production, inspection, and analysis of statewide voter registration lists that can be cross-checked effectively for improper registrations.