Monday, June 8, 2026
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Bannock County Commissioners Meetings, June 8-13, 2026

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(Bannock County Commissioner’s Office Press Release, June 5, 2026)

Monday, June 8, 2026:

There are no meetings scheduled at this time.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026:

9:00 AM Business Meeting (action items)

1:30 PM Work Session to review ordinance (potential action item)

Wednesday, June 10, 2026:

There are no meetings scheduled at this time.

Thursday, June 11, 2026:

9:00 AM Work Session and Claims Meeting (action items)

1:30 PM Quarterly Jail Inspection per Idaho Code §20-622 (potential action items)

NOTE: This meeting will be held at 5800 S. 5th Ave., Pocatello, Idaho

Friday, June 12, 2026:

There are no meetings scheduled at this time.

(The information packets for the business meeting and work session can be found at http://www.bannockcounty.gov. Scroll down and click on “Agendas and Minutes” then click on the information packet for the meeting that you are interested in.)

About BOCC Meetings

The Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) is comprised of the three elected County Commissioners: Ernie Moser (District 1, Chair), Jeff Hough (District 2), and Ken Bullock (District 3).

The BOCC generally meets twice a week: regular business meetings are on Tuesdays at 9:00 a.m. and work sessions are on Thursdays at 9:00 a.m. Meetings are generally held in the Commissioner’s Chambers at 624 E Center, Room 212, Pocatello, Idaho, unless otherwise noted. Times subject to change within 15 minutes of stated time.

During these meetings, the BOCC may: approve contracts, expend funds, hear testimony, make decisions on land use cases and take care of other County matters, and are open to the public.

City of Pocatello Calendar for June 8-13, 2026

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, June 5, 2026; Cover Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

City of Pocatello Calendar of Meetings ~ June 8-13, 2026

MONDAY, JUNE 8

  • Human Relations Advisory Committee Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Council Chambers

TUESDAY, JUNE 9

  • Pocatello Regional Airport Commission Meeting, 11:00 a.m., Airport Conference Room
  • Site Plan Review, 1:30 p.m., Iwamizawa Conference Room
  • Water Department Bid Opening, 3:00 p.m., Paradice Conference Room
  • Pocatello Iwamizawa Sister Cities Foundation Meeting, 5:15 p.m., Council Chambers

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10

  • Golf Advisory Committee Meeting, 1:00 p.m., 144 Wilson Avenue
  • Planning & Zoning Commission Clarification Meeting, 6:00 p.m., Council Chambers
  • Planning & Zoning Commission Meeting, 6:30 p.m., Council Chambers

THURSDAY, JUNE 11

  • No Meetings Scheduled

FRIDAY, JUNE 12

  • No Meetings Scheduled

Need a Job? Bannock County Is Hiring

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(Bannock County HR, June 5, 2026)

Equipment Operator 2 – McCammon
Bannock County – McCammon
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

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

Sr. Assistant Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney – Civil
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

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

Temporary 4-H Service Assistant
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Accountant & Payroll Specialist
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Seasonal Laborer
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

For a complete list of available jobs… please visit our career site at: https://bannockcounty.applicantpro.com

Guest Columnist Greg Pruett: Idaho’s Red Mirage: 10 Reasons the State Isn’t Truly Conservative

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June 4, 2026

Idaho’s Red Mirage: 10 Reasons the State Isn’t Truly Conservative

By: Honor Idaho President Greg Pruett

Idaho is the greatest state to live in if you ask me. But it isn’t the conservative stronghold many people moving here assume it is. And frankly, many native Idahoans don’t quite understand the political dynamics shaping our state today. They see the Republican registration numbers and assume that means conservative governance.

I’m here with some bad news: Idaho is not nearly as conservative as it looks on paper. But here’s the good news: Honor Idaho is fighting every day to make it the conservative state voters believe it should be.

Here are 10 reasons Idaho isn’t as conservative as you think.

1. Supermajority in Name Only

Republicans hold roughly 85% of the seats in the Legislature, yet conservatives must fight tooth and nail to pass even basic reforms. This year’s push for illegal immigration legislation went nowhere, not because Idahoans opposed it, but because special interests and weak‑kneed leaders in the Capitol refused to act for the conservative electorate and instead worked for their special interest cohorts. A supermajority means nothing if it won’t use its power.

2. Committees and their Chairs are Built to Block Conservative Bills

The biggest roadblock to conservative policy isn’t Democrats, it’s Republican committee chairs and how their committees are formed.

Senate State Affairs Chairman Jim Guthrie blocked illegal immigration reform and solid pro‑gun bills this session. While blocking conservative legislation, Guthrie made sure to support liberal ideas such as men in women’s sports and bathrooms. Other chairs quietly killed conservative legislation at the request of liberal lobbyists. Idaho’s committee system is where conservative ideas go to die.

3. Liberal Elites Run the Show

Powerbrokers wield enormous influence in the Capitol, and too many lawmakers, including the governor, defer to them. When a chairman like Dan Foreman blocks a bill to stop taxpayer dollars from flowing to liberal unions, you have to ask: Why is a supposedly conservative Legislature listening to unions at all? Agencies and special interests often have more sway than the voters.

4. Local Governments Lean Left

Idaho’s cities, school boards, and judicial races are labeled “nonpartisan,” but the ideology is purely partisan. Without party labels, voters often elect left‑leaning officials who push progressive policies on education, zoning, and spending. The left has quietly built power at the local level while voters assume everything is conservative.

Democrats know they can’t win statewide, so they hide in nonpartisan races. Former Idaho Democratic Party Chair Evangeline Beechler openly admitted Democrats love city elections because they can hide their affiliation. Party labels matter; they tell voters how someone will govern. Idaho must stop letting ideology hide behind the word “nonpartisan.”

5. We are Spending Like Democrats

Idaho’s budget has exploded over the last five years. It has grown by more than 50% in that time. Yes, Idaho is growing, but government growth is far outpacing our population growth and inflation. The fact is, Idaho’s lawmakers love to spend your money. 

You don’t have to look any further than their refusal to repeal Medicaid expansion, one of our largest expenditures in the state budget. And while expansion came thanks to a far-left group’s ballot initiative, the Republican Legislature continues to fund it year after year.  

6. Lobbyists and Special Interests Dominate

A handful of lobbyists fight for liberty, but many are there to protect corporate interests, expand government power, or secure taxpayer funding for their organizations. For instance, during the 2026 session, lawmakers fought to protect Idaho Power from being held accountable. Legislation like that is dangerous when you see what has happened in states like California and Hawaii, where power companies have been neglectful, and people have lost their homes as a result.

These lobbyists for these big corporations have money, access, and influence, and they use all three to steer lawmakers. Too many legislators listen to lobbyists before they listen to you.

7. Idaho’s Liberal Media Shapes the Narrative

Idaho’s mainstream media leans so far left you’d think we were already California. They amplify progressive Republicans, attack conservatives, and frame conservative legislation as “extreme.” Meanwhile, Idaho lacks strong conservative media outlets to keep voters informed. When the media tilts left, public perception tilts with it.

8. Liberal Republicans Still Run the Show

Democrats figured out long ago that the easiest way to influence Idaho politics is to run as Republicans. The establishment embraces these left‑leaning Republicans because it helps them maintain moderate control. The result? A Legislature filled with people who campaign as conservatives but govern like centrists.

9. Republican Officials Capitulate to the Left

Too often, Republicans in the legislature, who ran as conservatives, and the governor himself, capitulate to the left. They are either afraid of the liberal organizations and lobbyists, or they themselves are far more liberal than what they campaigned on.

For instance, Sen. Jim Guthrie killed a solid pro-gun school carry bill several years ago at the behest of Moms Demand Action, an anti-Second Amendment organization. Then, to make matters worse, Guthrie proposed his own version of a “school carry” bill that was so bad, Moms Demand Action and radical left lawmakers like Sen. Melissa Wintrow (Boise) supported the bill!

But perhaps an even more glaring example is when Governor Little called the legislature back into session to dump nearly half a billion dollars into our failing education system. All because leftists from Reclaim Idaho were going to put an education initiative on the ballot. Little and the legislature caved to his demands. 

10. The Primary System Isn’t Working

Between crossover voting and poor vetting of candidates, Idaho’s Republican primary often elevates progressive Republicans. The result is a Legislature that doesn’t reflect the values of Idaho’s conservative voters. We either find a way to dramatically increase primary turnout or consider a different system, like a caucus, that better reflects the will of actual Republicans.

The Bottom Line

Idaho isn’t a conservative state; it’s a state with a conservative brand and a political class that knows how to use it. The voters are conservative. The culture is conservative. But the system? Not even close.

You don’t have to look much further than states like Florida, which has a far less Republican majority, and you see leadership on conservative issues. You see a lot more conservative issues being pushed in what is supposed to be a less conservative state.

Honor Idaho is committed to changing that and restoring the conservative leadership Idahoans expect and deserve.

Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared on HonorIdaho.com, and is republished here with the author’s permission.

Idaho Freedom Caucus: New Treatment Options for Struggling Veterans

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(Idaho Freedom Caucus, June 3, 2026)

By: Rep. Rob Beiswenger, Idaho Freedom Caucus Member

This past April, President Donald Trump made history when he announced that the United States would accelerate the approval process for certain safe psychedelic treatments like ibogaine and psilocybin for several disorders including Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), Parkinson’s, and depression.

Joined by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., podcaster Joe Rogan, and other advocates, President Trump acknowledged that the rate of suicides, 22 a day for our veteran population, is too large to ignore, and that embracing their use for certain treatments rather than continuing to criminalize psychedelics may be a new beneficial path forward.

While many were surprised by the President’s announcement, the groundwork had been laid in a previous National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), in which the Trump Administration added ibogaine, psilocybin, and other psychedelics to a list of medicines that states could begin administering in controlled environments to voluntary participants. This will allow treatment research in this field, banned in the 1960’s, to restart. In a recent NDAA request, the Pentagon and Department of War asked for $10 million in funding to study psychedelics.

Now instead of traveling to Mexico where these medicines are legal, people in the U.S. would have access to treatments here at home that have been used historically in other countries across the globe.

Researchers at Stanford University recently conducted a study with 30 combat veterans, all suffering from PTSD or TBI, and all desperate for an alternative treatment to the VA-prescribed pills they were taking.

These veterans were flown to an ibogaine treatment facility in Mexico where brain scans were conducted before and after treatment. After a single ibogaine treatment in Mexico, roughly 80% of the soldiers lost their PTSD diagnosis, based on the scans. That number increased to 95% after a second treatment. (The story of these veterans was chronicled in the award-winning Netflix documentary “In Waves and War.”)

During the 2026 legislative session, I introduced a bill that would have created a pilot program in Idaho for research into treating PTSD and TBI for our veterans and first responders.

House Bill 899, named the “Medical Advanced Healing Act,” quickly picked up co-sponsors in the House and Senate, but was introduced too late in the process to secure a full hearing.

My bill did not request any taxpayer money for the program, although it would certainly be justified given the dramatic need to help our veterans. My simple goal is to make these treatment options fully available.

Currently, ibogaine, psilocybin and MDMA are considered Schedule 1 drugs, making them illegal. To be on Schedule I, a drug must be considered addictive and have no medical benefit. In the case of ibogaine, the opposite is true. Ibogaine is not a party drug, but rather it makes you quite miserable during treatment. No one wants to use ibogaine more than one or two times, and the known medical benefits are now being proven by researchers.

There are no known currently accepted treatments for PTSD or TBI that have shown to be anywhere near as effective as ibogaine and similar medicines.

With the Trump administration showing proactive leadership on this important veteran issue, it is my hope that Idaho will follow suit and allow access to these life-saving medicines by the end of the 2027 legislative session. Our veterans and first responders deserve nothing less.

Meet Employers and Apply for Various Jobs at Idaho Falls Hiring Event

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(Idaho Department of Labor Press Release, June 3, 2026)

The Idaho Department of Labor is hosting a hiring event Wednesday, June 10, at the department’s Idaho Falls office. The address is 1515 E. Lincoln Road.

The event is from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

A variety of employers will be in attendance including Cives Steel Company, Idaho Central Credit Union, Idaho Department of Juvenile Corrections, Idaho National Laboratory, Lamb Weston, Naval Nuclear Laboratory, Teton Stage Lines and more.

Open positions available include lead insulation installers, quality assurance specialists, welders, leasing agents, personal care aides, sanitation technicians, mortgage loan officers, licensed practical nurses, research data scientists, lead facility engineers, lab technicians, financial advisors and others.

Partner agencies providing resources to job seekers will also be in attendance. This includes Centennial Job Corps, Equus Workforce Solutions, Easterseals-Goodwill Senior Community Service Employment Program, TRIO – Idaho State University and more.

For a complete list of employers attending, visit the department’s calendar.

To find job search information and interview tips, check out our publications page.

Job search assistance, such as resume or interview help, is also available in person with a workforce consultant. Fill out the department’s customer inquiry form to be connected to a workforce consultant at your nearest local office.

Customers with disabilities who need a reasonable accommodation to participate can email IdahoFalls@labor.idaho.gov.

Attending a job seeker event counts as one weekly work search action for unemployment insurance purposes.

Dust Off That Old Fishing Gear for Free Fishing Day and Beyond

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(Idaho Fish and Game Press Release, June 2, 2026)

Free Fishing Day is June 13, and it’s a great opportunity to be outdoors and get acquainted with Idaho’s great fishing spots. Fishing is an inexpensive sport because you can get all the gear you need for about $50 (or less). But odds are good you have some old fishing gear laying around the house, or someone in your family has some you can borrow. You can also check garage sales or second-hand stores. Even if it hasn’t been used in years, it will probably still catch fish.

So dig out that old, trusty, dusty fishing gear and let’s get it ready to fish.

The rod (aka fishing pole)

Does it have all the eyes intact? Great, it’s probably ready to go. If it’s a sectional rod, check if the sections come apart. If not, put some penetrating oil on it, such as WD-40 or Break Free. The sections should easily disassemble and reassemble. If they won’t come apart, you can still fish with it, it will be just a little trickier to transport.

Next, check the reel seat. Chances are good there’s already a reel on it, but check the locking ring to see if it’s still functioning. If it’s corroded, apply more lubricating oil, or if it has a reel that feels solidly attached, leave it alone because there’s no urgent need to replace the reel so long as it’s working properly.

The reel

These come in many shapes and sizes, but all reels must do two things: reel in line, and let line out. If the handle cranks freely, it will probably reel in line, so you’re off to a good start. Now figure out if it will let line out. Depending on the type of reel, this is accomplished by flipping the bail on a “spinning” reel, or pushing a button a “baitcaster.”

If your reel does those things, you’re probably ready to go. But there’s another thing to check and that’s the drag, which allows line under tension to gradually unspool in case you have a fish pulling hard enough to break the line. Drag is important, but if you’re catching smallish fish, such as panfish or trout under 12 inches, it’s not critical.

The line

This is probably the most overlooked thing if you’re resurrecting old fishing tackle, and what will most likely to ruin your fishing trip because it will be kinky and tangle easily. If the reel hasn’t been used in a year or so, replace the line. Line is inexpensive, and you can replace the line yourself, or take the reel to a sporting goods store or tackle shop and have them do it.

Basic bait and tackle

Now we’re getting to the fun stuff, and it’s no exaggeration to say there are millions of things to put on the end of your line to catch a fish.

But a few pieces of basic tackle will catch nearly any fish, which includes hooks, weights (or bobbers) and bait. An earthworm will catch a huge variety of fish and is probably crawling around in your yard, but it may be easier to spend a few bucks on a dozen nightcrawlers.

Consider those items your starter kit. And if for some reason you have a working rod and reel, but no tackle, you can get all of them for about $10 or less.

Lures

If you have a tackle box with some random-looking lures, give them a try. Even if it’s grandpa’s old tackle box, there’s no reason that what worked then won’t still work now. It helps to know what fish a particular lure was designed to attract, but a lot of lures look nothing like anything in the natural world, and they can catch a surprising number of fish species.

If you notice they have rusty hooks, or their silver, gold or bronze finishes have tarnished. You can buy replacement hooks for a fraction of what a new lure costs, so go ahead and replace them. If they’re tarnished, a small piece of steel wool will brighten them.

Where to go

Now you have all you need to go fishing, and Idaho Fish and Game can help with that. Fishing is free on June 13, meaning no fishing license is required for people 14 years and older on that day. (Children 13 and younger are not required to have a fishing license in Idaho.)

Next take a look at Fish and Game’s Fishing Planner, which provides information about nearly every body of water in the state that has public fishing.

A Quantum Leap: INL Discovers New Behavior in Plutonium That Could Reshape Nuclear Science

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(Idaho National Laboratory Press Release, June 4, 2026)

By John O’Connor

Plutonium is one of the most complex elements in the periodic table. First synthesized and isolated in 1940 by scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, plutonium has been studied closely for more than eight decades. It’s most often associated with its role in nuclear security, but it’s also vital to nuclear power, where it is produced in reactors and can be recycled as fuel. Despite plutonium’s importance, some of its most fundamental behaviors remain a mystery.

Scientists at the Idaho National Laboratory have made an important discovery: A compound called plutonium hexaboride exhibits a one-of-a-kind quantum property known as a topological Kondo insulating state. Published in Physical Review Research, this finding marks one of only a handful of times such behavior has been observed in plutonium material — opening a new window for research into how some of nature’s most complex elements actually work.

Understanding the discovery

A topological Kondo insulating state sounds complex, but the core idea is surprisingly intuitive.

Most materials on Earth fall into one of two camps: They either conduct electricity (such as copper wiring) or they don’t allow electricity to pass through easily (like rubber insulation). Topological insulators break this mold in a fascinating way. They have special properties that block electrical current within their interior while allowing it to flow freely along their exterior surfaces. The surface conductivity of topological insulators is unusually strong; it can’t be easily disrupted by impurities or physical defects.

The “Kondo” part refers to a specific quantum effect where electrons inside a material interact so strongly with one another that they create entirely new collective behaviors — ones that can’t be predicted by looking at individual atoms in isolation. Plutonium is a striking example. It contains 5f electrons, which are especially prone to these intense interactions, making it one of the most dramatic and complex materials known.

“Plutonium is defined by the unusual dual nature of its 5f electrons,” said INL scientist Krzysztof Gofryk, who led the study. “This makes it difficult to understand, but scientifically fascinating. Plutonium hexaboride gives us a rare opportunity to see how strong correlations and topology work together in actinide materials.”

80 years later, plutonium still has surprises

Actinides are in the family of elements that include plutonium and uranium. Their electrons govern critical properties like magnetism, electrical conductivity and how materials hold up under extreme radiation and temperature. It’s necessary to understand those properties at the quantum level, the scale of atoms and electrons, to predict how nuclear materials will age, how to improve reactor safety and how to design future energy systems.

Actinides are notoriously difficult to study, and progress on this front has been gradual. Plutonium compounds are extraordinarily difficult to handle, synthesize and measure. Only a handful of facilities in the world can do it safely, and INL is one of them. INL is home to specialized infrastructure that includes plasma focused ion beam techniques used to prepare micro-size plutonium samples for ultra-cold quantum measurements, the most accurate way to see the quantum mechanics without interference from heat. These capabilities made this latest discovery possible.

“These advanced preparation techniques allow us to study plutonium at very low temperatures,” said INL researcher Daniel Murray. “INL is the only facility with the expertise and infrastructure to efficiently and safely perform this kind of research on transuranium materials.”

Charting new territory in actinide science

The INL team didn’t stop its work on plutonium hexaboride at lab measurements. In collaboration with Columbia University, INL paired experimental results with advanced computer modeling to better understand what plutonium hexaboride is doing at the quantum level.

“Our calculations capture the essential electronic and structural properties of plutonium hexaboride,” said INL researcher Shuxiang Zhou. “They provide strong support for its topological nature and offer an efficient path for studying similar actinide materials.”

The combination of carefully conducted experiments and rigorous theory gives these findings credibility among scientists. It also provides a road map for studying other actinide materials that have historically been too difficult to explore.

One discovery, endless possibilities

When it comes to plutonium hexaboride’s practical applications, the research sits at the intersection of nuclear science and quantum physics. On the nuclear side, this research will advance the practical and high-stakes work of keeping reactors safe while extending the life of nuclear materials to help secure the country’s energy future. On the quantum side, the research has potential applications in quantum computing, advanced sensing and frontier technologies that could fundamentally reshape how researchers model nuclear systems and materials.

The finding supports the U.S. Department of Energy’s recent $625 million push to advance quantum science as a pillar of U.S. technological leadership. Understanding how topological quantum states emerge in actinide materials could inform how researchers simulate complex nuclear behavior, helping industry design longer-lasting reactor materials and develop technologies that don’t yet exist.

Further, the plutonium hexaboride research underscores INL’s role as a national scientific asset with a one-of-a-kind capability to safely design, fabricate and study plutonium-based quantum materials.

The paper, “Electronic correlations and topology in Kondo insulator PuB₆,” was published as a letter in Physical Review Research. Available at: https://journals.aps.org/prresearch/abstract/10.1103/hwpn-gll9

This research was conducted at Idaho National Laboratory, in collaboration with Columbia University, and was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division.

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.

Guest Columnist Senator Tammy Nichols: Save America Through Election Integrity

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June 4, 2026

Save America Through Election Integrity

By: ID Senator Tammy Nichols

ID Senator Tammy Nichols (Photo Credit: Tammy Nichols)

Idaho Republicans are once again stepping forward to lead where Congress has failed to act. As concerns over election integrity continue across the country, Idaho conservatives are preparing to formally call on Congress to pass the Save America Act through resolutions being advanced both within the Idaho Republican Party and for consideration during the 2027 Idaho legislative session.

I recently drafted the resolution because the message is simple: secure elections matter, and states should not remain silent while Congress refuses to act.

The proposed resolution states that “free, fair, and secure elections are the foundation of our Constitutional Republic” and affirms that “the right to vote is one of the most sacred rights of American citizens.” It also makes clear that Idaho believes only eligible United States citizens should be voting in federal elections and that election integrity measures are essential to restoring public trust.

Importantly, the resolution recognizes the constitutional role states play when the federal government fails to fulfill its responsibilities. One section states that “when the federal government fails to fulfill its constitutional responsibilities to protect the integrity of federal elections, the states have both the right and the duty to call upon Congress to act.”

That principle is exactly why Idaho Republicans are moving forward.

Congress has failed to take meaningful action to secure federal elections and restore confidence in the electoral process. Meanwhile, public trust in elections has declined nationwide. Idaho has consistently supported strong election integrity laws at the state level, and conservatives here believe it is time to push for stronger federal standards as well.

This effort is also about federalism and state leadership. The states created the federal government, not the other way around. Conservative states like Idaho have a responsibility to speak clearly when Congress refuses to address issues that impact the integrity of the Republic itself.

The resolution also emphasizes that if states remain silent, Congress has little incentive to act. Federal elections impact every state, making it appropriate for state parties and state legislatures to demand accountability and stronger safeguards.

The resolution is expected to be presented at the Idaho Republican Party Summer Meeting and will also be prepared for consideration during the 2027 legislative session.

Idaho is once again showing what conservative leadership looks like: proactive, constitutional, and unapologetic about defending election integrity, the rule of law, and the voice of lawful American citizens.

You can read the resolution submitted below.

In Liberty,

Sen. Tammy Nichols

Guest Columnist Brian Almon – Dorothy Moon: Now, More Than Ever

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(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

June 3, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

Dorothy Moon: Now, More Than Ever

By: Brian Almon

I still remember the day Dorothy Moon won election as chair of the Idaho Republican Party. Having lost the race for secretary of state by only 1.66%, she announced her candidacy for party leadership and was immediately met with nasty attacks from all sides. Nevertheless, the feeling at the convention in Twin Falls was electric. I don’t think I’ve ever heard a standing ovation like the one that followed Brent Regan nominating her for party chair.

Despite near-constant attacks and attempts to undermine her from those who preferred previous leadership, Moon tirelessly worked to carry out the will of Republican grassroots activists and advance conservative values in Idaho. She was rewarded with a landslide reelection at the 2024 state convention in Coeur d’Alene, winning 62.3% of the vote, and followed that up by leading the victorious fight against ranked choice voting, which lost 70-30 on the November ballot.

As far as I know, no Idaho GOP chair has run for and won a third term in at least four decades, yet this week Dorothy Moon announced her intention to do just that:

Moon emphasized the importance of party unity heading into the 2026 election cycle, especially in opposing the radical pro-abortion initiative expected to appear on the November ballot.

“Idaho Republicans share a common commitment to protecting our state from the failed policies we see spreading across the country,” she said. “Now is the time to continue building a strong, unified organization capable of winning elections, protecting our most vulnerable, and preserving Idaho’s unique way of life for future generations.”

As a delegate to the 2026 convention, I am proud to support Dorothy Moon in her quest for a third term as chair.

I can’t claim to be unbiased here, of course. I’ve had the privilege of working with Chairwoman Moon for quite a while now. Over the past year, I’ve taken on multiple responsibilities within the Idaho GOP as a paid consultant, all of which require close coordination with the chair and staff. I know some have found Dorothy difficult to work with, but I believe that is because she has high expectations for those who commit themselves to this cause.

I have never seen a more tenacious worker, and as high as her expectations are for staff and volunteers, Dorothy’s highest expectations are for herself. She has spent tremendous time and treasure in service to the Idaho GOP and the conservative cause for four years now, following six years in the Legislature, spending far too many days away from her husband, family, and home on the mountain.

Under Dorothy Moon’s leadership, the Idaho GOP has grown from 550,000 registered voters to more than 631,000. Its share of registered voters in Idaho has increased from 55% to nearly 62%. The last legislative session had more Republican senators and representatives than at any point in the past twenty years, and our statewide and federal offices have remained firmly red. Under Moon’s leadership, the Idaho GOP led the charge against ranked choice voting in 2024 and is preparing to lead the charge against the radical abortion initiative this year.

Over the past four years, Dorothy Moon has built a strong coalition of elected officials, party officers, and volunteers within the Idaho GOP. While some on the more populist/libertarian side of things seem frustrated that Moon hasn’t snapped her fingers and unilaterally ejected all the “RINOs” from the party, I know quite a few people who once opposed her but have now come alongside her to work together for the good of Idaho. Once people get past the caricature that has grown up around her, they often find that there is no one more dedicated to the cause of liberty than Dorothy Moon.

Running the Idaho Republican Party takes more than conservative bona fides, it takes more than charisma, and it takes more than organizational talent—though Dorothy Moon has all of those things. The state chair must know all the players and be able to tell who is sincere and who has a hidden agenda. The state chair must be strong enough to do what needs to be done, but humble enough to serve the state central committee and the Republican voters of Idaho. The state chair must have the time and resources to travel to every corner of the state, supporting local committees and candidates, talking to voters where they are, and equipping them to be leaders in their communities.

Later this month, I will attend my fourth Idaho GOP state convention. As an alternate, I did not vote in 2020, but watched and learned. I voted for Dorothy in 2022 and again in 2024, and I look forward to casting my vote for her again in just over two weeks. She’s the hardest-working person I know, and the Idaho GOP has been blessed by her leadership. I hope my fellow delegates will join me in supporting Dorothy Moon one more time.

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