December 10, 2025

Understanding the IACI Endorsement
Why This Endorsement Should Matter to Every Voter

By: Idaho Dist. 24 State Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld

ID Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld (Photo Credit: Glenneda Zuiderveld)

This Is What I’m Up Against — And Why It Matters to You

Recently, my challenger Brent Reinke, along with Don Hall, Alex Caval, Cheri Volmer, and Casey Swenson, received an endorsement and backing from the Idaho Prosperity Fund—the political action arm of the Idaho Association of Commerce and Industry (IACI).

Let’s not pretend that’s just another “business endorsement.”

It isn’t.

It is a clear signal of alignment with the most powerful corporate lobbying machine in the State of Idaho. And that should matter to every grassroots Idahoan who still believes that government is supposed to answer to the people, not the boardrooms.

I have always believed this simple truth:
Idaho works best when policy rises up from the people, not when it is pressed down by powerful institutions.

What IACI Really Is

IACI likes to call itself a “business association.” On the surface, that sounds harmless, even noble. We all support business. I certainly do. I fight every day for local, family-run operations that are being buried under property taxes, fees, regulations, and inflation.

But IACI is no longer a small-business advocate.

Over time, it has evolved into a corporate policy engine tied to global economics, not local commerce. It represents massive interests—healthcare conglomerates, tech giants, utilities, industrial agriculture, developers, insurers, and multinational corporations.

And their influence doesn’t stop at the Capitol during session.

It runs deep.

Their Web of Influence

Most Idahoans have no idea how extensive this network really is.

  • Idaho Potato Processors – Not your local farmer. This represents large-scale processors with enormous interests in water use, labor pipelines, environmental regulation, transportation, land use, and trade policy.
  • Idaho Council on Economic Education – This shapes how our children are taught to think about economics, markets, labor, regulation, and government’s role. When corporate power helps guide “economic education,” it also shapes future voters and policymakers.
  • Idaho Leads Project – A leadership pipeline that trains “emerging leaders” inside a worldview aligned with corporate governance and centralized planning, not citizen-driven government.

This is not accidental.
This is how long-term political control is built quietly, generationally, and efficiently.

Political Power, Not Just Business Power

For decades, IACI has been known, by media and insiders alike, as the most powerful lobbying force in Idaho. Their power doesn’t show up in loud headlines. It shows up:

  • In PAC spending
  • In behind-the-scenes pressure
  • In legislative scorecards
  • In who gets protected
  • And who gets crushed before the public ever hears the fight

Even Governor Brad Little spent nearly 20 years inside IACI leadership, serving at the top of that organization before holding office. This explains why so many policies favor:

  • Large healthcare systems
  • Workforce pipelines
  • Development interests
  • And corporate stability
    before families, farmers, and property owners.

Follow the Money

IACI’s political muscle flows through massive Idaho Prosperity Fund PAC. This is not fueled by $20 grassroots donors.

They are powered by:

  • Micron
  • Idaho Power
  • J.R. Simplot
  • Blue Cross
  • Timber and real estate giants
  • Large healthcare systems

These corporations don’t donate out of charity.
They donate because state policy affects their bottom line.

So when IACI endorses a candidate, that endorsement is not symbolic.

It is a transaction.

Votes in exchange for protection.

When people talk about “dark money,” they usually picture something hidden or foreign. But in Idaho, much of it operates right out in the open. Many of the corporations represented by IACI, and many of the same corporations that fund the Idaho Prosperity Fund, share the same dominant institutional shareholders: BlackRock and Vanguard. These are not mom-and-pop investors. These are two of the most powerful financial institutions on the planet. So when corporate money flows into Idaho politics through PACs and endorsements, we are no longer talking about “local business interests.” We are talking about global capital shaping local policy, one race, one legislature, one vote at a time. That is what dark money really looks like in the modern era: not secret, but distant, massive, and unaccountable to Idaho families.

Two Worldviews — One Idaho

IACI’s viewpoint:
“We need workers to keep the economy growing.”

Grassroots Idaho’s viewpoint:
“Enforce the law. Protect wages. Protect communities. Protect sovereignty.”

Who absorbs the cost of labor policy.

  • Corporations get the profit.
  • Communities absorb the impact.

Always.

That is why an IACI endorsement is not “neutral.”
It represents submission to an entire system of institutional economic control.

Why I Stand Where I Stand

I believe:

  • Families come before corporate systems.
  • Property owners deserve relief before corporations receive stability.
  • Local control matters more than centralized economic planning.
  • Idaho should never become dependent on federal money wrapped in golden ribbon and lifelong strings.

This race is not right versus left.
It is not Republican versus Republican.

This race is:

Grassroots Idaho versus Institutional Idaho.
Citizen government versus Corporate governance.

And as long as I have the privilege of serving you in the Idaho Senate, I will always choose:

Parents.
Farmers.
Small business owners.
Retirees.
Working families.

I will always stand for:

Protecting Idaho’s state sovereignty.
Exposing corruption, no matter who it embarrasses.
And voting against runaway government and bloated budgets.

Over any PAC.
Over any corporation.
Over any political machine.

On May 19 2026, you will make a clear choice about who represents you:

A candidate endorsed by IACI or a Senator who has always been grassroots, independent, and accountable to the people.

That choice is yours.

For me, it has never been about politics.

It has always been about stewardship.

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