West
West Coast exodus drives surprising political effect in red state, and it's not a liberal shift
This story is the third in a series examining the mass-migration of West Coast residents to Idaho. Read parts one and two.
SANDPOINT, Idaho — A snarky saying appeared on local bumper stickers in the early 1990s as droves of Californians moved to North Idaho: “Welcome to Idaho. Now go home.”
The “Don’t California my Idaho” sentiment remains alive and well 30 years later as tens of thousands of West Coast residents seek refuge in the Gem State. Recent transplants can be some of the fiercest critics of new residents.
“As soon as we signed the mortgage, we’re like, ‘That’s it. No more Oregonians. Build the wall,’” joked Nick Kostenborder, who moved from Portland to Sandpoint in 2021.
Nick Kostenborder was a lifelong Oregonian until 2021 when, driven out of Portland by pandemic restrictions and social justice riots, he and his family moved to Sandpoint, Idaho. Even though he considers himself a libertarian, Kostenborder said he’s not interested in voting against Idaho’s most conservative policies. (Hannah Ray Lambert/Fox News Digital)
WHY IDAHO JUST CLOSED A LOOPHOLE THAT WOULD ALLOW STATE AGENCIES TO STEAL RESIDENTS’ HOME EQUITY
More seriously, though, he said he understands locals’ concerns.
“You should be suspicious of newcomers,” Kostenborder said. “I’ll prove to you that I’m not here to turn it into Portland.”
Idaho “growing redder” as West Coast conservatives move in
Idaho is one of the fastest-growing states in the country, according to recent census data, with most of the increase coming not from births, but from West Coast movers. The rapid population gains have ballooned housing prices and strained inventory, while also sparking fears among conservative Idahoans that their new neighbors will bring liberal policies across the state line.
On the politics front, however, voter registration data suggests Gem State Republicans have nothing to fear.
“Politically, we are not changing anything,” Bonner County Commissioner Luke Omodt said. “Idaho is actually growing redder.”
A 2023 analysis of voters who moved in from other states depicts a red wave crashing down on Idaho. Californians led the pack, with 75% registering as Republicans and a mere 10% registering as Democrats. More than 60% of Washington and Oregon transplants who registered to vote in Idaho did so as Republicans.
“They feel like they’re running for their lives away from oppressive laws and policies in these other states,” said Coeur d’Alene-based real estate agent Seth Horst, a former California police officer who moved to Idaho in 2020.
CRISIS IN THE NORTHWEST: CITY’S BATTLE AGAINST HOMELESSNESS COULD HAVE DIRE EFFECTS FOR THE NATION
Educating potential movers about the state’s culture has become part of the job for Horst, who runs a podcast and YouTube channel called Residing in North Idaho.
“We get some pushback from locals and people that don’t want others moving here,” Horst said. “But [North Idaho is] not a secret anymore. … What’s important right now is that people are educated because we want the right people moving here. We want people whose values match and don’t want to come here and change the way of life.”
Trent Grandstaff, founder of the Living Life in North Idaho realty group, recalled one prospective mover who wanted to “help fix Idaho” with liberal values.
“I said, ‘For your sake, don’t do that. Nobody wants that,’” Grandstaff said. “People are changing their entire lives, spending so much money to get out of the liberal-run cities.”
Idaho has a Republican governor and secretary of state. Republicans also control both chambers of the state legislature. (Darin Oswald/Idaho Statesman/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
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Out of the three states driving Idaho’s growth, Washington is the only one to avoid overall population dips. California’s decreased by nearly half a million between 2018 and 2023, according to Census Bureau data, while Oregon’s dropped in 2022 for the first time in nearly 40 years.
“That’s a sign of how unique and critical this moment is,” Portland City Commissioner and mayoral candidate Mingus Mapps previously told Fox News Digital. “We have to get this right, and the things that we need to be focusing in on are houselessness, public safety and economic vitality.”
And West Coast states may be getting even bluer with so many of their conservatives fleeing to Idaho.
From May 2020 to March of this year, Oregon’s Multnomah County lost more than 3,700 GOP voters, around 6% of its total Republicans. Neighboring Washington County shed around 7,400 Republicans and gained more than 2,000 Democrats during the same period, according to data from the secretary of state’s office.
The Republicans could have simply re-registered as Democrats or with another party, but it’s notable that the losses were overwhelmingly “on one side of the ledger,” according to John Horvick of DHM Research.
“That suggests to me that our more conservative friends and Multnomah County Republican neighbors have decided to go somewhere else,” he said. “Whether it’s across the river to Clark County in Washington or over to Idaho.”
Left, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, is a popular destination for West Coast movers. Real estate agent Seth Horst said the city is clean, has a friendly atmosphere and lacks the homelessness problem overrunning other western cities like Portland, right. (Hannah Ray Lambert/Fox News Digital)
CRISIS IN NORTHWEST: ARE VOTERS ‘BEYOND A TURNING POINT’ AFTER DECADES OF PROGRESSIVE POLITICS?
Bryan Zielinski isn’t worried about the impact on states like Oregon and Washington, his former home.
“That’s their loss,” said Zielinski, who moved to Idaho last June and recently opened a gun store in Post Falls. “If high net-worth, high-productivity individuals and families want to leave an oppressive state … that can only benefit Idaho as a state. It can only hurt Washington, Oregon, California.”
Mayors: Population gains brought economic opportunity, housing hardships
Coeur d’Alene Mayor Jim Hammond has lived in North Idaho for half a century. He’s seen a lot of changes in that time, but lately the biggest difference is what he doesn’t see: familiar faces. He used to budget extra time during grocery store runs or Chamber of Commerce events because he would run into so many people he knew. Now, he doesn’t know the name of everyone he passes in town.
“I am amazed by that,” said Hammond, who also served as a Republican state senator from 2006 to 2012.
Hammond sees both positives and negatives in North Idaho’s rapid growth.
“If we’re big enough that we can support businesses … we strengthen our own economy,” he said. “We’re not going somewhere else to shop. We’re not going somewhere else for work. We’re doing that all within our community, and that means all those funds stay within our community.”
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Nearby, Sandpoint began as a timber town, but had to pivot when the logging industry faded. The proximity of Lake Pend Oreille and Schweitzer Mountain made it a natural outdoor recreation destination. Since tourism jobs are largely seasonal and low paying, Mayor Jeremy Grimm said the region has tried to attract other businesses, like tech companies and manufacturers, billing itself as a perfect location to work and play.
“When you could locate your business … in an urban center or in a place like Sandpoint, it’s pretty easy for a CEO or the owner of those companies to make that choice,” Grimm said.
But that strategy may have worked too well.
“It was easy to bring up companies from, say, California because the cost of living was so much lower here and, at the time, the cost of housing was much lower,” Hammond said. Now, housing prices are “not nearly as competitive” as they once were, he added.
“I fear for my children being able to afford a home”
Grimm spoke to Fox News Digital from a new development on the north side of town, where new houses on lots as small as 5,200 square feet are listed for $600,000 to $800,000.
“Although we have a very diverse economy with aerospace and food manufacturing and medical device manufacturing, at the end of the day, a lot of those jobs don’t support what it takes to buy a house like this,” he said.
Sandpoint’s population has increased roughly 10% in two years, creating housing shortages and straining infrastructure, said Mayor Jeremy Grimm. (Hannah Ray Lambert/Fox News Digital)
CRISIS IN THE NORTHWEST: THE HOMESCHOOLING MOM DOCUMENTING PORTLAND’S ‘DESTRUCTION’
People born in Idaho are getting priced out of their hometowns, said Daniel Hanson, whose family has lived in the Sandpoint area for more than 100 years. He and his wife built an approximately $500,000 home on a small parcel in 2020. Their latest tax assessment values the home at $1.3 million, he said.
“It’s unaffordable,” Hanson told Fox News. “I fear for my children being able to afford a home remotely close to our area.”
Grimm hopes a surge in new inventory will help. Developers are in the process of building around 1,200 new housing units in the city of about 10,000 people, he said.
“Hopefully that will allow our businesses to thrive [and] attract quality employees,” he said, “because we certainly want anyone who wants to move a business here to do that.”
Idaho’s population growth has cooled somewhat since the nearly 3% spike in 2020. But Horst still hears from frustrated West Coast families almost every day who say they want to move to the Gem State.
“The more that we see these ridiculous policies happening in other states, good people who are like, ‘We’ve had enough,’ they are getting pushed to the limit,” he said.
Idaho coupled its stunning scenery with lower taxes and fewer regulations than its neighbors to the west and billed itself as a perfect location to work and play. But the influx of new residents has sent home prices soaring, frustrating longtime Idahoans. (Hannah Ray Lambert/Fox News Digital)
And as some lifetime residents bristle at the rapid growth, Omodt said he hopes the “newcomers and the old-timers alike” can work together to preserve the quality of life he experienced growing up.
“People struggle when the field next door to them turns into houses,” he said. “But that’s also brought jobs. It’s brought families, it’s brought new churches, increased libraries … When we go and we see a new doctor, we’re grateful that we have that new technology and care.”
Ramiro Vargas contributed to the accompanying video.
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San Francisco, CA
San Francisco’s free, discounted childcare program adds over 700 new spots
California childcare providers struggle to stay alive
Hundreds of Bay Area child care providers closed their doors in 2020, as many parents worked from home and watched their children on their own. According to the Century Foundation, more than 70,000 childcare programs nationwide are projected to close. This is partly due to the expiration of the federal COVID-19 pandemic support program that kept many centers open.
SAN FRANCISCO – More San Francisco families will soon have access to free or discounted childcare thanks to an expansion of a city program announced Thursday by Mayor Daniel Lurie.
Who’s eligible for free or discounted childcare in San Francisco?
Dig deeper:
Under the mayor’s expansion of the city’s Family Opportunity Agenda, nearly 750 more children will have access to free or discounted care. To be eligible for free childcare, families must earn less than 150% of the city’s annual median income, $230,000. Families who earn under 200% of the median income – $310,000 – will receive a 50% subsidy for childcare.
The program expansion will offer more than 700 childcare spots, with a focus on infants and toddlers in the Sunset, Parkside, Richmond, Mission, Bayview, Portola, Mission Bay, Excelsior, Glen Park, and SoMa neighborhoods, the mayor’s office said.
“The new slots will expand the city’s early childhood system for infants and toddlers by more than 8%—broadening access to affordable, high-quality childcare for working families,” the city said, in part, in a statement Thursday.
What is San Francisco’s Family Opportunity Agenda?
Big picture view:
The mayor’s Family Opportunity Agenda was launched in January to make housing, childcare, education and more necessary resources affordable for San Francisco residents.
“When families have access to quality, affordable childcare, they can stay and build a life in San Francisco,” Lurie said. “For children, it supports their academic and emotional growth long before kindergarten. And for our entire city, it strengthens our future—helping families stay and keeping our communities strong.”
For more information on the city’s childcare program, click here.
How much does childcare cost?
According to the Public Policy Institute of California, full-time childcare for pre-school-age children can cost anywhere between $9,000 and $24,000 per year. For children under the age of two, the cost rises from $11,000 to $29,000, research shows.
Data from the U.S. Census Bureau in 2024 shows California has the third-highest costs for childcare across the U.S., at an average $16,945 per year.
The Source: Office of San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie
Denver, CO
Ex-Broncos wide receiver lands in UFL; ex-Denver RB joins 49ers
Kaden Davis is taking his talents to the United Football League.
The former Denver Broncos wide receiver signed with the UFL’s Houston Gamblers earlier this week, and he could make his debut as early as Friday evening when the Gamblers face the Columbus Aviators (5:00 p.m. MT on Fox and FuboTV).
Davis (6-1, 193 pounds) entered the league with the Broncos as an undrafted free agent out of Northwest Missouri State in 2022. After spending part of his rookie season on Denver’s practice squad, Davis played for the Michigan Panthers (then of the USFL) in the spring of 2023.
After that, Davis spent time with the Arizona Cardinals (2023) and Detroit Lions (2024) before returning to the Broncos as a member of the practice squad in 2024. He was later cut, re-signed, and cut again by Denver that fall. Davis joined the Cleveland Browns’ practice squad late in the 2024 campaign, and he remained with the Browns in 2025. He’ll now look to impress in the UFL.
Elsewhere on the ex-Bronco front, the San Francisco 49ers signed running back Sincere McCormick, who had a brief stint on Denver’s practice squad last season.
Social: Follow Broncos Wire on Facebook and Twitter/X! Did you know: These 25 celebrities are Broncos fans.
Seattle, WA
Seahawks receiver makes surprise switch to cornerback
The Seattle Seahawks have an extensive history of taller cornerbacks on the roster, but not this tall.
The only reason why this is notable is because Broden was measured at just over 6’5 and weighed under 200 pounds. In addition to Broden’s height, he ran a reported 4.37 40-yard dash at his Pro Day. For context, Broden is taller than Richard Sherman (6’3), Riq Woolen (6’4), and Brandon Browner (6’4). Other reports of Broden’s height (including from Tyrone himself) have him up to 6’7. Unsurprisingly, Broden did not have any prior experience at corner during his college football days, and there’s nothing to indicate he had any cornerback work in high school.
At receiver, his chances of making the active roster are slim and none given the competition ahead of him, so why not have some fun experimentation? I’m not banking on it being much of anything, but I hope it continues into training camp so that fans can see this in person.
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