Idaho
Idaho Democratic Party doubles legislative candidate numbers in the face of GOP supermajority • Idaho Capital Sun
For Joseph Messerly, a Soda Springs business owner and a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the decision to run for state office started with one issue: Idaho libraries.
His mother is a children’s librarian, and she even testified in opposition to one of the early iterations of this year’s legislation meant to restrict children’s access to library material, which ultimately passed the Legislature under House Bill 710 and was signed into law in April by Idaho Gov. Brad Little.
Messerly said one of the concerns he saw local librarians, like his mother, talk about was the impact that it was going to have on children in rural Idaho.
“We’re on a four-day school week in Soda Springs, and we can have up to 30 kids in the library on Fridays,” he told the Idaho Capital Sun. “With some of their parents at work, kids are waiting at the library before the doors even open to get out of the cold or to have somewhere to work on school projects.”
Messerly, a Democratic candidate, is running for election for the first time to the Idaho House of Representatives to represent District 35, Seat A. The district is located in eastern Idaho and includes Bear Lake, Caribou and Teton counties as well as a portion of Bonneville County. Messerly is running unopposed in the May 21 Democratic primary election. He will run against incumbent Rep. Kevin Andrus, R-Lava Hot Springs, in the Nov. 5 general election.
Efforts to reach Andrus were unsuccessful.
“The fact that librarians aren’t going to be able to help them in the way they need to for fear of civil or for liable actions isn’t OK,” Messerly said. “We need to make sure that all voices are being heard at all times, and Idaho values really truly line up with the Idaho Democratic Party at the end of the day.”
Messerly has entered Idaho’s 2024 legislative races along with 86 other Democrats who have said they are driven by concerns related to legislation affecting library materials, reproductive rights and public education. This surge nearly doubles the amount of democratic candidates running for legislative office in comparison from 2022.
More candidates means more choices for Idaho voters, Boise State professor says
Jaclyn Kettler, a political scientist at Boise State University has noticed the increase in Democratic candidates, particularly compared to the field of 2022 candidates.
“It is something that I had noticed and I think it reflects the hard work that the Democratic Party has done in recruiting candidates,” Kettler said.
Kettler said having more candidates means more choices for voters, which can be a good thing regardless of which political party they support.
“It is important for a few reasons,” Kettler said. “It helps build up a base, and it helps turn out more voters. If you don’t have candidates on the ballot, it’s hard to demonstrate how much support you might have. But it is also important to have contested elections in more general ways. Having contested elections helps keep our elected officials more accountable through conversations about what the incumbent has done or hasn’t done. It can bring opportunities for voters to express the types of issues or policies they would like to see their representatives work on, and it can also get more citizens participating and engaged with more campaign activity happening.”
Kettler said a fuller field of candidates may also give Idahoans insights in how the state has changed since legislative and congressional districts were redrawn following the 2020 census.
“Because we didn’t see many Democrats on the ballot in 2022, we haven’t seen how our increasing population – or population growth – has affected some districts,” Kettler said. “Voter registration data indicates a lot of Republicans are moving to the state, but do we see some districts become competitive that previously weren’t? Or maybe districts that have previously been competitive won’t be as competitive because of it.”
Even with the large increase in Democratic candidates this year, Kettler doesn’t expect a big shift in the balance of political power. Democrats in Idaho have history, numbers and lots of money working against them.
Republicans have held a supermajority in both chambers of the Idaho Legislature since the 1992 general election.
Republicans have won every statewide office since Democrat Marilyn Howard was re-elected superintendent of public instruction in 2002.
‘We’ve lost so much’: Idaho Democratic chairwoman says more is at stake this election
This year, there is at least one Democratic candidate in all 35 legislative districts in Idaho.
Candidate filings show:
- For the Idaho House of Representatives, there are 59 Democratic candidates running in comparison to 32 in 2022.
- For the Idaho Senate, there are 28 candidates running in comparison to 13 in 2022.
Idaho Democratic Chairwoman Lauren Necochea said in a press release that Idaho’s Democratic candidates are parents, teachers, nurses and small business owners who stepped up as the Idaho Republican supermajority “descends into extremism.”
“These Democratic candidates are running because they cannot accept the loss of our reproductive freedoms and the exodus of doctors from our state, they cannot accept relentless attacks on our libraries, and they will not accept the selling out of our public schools to costly voucher schemes,” she said in the release.
Multiple efforts to reach Idaho Republican Party Chairwoman Dorothy Moon were unsuccessful. Moon also did not respond to a list of questions that a reporter from the Idaho Capital Sun sent her via email on May 1.
In a phone interview, Necochea told the Sun that the Democratic Party made thousands of phone calls to recruit prospects across Idaho. Another reason the party was able to recruit more candidates than in the past is because the party has grown its resource base, she said, even receiving funding from former Idaho Republicans.
“We’ve lost so much, so the will to step up and fight back is growing,” Necochea said. “We can’t let things slide anymore. We’ve lost too much already, and we need to work to get our freedoms back.”
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‘I have to step up’: North Idaho nurse running as Democratic candidate
Inside the halls of Post Falls High School, you’ll find class portraits of Loree Peery, along with photos of her grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles and cousins. The sixth generation Idahoan moved to California for 20 years before moving back to the Gem State in 2006 and settling in Spirit Lake.
“When I moved back, man, my state had changed,” she told the Sun, adding that she had always been involved in Idaho’s Democratic Party.
Peery never saw herself running for office until the representative in her district, Rep. Heather Scott, R-Blanchard, presented a bill to expand the state’s cannibalism law this session.
“I kept thinking, there’s got to be someone running against her, but there wasn’t,” Peery said. “I was like, that’s it. I have to step up. So that’s what I’m doing. I’m not a politician; I’m a nurse.”
Peery is running unopposed in the May 21 Democratic primary election. In November, she will run against Scott in the general election. Scott has served as a member of the Idaho House of Representatives since 2015. She is the co-chair of the Idaho Freedom Caucus, a group of Idaho’s most conservative legislators who have championed legislation such as legally redefining gender and sex, protecting public workers from having to identify people by their preferred pronouns and codifying procedures for libraries to follow if patrons request an item’s relocation.

Scott ran unopposed in the 2022 general election. She did not respond to the Sun’s questions about how an opponent impacts her campaign strategy, but she did respond to a question about why she thinks there are more Democrats running this election.
“I believe we are seeing so many Democratic candidates running for office to provide cover for the Democrats they have running as Republicans in the primary,” Scott told the Sun in a text. “This is the next phase for the Gem State heist.”
Supreme Court justices appear split over whether to protect abortion care during emergencies
As a nurse, Peery said reproductive rights are her top concern, especially as the U.S. Supreme Court is set to decide if Idaho’s abortion law violates the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act. Also known as EMTALA, the federal law prohibits hospitals from refusing to help patients that seek emergency treatment if they are unable to pay for the services.
The U.S. Department of Justice sued the state of Idaho for its strict abortion law that provides an exception to save a patient’s life, but not to preserve a patient’s health. Without health exceptions, Idaho doctors have sent pregnant patients needing stabilizing treatment to out-of-state clinics where abortion is accessible, States Newsroom reported.
Last month, U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, who is from Idaho, argued to the U.S. Supreme Court that without the ability to immediately treat a pregnant patient with an emergency medical condition in Idaho, a person’s bodily functions, including their ability to have children in the future, could significantly be affected.
“The fact that EMTALA is under threat terrifies me,” Peery said. “I was an operating room nurse for over 40 years, and I know what can happen to women when pregnancies go bad, and it’s really scary and dangerous. The fact that our law is so vague that physicians don’t know what to do and are afraid of being sued is really scary to me.”
Reproductive rights a top issue for Democratic candidates
Like Peery, Julia Parker, the Democratic candidate from Moscow running in District 6, said reproductive rights is also her top concern.
“As a nurse, you really get a view of what people are struggling with, and how difficult health care systems and personal decisions can be,” she told the Sun. “Whether that is a pregnancy decision, or to spend money at a hospital, those decisions are so deeply personal and complicated. There’s no way the Legislature should be the ones making those kinds of decisions for people.”
This is her first time running for state office, but Parker has been involved in local politics since 2021 as a Moscow City Council member.
“I just really love Idaho, and I think that we just deserve better representation than we have,” she said, adding that public education and health care are issues that inspired her to run. “I think it’s just really important for regular people like me to stand up and run for office.”
Parker is running unopposed in the May 21 primary election. She will run against the winner of the Republican primary election between incumbent Sen. Dan Foreman, R-Moscow, and GOP challenger Robert Blair, R-Kendrick.
Blair is a fourth generation Idahoan and farmer. He told the Sun he said is running because he is concerned about the direction of the Idaho Republican Party. The top three issues that inspired him include local control, agriculture and infrastructure.
Blair substituted for former Sen. Dan Johnson in 2021 in the Idaho Legislature, and has experience voting on bills related to abortion, education and libraries. He said he is not sure why there are more Democrats running in this election than in 2022, but he said those are the issues that “separate the Republican and Democrat party.”
“I read every single bill and voted on the bill on its merits and what it’s going to do to the people in my district,” he said. “That’s how I approach things. I don’t know how I’ll vote on a bill until that bill is in front of me.”
Blair ran in the 2022 election, but lost against Foreman. Right now he said he is focused on the primary election and not his Democratic opponent.
Foreman did not respond to the Idaho Capital Sun’s request for comment.
Mary Shea, a Democratic candidate running for election to the Idaho House of Representatives to represent District 29, seat A, has also served as a Senate substitute.
In the recent legislative session, she substituted for Sen. James Ruchti, D-Pocatello, and was outspoken in her opposition to legislation that changed Idaho’s legal definition of sex and gender, and legislation that protects public employees from punishment if they choose to misgender someone.
Shea has a background in law, and she said she felt compelled to run when in September 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed Senate Bill 8, the Texas law permitting civil suits against abortion providers after approximately six weeks of pregnancy, to go into effect. Idaho now has a similar law that lets the family members of a person who had an abortion seek civil penalties of at least $20,000 from a provider. That ruling preceded the ultimate Dobbs decision in June 2022.
This year will be her second time running for the same office. In 2022, Shea ran against Rep. Dustin Manwaring, R-Pocatello, losing by about 640 votes. Shea is running unopposed in the May 21 Democratic primary election, but will again run against Manwaring in the Nov. 5 general election.
Manwaring said his experience, his Republican values and his ability to work with both political parties differentiate him from his opponent.
“What makes me different is while I believe in and strive to uphold the traditional values of the Idaho Republican Party, I also try to find a middle ground on issues and that means working with all sides of my party and across party lines to solve problems,” Manwaring said. “I believe it is a winning ingredient for a legislative district like mine. District 29’s leadership is comprised of both parties, and I have served as the sole Republican representative in this district since I was first elected in 2016.”
Shea said she is concerned that Republicans are “not allowed to think for themselves anymore,” adding that she is also concerned about public education and efforts to fix school maintenance issues and attempts to create school vouchers.
“The fastest and best way to turn things around in Idaho is to get more good Democrats in the seats,” Shea said.
Manwaring has taken notice of the increase in Democratic candidates filing for legislative offices this year, but he doesn’t think the increased number of candidates will flip any seats in the Idaho Legislature or shift the balance of power away from the Republican supermajority.
According to data obtained from the Idaho Secretary of State’s Office, the breakdown of candidates running in the general election for the Idaho Legislature has shifted over the years, for example:
- 2018: 102 Republicans, 61 Democrats
- 2020: 101 Republicans, 56 Democrats
- 2022: 105 Republicans, 45 Democrats
In the 2024 primary, there are 158 Republican candidates and 87 Democratic candidates running, according to candidate filings on the voteidaho.gov.
“My take on the numbers of candidates filing this year is the R’s are about average, or down very slightly, and the D’s have recruited substantially more candidates than usual to appear on the general election ballot,” Manwaring said. “I do not believe this will translate into more real competition in November because it does not change the demographic of electors who are likely to vote in each of the legislative districts.”
“Of course, there are always exceptions and if one party does not field a good candidate and there is an alternative available it is possible the race becomes more competitive,” Manwaring added. “I do not see this as likely to happen in any of the districts in Idaho that have not been historically competitive between the two major parties. I also believe the districts are getting more set in the Democrat ones being more solid blue and the Republican ones being more solid red as our state continues to add population with much of the migration coming into rural Idaho being conservative voters.”
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Idaho
Evacuations lifted as crews continue to battle Gap Fire near Pocatello
POCATELLO, Idaho — A wildfire sparked in Bannock County Sunday afternoon has burned 200 acres and is threatening structures, according to fire officials.
The fire is burning in an area between Pocatello and Inkom known as the Portneuf Gap, according to a news release from the Bureau of Land Management. The BLM is managing firefighting operations for the Gap Fire.
The release says some structures are threatened in “a small area west of Inkom” but did not say how many. Bannock County spokeswoman Emma Iannacone said an evacuation order for residents on Canyon Road was in place for a short time but was lifted about 7 p.m.
Evacuations have been ordered in the area, but a precise location was not immediately available.
Investigators have not determined the cause of the fire, though the BLM said it is burning through grass and brush. The agency did not have an estimated time of containment as of 5:15 p.m.
Several agencies, including U.S. Wildland Fire Service Great Basin Unit 3 -Idaho Falls and the U.S. Forest Service, are assisting with the effort to get control of the blaze. Watch Duty reported that the Forest Service is contributing its Helicopter Bucket Crew to the fight.
The wildfire was first reported at about 1:45 p.m. near the 6000 Block of W. Old Highway 91, fire officials said.
Idaho
Renewing a Sanctuary for Salmon and People
STORY AND PHOTOS BY KAREN BOSSICK
Greg McReynolds stood before the Sun Valley Forum and took his audience on a journey that began–not with dams or politics–but with volcanoes.
“The Idaho that you see is a marvel, but it wasn’t always like this,” said McReynolds, executive director of Idaho Rivers United.
Travel east from Sun Valley and you’ll hit Craters of the Moon, he explained. It’s only about 20,000 years old, and it reveals the bones of Idaho — a massive field of basalt, the leavings of ancient volcanoes and a magma sea where molten rock scratched a barren scar across the West from the Sierras to the Rockies.
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The Shoshone-Bannock still use traditional spears and other tools to fish near the present-day site of the Sawtooth Fish Hatchery. |
Then came salmon.
The nitrogen and carbon that built the forests surrounding the Wood River Valley came from salmon, McReynolds told the audience. Salmon that swam from Idaho to the Pacific Ocean where they gained strength and weight, then came home.
Millions of salmon for millions of years–so vast in number that their nutrients reside in every tree, every blade of grass, every insect, every animal — and even in those who now call Idaho home.
McReynolds, who grew up in Pocatello and spent a decade with Trout Unlimited, painted a picture of a species that has survived drought and flood, four glacial cycles and a time when the ocean was 100 meters lower than current sea level.
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These two attendees are celebrating Idaho salmon, which swim 900 miles, climbing 6,500 feet over eight dams and through eight reservoirs, to return to Idaho from the Pacific Ocean. |
Just north of Sun Valley, over Galena Summit, lies the headwaters of the Salmon River — the top end of the last best salmon habitat left in the Lower 48.
Scientists estimate that upwards of 16 million salmon used to swim up the Columbia River, and more than half returned to natal waters in the Snake Basin. Now, only a handful make it home each year.
“If you were to be there in August or September, a single redd would stand out like a beacon in the river,” McReynolds said. “You might see a massive female fanning the gravel into a nest for her eggs. You might stand in the willows and watch, lost in the thought of her incredible journey.”
The story of why so few wild fish remain is simple, he said. Four dams along the Lower Snake River in eastern Washington create a 140-mile chain of slack water. They allow fish passage, but they are particularly deadly to young salmon migrating downstream. The dams provide barging and some electricity, but they are driving the most important salmon run in the contiguous United States to extinction.
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In 1934, Idaho Fish and Game blew up the Sunbeam Dam east of Stanley to allow fish passage after the dam’s fish ladders fell into disrepair. |
McReynolds took his audience back to March 1945. American troops were still fighting in Europe and the Pacific, but the war’s end was in sight and Congress was starting to think about what came next.
Before the war, unemployment had topped 20 percent. The American war machine had built millions of tanks, guns, planes and ships but almost nothing for domestic use. With 7 million service members about to come home looking for work, Congress passed the Rivers and Harbors Act, authorizing construction of those four lower dams to create a chain of flat water extending 450 miles from the Columbia River to Lewiston, Id.
“The legislation aimed to create an inland port and generate electricity. But, in truth, the goal was not dams or electricity or ports,” McReynolds said. “The goal was jobs and progress.”
In 1945, less than half the homes west of the Mississippi had a telephone. In the Pacific Northwest, many rural areas were still using oil lamps. Many roads were still dirt.
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Fish can be seen in the Upper Salmon River as it runs near Stanley, but the prized red kokanee salmon are few and far between. |
The project, authorized in 1945 and completed in 1975, was built by men and women who were incredibly proud of their work, McReynolds said.
“They were not content to pass off oil lamps and dirt roads to their children and grandchildren,” he said. “They electrified the Northwest. They did not accept the status quo and they changed the world in ways that were wonderful and terrible.”
They brought jobs and power and an inland port. But wild salmon began a downward trajectory.
In the 50 years since completion of the Lower Snake dams, McReynolds said, Americans have continually lowered their expectations year by year, decade by decade, generation by generation until today, when catching a single wild steelhead or seeing a single wild Chinook spawning in the headwaters of the Salmon River bowls us over.
Wild salmon and steelhead have declined by 90 percent since the dams were completed. Snake River populations have continued to plummet despite $25 billion spent in mitigation by electric ratepayers.
“I’m going to say it again because it’s a big number,” McReynolds said. “Twenty-five billion dollars. And wild fish are still on a downward trajectory.”
Extinction has already claimed several populations and is assuredly coming for the remaining wild Snake River stocks, he said.
Congressionally authorized treaties of 1855 that guaranteed salmon to tribes are being violated, McReynolds said. Communities like Riggins and Salmon, Idaho, that once had thriving economies based around robust salmon returns are now a mere shadow of their potential.
A report from Headwaters Economics released earlier in the week showed that the economies of Lewiston and Clarkston, the inland port cities at the heart of the hydro system, are lagging behind the rest of the region. The industries most closely associated with the dams — shipping and agriculture — are declining, while those not reliant on the status quo are growing.
Meanwhile, the electricity from the dams is decreasing in volume and reliability. Long-term drought and needed flows for salmon mitigation are driving down power output. Over the last few years, the dams have averaged less than 700 megawatts of electrical output — less than a medium-sized solar facility, barely enough to run a large data center.
“In 1945, the Army Corps and Bonneville Power said they could overcome the impacts on salmon with hatcheries,” he said. “But in reality, the salmon were sacrificed for economic progress. And 90 years on, we can see that not only did we sacrifice salmon, but the economic boom didn’t last either.”
Idaho Rivers United and its partners are committed to not only removing the dams but replacing them with better, more modern solutions, he said.
“The Snake Basin isn’t just a salmon sanctuary,” he said. “It’s a people sanctuary too.”
McReynolds pointed to a proposal put forward by Republican Congressman Mike Simpson of Idaho, who envisioned a grand bargain: Dam removal paired with massive regional investment. Simpson proposed $150 million for waterfront redevelopment in Lewiston, $14 billion for power replacement, $2 billion for transmission upgrades, $1.2 billion for clean water and $4 billion for farmers’ transportation.
“These are the kinds of investments that changed the world 90 years ago,” McReynolds said.
Since the construction of the Lower Snake dams, McReynolds noted, we’ve put a man on the moon, mapped the human genome and witnessed the birth of the internet and artificial intelligence. The world is fundamentally changed.
“The Lower Four are an anchor holding us back,” McReynolds said. “The future is abundant electricity. The future is new modes of transportation. It is creating the kind of jobs that can’t be outsourced or done with AI. The future is once again investing in the infrastructure of tomorrow. And it is abundant salmon in Idaho.”
Idaho
One dead, four injured in US 26 crash near Ririe – East Idaho News
RIRIE — Idaho State Police is investigating a fatal two-vehicle crash that occurred Saturday afternoon on U.S. Highway 26 west of Ririe.
Troopers say the crash happened around 4:30 p.m. near milepost 349 on westbound U.S. Route 26, just south of Ririe.
A 2007 Toyota Tundra driven by a 37-year-old man from Ammon was pulling a utility trailer westbound, according to Idaho State Police. Three juveniles were also in the vehicle.
A 2017 Honda Accord, driven by a 44-year-old woman from Idaho Falls, was also traveling westbound when ISP says the driver attempted to make a left turn and was struck by the Toyota.
The driver of the Honda died at the scene from her injuries.
The driver of the Toyota and the three juvenile passengers were taken by ambulance to a local hospital. All occupants in the Toyota were wearing seatbelts. Authorities say the Honda driver was not wearing a seatbelt.
The westbound left lane was blocked for about three hours while investigators worked the scene.
The crash remains under investigation.
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