Connect with us

Idaho

Smaller Idaho GOP committee to play larger role selecting national delegates

Published

on

Smaller Idaho GOP committee to play larger role selecting national delegates



Thanks to a series of deadline issues, the responsibility for selecting about 20% of the delegates to the Republican National Convention that normally fell to a broad group of Republicans at the state convention will now be handled by a much smaller executive committee chaired by Idaho Republican Party Chairwoman Dorothy Moon.

The delegates will be sent to the July 15 Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, which is where the Republican Party is expected to officially nominate its candidate for president. 

Advertisement

The Idaho Republican Party’s 17-member executive committee, of which Moon is the chair, is scheduled to confirm the delegates during a meeting at 11 a.m. Saturday at Crane Creek Country Club in Boise, according to two Idaho Republican party officials and documents obtained by the Idaho Capital Sun. 

In past presidential election cycles, hundreds of Republicans who attended the state convention as state delegates got to vote on selecting the delegates to the national convention. 

Part of the issue is that because the Republican Party does not control the White House, its national convention will be held first this year. The issue arises with Rule 16 from the Rules of the Republican Party. That rule states, in part, that no primary election, caucus or convention for selecting delegates to the national convention shall occur “less than 45 days before the national convention is scheduled to begin.”

The Republican National Convention is scheduled to begin July 15, which means the deadline to select delegates is May 31. The problem is the Idaho GOP Convention doesn’t begin until June 13, well after the Republican Party’s deadline to name delegates.

In a written statement to the Idaho Capital Sun, Moon and Brent Regan, the rules committee chairman, said the Idaho Republican Party made new rules to respond to the deadline issue and is following those new rules.

Advertisement

“We have gone through a very deliberate process sanctioned by the RNC,” Moon wrote. 

Regan also wrote that Moon will vote only to break a tie on the executive committee and does not have the authority to pick any delegates by herself.

“The chairman does not have the authority or mechanism to select ANY of the delegates,” Regan wrote, capitalizing the word “any” to add emphasis. “A review of party rules will show that whoever claims otherwise is either ignorant or malicious.”

Why does it matter who picks delegates for the national GOP convention?

Idaho gets 32 delegates at the Republican National Convention this year, and being a delegate is a big deal in political circles. National conventions can feature a roaring, party-like atmosphere that is televised nationally, where delegates would typically cheer on a series of high profile speeches from the party’s A-listers and rising stars and then hear directly from the party’s nominees for president and vice president. 

Advertisement

“If you like politics, it’s a great place to be and be participating,” said Cindy Siddoway, who represents Idaho on the Republican National Committee and has participated in multiple Republican national conventions. 

“It does cost to go, but it is a wonderful opportunity to participate in history,” Siddoway added. 

The change in selecting delegates is happening as some longtime Republican officials say Moon and her supporters are purging officials from the Republican Party who do not fall in line and agree with them. For example, during the Idaho Republican Party’s 2023 summer meeting in Challis, the party stripped executive committee voting rights from the Idaho Federation of Republican Women, the Idaho Young Republicans and the Idaho College Republicans. That’s the same executive committee that is being asked to sign off on the new delegates to the Republican National Convention.  

Although the Idaho Republican Party’s executive committee is going to consider confirming the list of delegates Saturday, two Republican officials — Region Six vice chair Trent Clark, who is a former chairman of the Idaho Republican Party, and Siddoway, told the Sun on Tuesday they have not yet seen the list of delegates. 

“The selection of delegates needs to follow the rules,” Clark said in an interview Tuesday. “For 137 years, we’ve been having our convention to name our delegates, even before we were a state.”

Advertisement

Siddoway said she has always known delegates to be picked at the state convention, which she supported. 

“In my knowledge, it has never ever been done this way, but they are trying to meet all of the deadlines,” Siddoway told the Sun. 

“I wish we could have done it through a convention the way we normally do,” Siddoway added.

Six other Idaho Republican officials expressed concern about the delegate selection issue in a March 26 letter that was sent to Idaho Republican Party Treasurer Steve Bender and obtained by the Sun.

In the letter, the six Idaho GOP officials said they have a duty to make an inquiry “when a problem exists or a report on its face does not make sense,” citing the Idaho attorney general’s office’s guidance for nonprofit board membership. In their letter, the six officials said the early deadline issue was a topic of a discussion at a January 2023 Republican National Committee meeting held in Dana Point, California, which would have given Moon and Idaho Republican Party officials 18 months to come up with a plan to move up the state primary election and state convention. 

Advertisement

“Several states, and the District of Columbia, consulted with the (Republican National Committee) at the Dana Point meeting to resolve early deadline challenges,” the six GOP officials wrote, before switching to all capital letters in the next sentence. “WHY DIDN’T IDAHO?”

The six Idaho Republicans who signed the letter were state committeewoman Marsha Bjornn from Madison County, state committeewoman Shellie Blanchard from Fremont County, Bannock County Chair Char Tovey, Jefferson County Chair Kaye Field, Caribou County youth committee chair Christin Clark and Clark County Chair Connie Barg.

In his written statement Regan, the GOP rules committee chair, said the Idaho Republican Party’s state convention is as early as it practically can be. Part of the reason is because of how political parties are made up. The Republican Party’s county central committees are responsible for sending delegates to the state convention. But the county central committees are made up of locally elected precinct committeemen, who are elected in the primary election every two years. The date of the primary election is May 21 this year, and there was not enough time to allow the new precinct committeeman to take office, organize at the county central committee level, select delegates to the state convention and have the state convention begin before the May 31 deadline to select delegates for the national convention.

“We discussed the 45-day (May 31) deadline for submitting delegates with the RNC, but they were unable to accommodate a delay due to the need to conduct background checks and other security measures,” Regan wrote. “If we miss the deadline we lose all but 12 of our delegates (under) RNC Rule 17a. Clearly, moving the primary and or moving the convention to an earlier date is not practical.”

Why is there an early deadline for naming delegates to the Republican National Convention?

Advertisement

Most of Idaho’s delegates were already picked by former President Donald Trump who Idaho Republican Party officials said won the March 2 Idaho Republican Presidential Caucus. 

But the party does get to pick about 20% of the delegates. This year, that includes six delegates that are split between the state’s two congressional districts. Normally, those are the delegates that would be selected by a broad group of Republicans at the state convention, if not for the 45-day deadline. 

For example, the 2021 version of the Idaho Republican Party’s rules states that the remaining 20% of delegates are selected by the nominating committee at the Idaho State Republican Convention, where they are voted on on the floor. 

Idaho state law also states that at the state party conventions, each political party may “in the year of presidential elections … elect delegates to the national convention in the manner prescribed by national party rules …” 

But faced with the deadline issue, the Idaho Republican Party’s state central committee changed its rules for nominating delegates instead of pushing for an earlier primary election and an earlier state convention to meet the 45-day deadline. 

Advertisement

The latest version of the Idaho Republican Party’s rules, adopted in January, says that rather than selecting the remaining 20% of delegates at the convention, the nominations committee of the Idaho Republican Party will select the delegates, which “shall be confirmed at a special meeting of the executive committee.” The new rule also states the Idaho Republican Party chairman, who is Moon, will serve as the delegation chairman responsible for sending the list of delegates, alternates and guests to Republican national party headquarters by the deadlines unless the delegation selects a different chairman based on a majority vote.



Source link

Idaho

Big Sky tournament: No. 1 Idaho too much for Weber State in middle quarters

Published

on

Big Sky tournament: No. 1 Idaho too much for Weber State in middle quarters


1 / 8

Weber State guard Lanae Billy (32) drives against Idaho’s Ana Pinheiro in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

2 / 8

Advertisement

Weber State’s Antoniette Emma-Nnopu (7) eyes an entry pass to Nicole Willardson (25) as Idaho’s Kyra Gardner (3) defends in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

3 / 8

Weber State guard Hannah Robbins, right, drives past Idaho’s Ana Pinheiro in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

Advertisement

4 / 8

Weber State guard Fui Niumeitolu (12) lofts a floater over Idaho’s Kyra Gardner (3) in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

5 / 8

Weber State guard Sydney White (22) tries to set up a play against Idaho’s Ella Uriarte (5) in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

Advertisement

6 / 8

Weber State guard Lanae Billy (32) shoots against Idaho’s Kyra Gardner (3) in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

7 / 8

Weber State guard Lanae Billy gets back on defense after making a 3-pointer against Idaho in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics

Advertisement

8 / 8

Weber State forward Arizana Peaua (11) shoots over Idaho’s Debora dos Santos in the women’s Big Sky tournament quarterfinals Sunday, March 8, 2026, at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Ava Nash, for WSU Athletics


Weber State women’s basketball showed plenty of fight but Idaho showed why it’s the No. 1 team in the Big Sky on Sunday afternoon.

Using middle-quarter dominance, Idaho built a 21-point lead through three quarters and had enough cushion to withstand a big Weber State push on the way to a 66-52 victory in the Big Sky tournament quarterfinals at Idaho Central Arena in Boise.

Weber State (11-22) got 14 points apiece from its two seniors each putting a cap on their two-year stint in Ogden. Guard Lanae Billy and forward Antoniette Emma-Nnopu each tallied 14, with Emma-Nnopu adding seven rebounds and four assists.

Advertisement

Junior post Nicole Willardson totaled 10 points and a career-high 11 rebounds for the Wildcats. Those three players combined to shoot 9 of 17 from the 3-point line.

A back-and-forth first quarter bled into the start of the second quarter when Willardson made a 3 to put WSU ahead 15-14. But Idaho’s pressure began to wear on Weber, with the Vandals (27-5) keeping the Wildcats from quality shots while beginning to dominate the post.

Idaho paint players Debora dos Santos and Lorena Barbosa combined for 12 points in the frame; the Vandals outscored WSU 22-6 after Willardson’s 3 and took a 36-21 lead into halftime when WSU left Barbosa open for a straightaway 3 at the horn.

“They were a lot more aggressive this go-round. They really cranked it up, they were denying up on us … they just really sped us up first half, is what it felt like,” WSU head coach Jenteal Jackson said. “We went into a little more iso ball, which is not typical of us. Just needed to slow down, take a breath, run our offense and run a bunch of our actions that we needed to make them guard.”

The third quarter was much of the same. Idaho guard Ana Beatriz Passos Alves da Silva knocked down a 3 to give the Vandals a 54-30 lead with 30 seconds left in the quarter.

Advertisement

Emma-Nnopu ended the quarter with one of her three 3s, though, and unknowingly began a 20-6 run for Weber State. WSU burst out of the final break with a pair of buckets to precede a Willardson 3, then a Sydney White steal leading to a Billy triple seven seconds later. That made it 56-43 with 7:30 left.

Later, White made a 3, then another steal led White to find a rolling Arizana Peaua for a layup to cut the score to 60-50 with 4:00 remaining.

WSU’s gas ran out there, though. Hope Hassmann drove for a bucket on one of Idaho’s 17 offensive rebounds to all but put the game away at 65-50 with 3:00 left on the clock.

Hassmann and Kyra Gardner each also scored 14 to lead Idaho, with Hassmann adding six assists and five rebounds. Ana Pinheiro and dos Santos each scored 12 points.

Idaho advances to play Tuesday, facing the winner of Monday’s game between Idaho State and Sacramento State.

Advertisement

After starting Big Sky play with nine straight losses, WSU finished by winning four of six before the defeat to Idaho, but finished in ninth place.

Weber turns to next season returning five scholarship juniors while replacing the two seniors. WSU lost three players before the season began with knee injuries.

“It’s always tough when kids who are really playing well and peaking are done. It’s been a joy to coach them,” Jackson said of the seniors. “We’re going to miss them a lot.”

Copyright © 2026 Ogden Newspapers of Utah, LLC | www.standard.net | 332 Standard Way, Ogden, UT 84404

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Idaho

Big Idaho Potato Truck Tour brings four-ton spud to Grand Junction

Published

on

Big Idaho Potato Truck Tour brings four-ton spud to Grand Junction


Throughout the afternoon and evening Tuesday in Grand Junction, bewildered drivers on North Avenue pulled over into the Texas Roadhouse parking lot to gawk at a giant potato.

The Big Idaho Potato Truck rolled into town as part of its 35-state national tour promoting Famous Idaho Potatoes. Upon the trailer sits a four-ton, 13-foot-tall, 10-foot-wide potato, impossible not to see for passersby.

Famous Idaho Potatoes won’t say whether the titanic tater is actually real — just that it would take 7,000 years to actually grow a spud this spectacular, one that’s the equivalent of one million french fries or 20,217 servings of mashed potatoes. They prefer to leave it up to each person whether they believe that much effort and time have actually been spent on one potato.

“We gracefully embark on a seven-month-long journey across the U.S. promoting Idaho potatoes and representing over 700 family-owned farms,” said Jenna, a Famous Idaho Potatoes brand ambassador traveling with the prodigious potato. “We do numerous types of events. (On Wednesday), we’re headed to Colorado Springs to another Texas Roadhouse. We also do NASCAR events and parades. We’ll be at the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Atlanta. We’re doing the Fourth of July in Philadelphia for the 250th year of America. We’ll be returning home in September.”

Advertisement

This is the 14th cross-country trip for the voluminous vegetable, and the second for Jenna. The truck has been to all 50 states, even being shipped to Hawaii for five weeks in 2024. It’s also been in Canada.

“It was only projected to be one year to celebrate the Idaho Potato Commission’s 75th year, and there was a postcard that had a big potato on it, being hauled just like this,” Jenna said. “Someone came up with the idea of, ‘Let’s make that real!’ It became so popular that, now, it’s on its 14th journey. We hope to continue doing it and continue bringing smiles and potatoes.”

Each year, the massive Murphy’s route is determined by a tour director based in Boise. There are many eight-hour driving days between locations. The Tater Team that transports the Big Idaho Potato must always be vigilant about weather conditions, as well.

“We try to stay primarily East Coast, just because Idaho needs some representation around there,” Jenna said. “We don’t really get to do a lot of home-base activities, but it’s fun. It’s a journey.”

Grand Junction was chosen as a stop this year because it was along the route. Merchandise and swag were provided inside the Texas Roadhouse, including stickers, memorabilia, lanyards, and a station to craft porcupines using potatoes, sunflower seeds, googly eyes and glue.

Advertisement

Sometimes, the Big Idaho Potato Truck Tour works with food banks in the markets it visits, presenting them with checks. No such collaboration took place with this Grand Junction visit, but Jenna said such charity could work out when the truck returns to town — potentially on its way back to Idaho later in the year.

Jenna said the sight of confused and amused people discovering the enormous earth apple is a constant source of joy.

“It surprisingly never gets old,” she said. “Even getting gasoline is a whole thing. It takes about 20 minutes to hand out those stickers and pens, and people have questions and want to take pictures. No matter where we stop, we want people to have a great experience.”



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Idaho

JFAC approves Idaho National Guard education funding

Published

on

JFAC approves Idaho National Guard education funding


BOISE — The Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee voted Friday to partially restore funding to the Idaho National Guard’s education reimbursement program. The near-unanimous vote arrives after the body twice voted against making the reimbursement funding available but failed to come to a consensus on Idaho Military Division enhancements.

With this matter unresolved, JFAC once again took up the issue of funding for the National Guard’s State Education Assistance Program (SEAP), which provides enlisted soldiers and airmen up to $8,000 per year for tuition and fees at Idaho institutions.

Rep. James Petzke, R-Meridian — who has repeatedly voiced support for restoring the reimbursement funding — brought forward the motion Friday to provide a general fund enhancement of $190,800 to SEAP for fiscal year 2027. This amount allows the program to maintain 69% of funding, up from the 39% it would have been reduced to as a result of JFAC’s 5% cuts for next fiscal year.

Though the vote sailed through without comment from committee members Friday, Petzke has couched the funding as necessary as Idaho lags behind neighboring states (including Oregon, Washington and Utah), which each offer 100% tuition reimbursement through their own education programs.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending