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.
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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)
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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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Utah
Therapy dogs offer a welcome break for firefighters battling Utah’s Iron, Cherry fires
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — After weeks of long days on the fire line, firefighters battling Utah’s Iron and Cherry fires received some four-legged support.
Golden Healers, a Utah nonprofit that provides therapy and service dogs, visited the wildfire base camp at the invitation of the incident management team, giving firefighters a chance to step away from the demands of the job, if only for a few minutes.
The certified therapy dogs spent time with crews in dining areas, gathering spaces and rest areas, where firefighters petted the dogs, took photos and talked about the pets waiting for them back home.
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“Our firefighters face tremendous physical and emotional demands every day,” said Mike Carlson, founder and CEO of Golden Healers. “Sometimes all it takes is a few minutes with a therapy dog to help someone relax, smile and reset before heading back to work. It was an honor to support these incredible men and women.”
The visit came as hundreds of firefighters continue working to contain the Iron and Cherry fires, which have burned tens of thousands of acres in central Utah.
Golden Healers brought several certified therapy dogs, including Golden Retrievers, doodles, poodles and a corgi. Each dog has completed specialized therapy training designed to help them remain calm in busy, high-stress environments.
Volunteers said the response from firefighters was immediate.
Crews who had spent hours battling wildfire conditions gathered around the dogs, laughing, sharing stories and enjoying a brief reminder of home before returning to their assignments.
One of the most memorable moments came when an entire firefighting crew surrounded one therapy dog, taking turns petting it while talking about their own dogs and families.
For a few minutes, conversations shifted away from fire behavior and operational briefings to life beyond the fire camp.
“Watching these firefighters light up the moment a dog walked over reminded us why therapy dogs are so important,” Carlson said. “These are people who dedicate their lives to protecting our communities, often while spending weeks away from their own families. If we can give them even a few minutes of comfort and emotional support, then we’ve accomplished something meaningful.”
Golden Healers hopes to continue visiting wildfire camps and other first responders across Utah. The nonprofit regularly provides therapy dog visits to hospitals, schools, law enforcement agencies, mental health providers and community organizations.
“Our mission has always been to improve lives through the healing power of dogs,” Carlson said. “Whether we’re helping a child with autism, supporting someone struggling with mental health, or bringing comfort to firefighters after a long shift, these dogs have an incredible ability to connect with people exactly when they need it most.”
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Washington
Colorado Democrats punish Washington ties in primaries
After DSA candidates roiled traditional Democrats with wins in New York City last week, Tuesday’s primary in a Denver-centered district tested whether the left wing’s appeal could prevail elsewhere.
It turns out the democratic socialists’ reach extends well beyond New York — and it may well grow before the year is out.
Melat Kiros, backed by the national Democratic Socialists of America and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, upset Rep. Diana DeGette, who has held her reliably blue seat for almost 30 years.
“What we’re seeing right now is the response to voters feeling like the party has not actually been fighting for working people,” Kiros told MS NOW last week.
The result is that Kiros, a critic of the Israeli government and high-ranking Democratic leaders, will likely be a member of Congress come next year. That happened even as DeGette cast the race as a warning, with President Donald Trump’s second term continuing to upend governance from the nation’s capital.
“Now is not the time to gamble and send somebody with no experience to Washington,” DeGette said during a recent candidate forum. “We need a strong, bold, hardened leader who will hold Trump accountable.”
The result was one of several Colorado results Tuesday to test incumbents or prominent statewide officials navigating a turbulent moment in Democratic politics — one in which voters have shown an appetite for untested fighters over familiar faces who’ve served in Washington’s halls of power.
The night’s theme wasn’t clear-cut; the three marquee races diverged on everything from ideology to questions of approach and clout. But each pitted an incumbent whose Congressional ties became fodder for a challenger.
In 2020, Democrats’ ability to woo former Gov. John Hickenlooper into the Senate race was seen as a boon for a party trying to unseat incumbent GOP Sen. Cory Gardner, one of the last Republicans left representing a blue state in the Senate. That move came after Hickenlooper’s 2020 presidential primary campaign fizzled. Even so, he faced a somewhat-competitive primary that year, taking 58.7% to his challenger’s 41.3%. Hickenlooper went on to win the seat that November by a little over nine points.
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