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PODCAST: Idaho’s Immigration, School Choice & Medicaid Fights

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This episode is a wide-ranging conservative survey of the Idaho fights shaping the current political cycle — a tour through immigration, education, the state budget, and a coming abortion ballot measure, framed around a single question: who is really paying, and who is really benefiting.

It opens on illegal immigration and public safety before making its case for why several immigration bills died in the legislature, pointing to a senator who allegedly held bills in committee and to agricultural interests it blames for protecting cheap labor. From there the discussion widens to corporate influence and term limits, voter disengagement, a call to defund the State Library Commission over Pride programming, and the costs of public education — administrative salaries, a student-proficiency gap, and the case for school choice and the $5,000 education tax credit.

The budget thread runs deepest on Medicaid, which the episode traces from a 1966 afterthought to the state’s largest appropriation at over $5 billion. Borrowing Milton Friedman’s framework on spending other people’s money, the discussion argues that programs like this expand because those authorizing the spending bear none of the cost and collect all of the credit — a logic it then extends to COVID-era dollars and rising healthcare costs.

The closing stretch turns to a coming Idaho abortion ballot measure, cast as a national turning point worth a unified conservative response, and to the campaign spending the episode says is used to mislead voters. It ends with an invitation to an Idaho Freedom Foundation fundraising dinner and a promise to take up Idaho’s energy debate next time. Throughout, contested claims about named officials, agencies, and organizations are the show’s arguments rather than verified fact.

0:01 Welcome and Tea Party Roots

The episode opens with introductions and a bit of shared history in the early Tea Party movement before turning to the day’s lineup of Idaho policy fights.

0:50 Illegal Immigration and Public Safety

The policy slate opens on illegal immigration and public safety, citing a social-media post about a fatal drunk-driving crash and other incidents the discussion ties to illegal immigration. The argument is a rule-of-law one: that people in the state illegally have already broken the law and should be removed or held accountable, and that Idahoans’ safety shouldn’t be the price of inaction. The incidents are recounted as the episode’s cited claims, not verified fact.

2:49 Why Idaho’s Immigration Bills Stalled

The episode makes its case for why immigration bills keep dying in the legislature, charging that Senator Jim Guthrie held three bills — some already passed by the House — in committee, and that statewide officials and agricultural interests have shielded illegal immigration to protect cheap labor. It alleges retaliation against conservatives who pushed back, including against one ousted official’s family and business, and warns of a chilling effect on future candidates. These are the episode’s characterizations of named officials and groups, not established fact.

7:46 Corporate Capture, RINOs and Term Limits

The conversation widens from immigration to the machinery of Idaho politics, arguing that lawmakers answer to corporate and agricultural lobbies rather than ordinary citizens and that establishment money targets conservatives because they “suffer by comparison.” The segment makes the case for term limits and points to a hypocrisy it sees in “buy Idaho” farm messaging that still leans on out-of-state labor.

11:29 Voters Who Don’t Know Their Representatives

The discussion turns to civic disengagement, with anecdotes about residents who can’t name their state representatives and last-minute voters who phone for guidance on Election Day. A homeowners-association vote — fewer than 180 ballots returned out of 508, many from owners living out of state — stands in for the broader apathy the episode blames for entrenched incumbents.

13:22 Pride, the Libraries and Defunding the Library Commission

Reacting to a social-media post about Pride programming in the Boise library system, the episode calls on the legislature to zero out the State Library Commission’s appropriation and to repeal the statutes that allow library taxing districts. The argument links that proposal to property-tax relief and to what the discussion frames as protecting children and notes similar tensions reaching smaller Idaho towns.

16:37 Administrative Bloat and the Proficiency Gap

On education spending, the episode points to administrative growth — citing a West Ada superintendent’s salary said to start near a quarter-million dollars and 147 separate districts — against scores it puts at under a third of students proficient in math and reading. It contrasts that roughly 32% student proficiency with teacher-performance ratings near 98–99%, which the discussion blames on evaluators reluctant to grade down colleagues. The figures and salary claims are the episode’s; verify before publishing.

20:14 School Choice and the Education Tax Credit

The proposed remedy is expanding school choice — private, micro- and home-school options — with money following students rather than the system. The episode sets the $5,000 education tax credit against a roughly $13,000 per-pupil public cost, frames the credit as taxes a family simply doesn’t pay rather than a payout, and argues the current $50 million cap (about 10,000 of some 368,000 students) should grow as public budgets shrink with enrollment. The dollar figures here are the episode’s.

25:05 Medicaid as Idaho’s Budget Leviathan

The episode traces Medicaid in Idaho to a 1966 special-session afterthought, pitched as a low-cost, mostly federal program, and follows it to its present standing as the state’s single largest appropriation at over $5 billion. The point runs past the dollar figure to the structure: citing a recently posted Idaho Freedom Foundation article, the discussion frames such programs as self-perpetuating — once established they expand through inflationary federal spending and a growing state match, with no built-in brake. The $5 billion figure and historical account are the episode’s.

28:18 Four Ways to Spend Money and the 2014 Expansion

Invoking Milton Friedman’s “four ways to spend money,” the episode frames runaway spending as a problem of incentives rather than bad actors: when officials spend other people’s money on other people and collect the credit, there’s every reason to overspend and overstate results and none to count the cost. It applies that lens to the 2014 Medicaid expansion — attributed here to a bloc of “liberal Republicans” the discussion says now downplay their votes — and to a state budget it claims has doubled in recent years. The vote attribution and budget claim are the episodes.

31:21 Abortion Heads to the Idaho Ballot

Looking to the general election, the episode casts a coming Idaho abortion ballot measure as a national turning point — the “last great battleground” after similar measures passed in other red states. It calls on conservative and pro-life groups to unite not just to defeat the measure but to build a lasting movement, and predicts millions in outside spending against an effort it expects to be heavily outspent. The framing here is the episode’s advocacy, not neutral reporting.

34:01 The Money Spent to Deceive Voters

This segment turns to campaign spending, describing a flood of glossy primary mailers and ads the episode says are designed to deceive and confuse voters. As an example it points to a child-welfare bill, claiming opponents were falsely painted as against protecting children — and goes further, alleging the bill would have let state agencies remove healthy children from fit parents for financial gain. That last allegation about a named state function is the episode’s contested claim and is flagged for verification.

35:25 Subsidies, COVID Billions and the Cost of Care

A shared principle drives this stretch: subsidize a thing and you get more of it. The episode runs it from a claimed per-student payment for ADD diagnoses through the federal dollars poured into hospitals and insurers during COVID, arguing that money built systems that now must be sustained and that bankroll ever-pricier campaigns. It lands on healthcare costs — pointing to St. Luke’s, traveling nurses, and long waits — with the structural claim that more dollars chasing the same services simply raises prices rather than expanding care. The hospital figures and characterizations are the episodes.

38:42 Closing: Event Invitation and Sign-Off

The episode closes with an invitation to a July 18 “Something to Stand For” dinner in Boise — a fundraiser tied to America’s 250th, with announced speakers from the Babylon Bee and the “Let Women Speak” campaign and tickets via IdahoFreedom.org. A promise to take up Idaho’s energy debate in a future conversation rounds out the sign-off.

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