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In this episode of Idaho Pulse, host Bob Neugebauer interviews Ron Nate, president of the Idaho Freedom Foundation, who shares his cautious optimism about the 2025 legislative session. Nate highlights several key wins for conservatives including school choice legislation, DEI prohibition in universities, health freedom bill passage, and various tax cuts. He explains these victories came despite some setbacks, including continued budget growth and the failure to substantially reform Medicaid expansion.
Nate provides data-driven analysis showing how the legislature has improved, noting a net gain of 8 conservative legislators from the last election cycle, with 31 legislators now scoring A or B on the Freedom Index, up from just 20 previously. He explains that better legislation is now moving through the process, with the average rating of bills shifting from slightly negative (-0.13) to slightly positive (+0.16), resulting in more conservative policy wins.
The conversation turns to challenges including the new lobbying legislation that broadens the definition of lobbying to include indirect advocacy, potentially affecting organizations like the Gem State Patriot. They discuss Boise’s mayor defying the flag law prohibiting pride flags at government buildings, expressing frustration at the lack of penalties in the law. Nate concludes with concern about special interest influence from data centers being built in Idaho, cautioning about water and power resource impacts while emphasizing the need to avoid government favoritism through tax incentives.
Looking ahead to 2026, Nate expresses optimism about continuing to elect more conservative legislators, building on recent primary victories where establishment Republicans lost to more conservative challengers. He warns conservative organizations against infighting, stressing the importance of maintaining a united front to preserve and strengthen the “freedom infrastructure” that led to this year’s successes.
01:19 Introduction to Ron Nate and the Legislative Session
By Bob NeugebauerIn this episode of Idaho Pulse, host Bob Neugebauer interviews Ron Nate, president of the Idaho Freedom Foundation, who shares his cautious optimism about the 2025 legislative session. Nate highlights several key wins for conservatives including school choice legislation, DEI prohibition in universities, health freedom bill passage, and various tax cuts. He explains these victories came despite some setbacks, including continued budget growth and the failure to substantially reform Medicaid expansion.
Nate provides data-driven analysis showing how the legislature has improved, noting a net gain of 8 conservative legislators from the last election cycle, with 31 legislators now scoring A or B on the Freedom Index, up from just 20 previously. He explains that better legislation is now moving through the process, with the average rating of bills shifting from slightly negative (-0.13) to slightly positive (+0.16), resulting in more conservative policy wins.
The conversation turns to challenges including the new lobbying legislation that broadens the definition of lobbying to include indirect advocacy, potentially affecting organizations like the Gem State Patriot. They discuss Boise’s mayor defying the flag law prohibiting pride flags at government buildings, expressing frustration at the lack of penalties in the law. Nate concludes with concern about special interest influence from data centers being built in Idaho, cautioning about water and power resource impacts while emphasizing the need to avoid government favoritism through tax incentives.
Looking ahead to 2026, Nate expresses optimism about continuing to elect more conservative legislators, building on recent primary victories where establishment Republicans lost to more conservative challengers. He warns conservative organizations against infighting, stressing the importance of maintaining a united front to preserve and strengthen the “freedom infrastructure” that led to this year’s successes.
01:19 Introduction to Ron Nate and the Legislative Session