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Behind the curtain: The discrediting of conscience in Idaho politics

GUEST OPINION

EDITOR’S NOTE: Rep Mark Sauter and Sen. Jim Wooward represent west Bonner County in the state legislature.

In the quiet corners of Idaho — Bonner and Boundary counties — where neighbors wave from passing cars and acknowledging neighbors still matters, something unsettling has taken root. The handshake, once a symbol of trust, is now shadowed by ideological scorecards. A new playbook is unfolding, and the rules are being written in rooms most Idahoans will never enter.

The stories of Republicans Rep. Mark Sauter and Sen. Jim Woodward are not isolated tales of political contest. They are warnings. Warnings of what happens when conscience is punished, and control becomes the highest value.

Manufactured dissent and the illusion of betrayal Take the Bonner County Republican Central Committee’s vote of no confidence in Sauter. Was it about performance? Principle? Or was it a choreographed act of party purification— a signal to those who think for themselves that deviation will be punished?

Sauter supported education funding, common- sense health care provisions, and resisted attempts to censor libraries. Woodward stood firm on abortion exceptions, budget transparency and a consistent approach to civic policy. Yet both were vilified. Not by the general public, but by operatives who frame moderation as betrayal.

“This is not about public service — it’s about ideological obedience.”

The machinery behind the message

These attacks don’t form in daylight. They emerge from back rooms and obscure donor rolls. The Idaho Freedom Foundation and its affiliate Idaho Freedom Action function as ideological enforcers — not just issuing policy positions, but publishing scorecards, endorsing primary challengers and drowning elections in hyperbole.

Behind them stand shadow networks like Donors Trust and the State Policy Network — national groups that shield billionaire backers and fund far-right campaigns across the country. Their goal isn’t better Idaho policy. It’s control. If a candidate like Sauter or Woodward won’t follow the script, the machine finds someone who will — and funds them to the hilt.

I call that “dark money governance,” and that’s exactly what it is — unelected influence in a state that prides itself on sovereignty.

Ideology over Idaho

The talking points? “Freedom.” “Choice.” “Constitutional conservatism.” But the actions tell another story — defunding public education, dismantling social services and redirecting taxpayer dollars to private interests.

Scott Herndon’s campaign against Woodward was a case study in distortion: twisting nuanced votes into political grenades, vilifying civility as weakness. Now the same tactics are being aimed at Sauter: cherry-picked votes framed as betrayals, balanced decisions distorted into dogma.

In past editorials on political extremism I called this what it truly is: “ideological colonization.” The scripts aren’t written in Idaho — they’re imported.

The cost of conscience

And still, these men stand. Woodward didn’t hide from his critics — he met them, clarified his views and continued serving. Sauter ran without the local GOP’s endorsement — and won. Neither man surrendered principle for praise.

They remind us of what governance used to mean: showing up, listening, deciding with care. It isn’t always flashy, but it’s real. It’s Idaho.

As it has been said before, “Leadership isn’t loud — it’s loyal to the people, not the platform.”

A call to clarity

Idaho now faces a choice. Not between left and right, but between reality and rhetoric. Will we elevate those who serve quietly and thoughtfully? Or will we hand the reins to operatives who answer only to distant donors and unforgiving dogma?

The attacks on Mark Sauter and Jim Woodward are more than politics — they are philosophical ruptures. We must decide whether our communities deserve representatives who think and feel — or only those who comply.

Let us not confuse volume with virtue. The loudest voices may not speak for the people — they may speak for the strings being pulled behind them.

And in that clarity, we just might reclaim the Idaho we know.

DARRELL KERBY IS A FORMER MAYOR OF BONNERS FERRY, IDAHO.


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