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Posts published in “Idaho”

Conflicts of interest

This comparison and contrast between Idahoans and their leaders isn’t new in principle, but it’s worth reiterating as the Idaho state government sets about its annual goal setting in the form of the Idaho Legislature.

Every year, for many years now, and generally toward the start of the legislative session, the Idaho Public Policy Survey is released at Boise State University. It is a poll of Idaho’s people about a wide range of public issues.

The survey was conducted by GS Strategy Group; if you wonder (as I do) about how such a survey is conducted these days, GS reported that 38% was done by cell phone, 11% by landline phones, 40% online and 11% by text message. It was conducted in the first part of November.

Its top line was a reversal of the previous year, as respondents found Idaho is moving in the right direction - although what that means exactly isn’t especially clear. Two different people might say, for example, “right direction,” and mean wholly different things by it.

Most of the rest of the findings were more specific and less ambiguous, and very much in line with findings from previous years, which lends some strength to their plausibility. Here are the report’s “key findings” (the whole list) on issues:

“For the second consecutive year, workforce and affordable housing is Idahoans’ top overall legislative budget priority.

“Increased teacher pay is Idahoans’ top education budget priority.

“A majority of Idahoans say they oppose (53%) the use of tax dollars to pay for a private or religious school.

“Nearly half of Idahoans (49%) say access to health care is difficult in the state.

“39% of Idahoans say increasing the number of immigrants helps Idaho’s economy, but that proportion grows to 46% when discussing legal immigrants specifically.

“A majority of Idahoans (55%) believe that abortion should be permitted in Idaho through at least the first trimester. A majority (64%) also believe that exceptions for abortion access should be expanded.

“A majority of Idahoans (51%) have concerns about the security of elections in the United States, but less than a quarter (22%) have concerns about the security in Idaho itself.

“A majority of Idahoans are concerned about campaign spending by independent groups in Idaho.”

That sounds not only very different from the high priorities of the Idaho Legislature, it sounds directly in contradiction to them.

Many states (Oregon, California and Washington among them) are spending much of their legislative effort on housing. (A suggestion: Check out what other state legislatures are doing, since most of them are meeting by this time of year. What are they dealing with? Some, you will find, are very like Idaho, and others are highly different.) How successful those efforts will be is unknown, but they’re trying. It’s not a top priority at the Idaho Legislature. Neither is homelessness, which is a big topic elsewhere in western states.

Attitudes toward abortion and immigration clearly are very different statewide than at the Statehouse. Idahoans generally do not seem comfortable with the how-absolute-can-we-make-our-abortion-ban approach at the legislature.

Health care access in Idaho - which by any reasonable standard is one of the top problems in Idaho right now - obviously registers as a serious matter for many Idahoans. You’ll not find a lot of action in that area at the legislature, which in recent years has gone out of its way to make the problem worse.

Most Idahoans say they’re concerned about the massively-rising levels of campaign spending by independent (often out of state) groups in Idaho elections, including but not exclusively legislative elections. Expect the sound of crickets about that at the Statehouse.

Idaho’s legislators aren’t acting in secret. There are plenty of ways Idahoans actually can track, in detail and even in real time, the actions of their lawmakers at Boise. Few seem to do it. Probably few even know who their legislator is (except that, for nearly everyone, it’s an “R”).

That’s the simplest straight-line explanation of why so many legislators get so easily re-elected. Doing the will of the people doesn’t really seem to explain it.

 

Not a SLAPP

The first Senate bill of the new legislative session offers something to ponder: The political backdrop and connections of the sponsors as opposed to what the bill actually does, which appears to be highly positive.

Senate Bill 1001 is described by its backers as a freedom of speech measure, but more specifically it provides a mechanism for “swiftly dismissing meritless Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, ensuring public engagement and expression on matters of societal or community interest not stifled by legal intimidation.”

A SLAPP is a legal action, usually undertaken by a well-funded person who has plenty of money to spend on lawyers, to attack someone else for marginal or no good reasons when they speak out on an issue of public concern. Wikipedia describes such suits as “lawsuits intended to censor, intimidate, and silence critics by burdening them with the cost of a legal defense until they abandon their criticism or opposition.”

SLAPPs are a real problem, in Idaho and nationally, and these sorts of lawsuits have popped up in Idaho in recent years; some have generated statewide headlines.

Laws comparable to this bill are on the books in 34 states and the District of Columbia. Washington, Oregon, Nevada and California have had anti-SLAPP laws on the books for years. The Institute for Free Speech currently gives Idaho an “F” grade on its lack of an anti-SLAPP law.

The new Idaho bill would allow a defendant, within 60 days after a suit is filed, to seek dismissal of the case if it’s not strong enough, and stay actions until or unless the judge concludes the case does pass muster. It’s a simple approach but could choke some damaging legal maneuvers in the meantime. It would be a big improvement over existing Idaho law.

The political positioning of SB 1001’s backers, Nampa Senator Brian Lenney (who also pressed a similar failed measure in the 2024 measure)  and Representative Heather Scott of Blanchard, both Republicans, is a little less clear. Both have been close to a number of the Republican activists and interest groups involved with lawsuits of this kind in recent times.

One of the people caught up in one of those legal conflicts is Gregory Graf, an Idaho blogger and political activist, who has conflicted with some of the people now backing the bill. And he adds, in a detailed online post (at https://idaho.politicalpotatoes.com/p/idaho-needs-good-faith-anti-slapp, and which I won’t try to parse here) about the background of the bill, that, “It’s hard to ignore the irony of Lenney’s sudden interest in curbing the very tool his allies have wielded for years.”

So what about the bill?

Graf made clear he would like to see and would better trust a SLAPP bill coming from a different source, but concluded, “This bill may pass, and if it does, Idaho will finally have protections against SLAPP lawsuits.

As Lenney said in asking for support for the bill, “Good people don’t deserve to get buried for exercising their First Amendment rights.”

That would seem to be the bottom line, even if there are some questions about how and why this one specifically came to be.

There are larger issues here too about how our legal system works: Clearly, there are bugs in the system. The anti-SLAPP laws don’t solve the underlying problems, but they do help protect against some of the worst immediate abuses.

It isn’t perfect (few bills are), and its use probably eventually ought to be expanded beyond the relatively narrow reach it has at present. It does say it should be “broadly construed and applied to protect the exercise of the right of freedom of speech and of the press, the right to assemble and petition, and the right of association, guaranteed by the constitution of the United States and the constitution of the state of Idaho.”

The details should get close legal analysis. But if it’s as described, it’s a good bill and should pass.

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It’s about the money

The standard Idaho political rhetoric speaks of “school choice” - which sounds wonderful, doesn’t it? - and in his state of the state speech, Governor Brad Little added to that with the descriptor “education freedom.”

The suggestion underlying that language is that public education is somehow oppressing Idahoans, that what’s being pursued here is the ability to pursue non-public school options for education. That construct is a crock. Idahoans, like people in other states, have and always have had the ability to educate children in private schools or at home. The choice is and has been theirs. That’s unchanged. And no one is talking about changing it.

So what is “school choice/education freedom” about?

It’s about the money. Watch the money, in the session ahead, as legislators prepare to shift a large chunk of it - the debate likely will center on how much and when, more than if it happens - away from public schools to, well, somewhere else.

After all, roughly half of the general fund budget in Idaho (and across most states this is more or less true) goes to education, and that’s not all the money schools get. This is a large pile of money, and some people out there salivate at the thought of taking a personal or corporate bite out of it. It’s not that there’s no concern about actual, you know, learning among these people; some no doubt are committed to doing something better.

But a moment’s reflection should tell you it’s not that simple. Remember the old saying, that if someone tells you it’s about the principle of the thing, it’s probably about the money.

In his state of the state, Little - who may recognize the school voucher train coming hard at him from the legislature, which rejected past voucher plans but likely won’t this session - proposed spending $50 million “to further expand education options.” He said he will “ensure there is oversight” and “prioritize first and foremost our public schools.” (Don’t be fooled: Money used for vouchers or related programs is money that isn’t being spent on public schools.)

Or at least that’s the governor’s opening move. One floor above in the Statehouse, a crop of voucher-adjacent measures is arising, with many possible price tags. One of them, backed by two legislators in top leadership positions, would offer $5,000 tax credits for students who attend school other than the public kind. Spending on this is said to be limited to $50 million.

Last month, one of the co-sponsors of that measure, Representative Wendy Horman, faced off at an event sponsored by the Idaho Falls City Club against Rod Gramer, former president of Idaho Business for Education, which has opposed vouchers. Gramer pointed out that once voucher payments in other states have begun, they have sometimes exploded, as in Arizona and Indiana. He said, “Out-of-state billionaires and their front organizations never stop pushing vouchers until they have universal vouchers with no income limit and no accountability.”

Horman said that the legislature would have to approve any future increases. That would be true, but it was true in Arizona and Indiana too.

Something in this area, or maybe more than one option, feels like a slam dunk to emerge from the legislature, a probability signified by a big pro-voucher event held just hours before the launching of this year’s session, by the Mountain States Policy Center.

There are complexities, of course. Much of the national discussion about vouchers (incoming President Trump last year proposed a federal voucher program) has centered on schooling options for lower-income or special needs students; the Idaho options seem not to focus on those areas. And there’s the geographic difficulty, that many Idaho students live far from the nearest private school option, or maybe near only one that might not be a good choice.

Follow the money.

 

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Carter and Idaho

The last time a Democrat won Idaho’s vote for president was 60 years ago, in 1964, when Lyndon Johnson prevailed in a landslide nationally and narrowly in Idaho, and Republicans have won the state easily since. In these last six decades, the highest Democratic percentage for the office, 37.1%, was won by Jimmy Carter, who died at 100 on December 29. (Barack Obama in 2008 came next highest, at 36.1%.)

Carter’s numbers fell by about 12 points four years later, a drop more severe than he experienced nationally. Some of that may relate to the candidacy of Ronald Reagan, who was almost preternaturally popular in Idaho.

But Idaho, and its politics, changed during those Carter years in various ways, and probably more than the nation’s did. Not all of it - not most of it, for that matter - was directly attributable to Carter himself. But the Carter era, with all it entailed in Carter’s own action and the opposition to him, was something of a pivot for Idaho, as it would be in many other places. And a president famously unconcerned about the political impacts of his actions was not well positioned to oppose a wave rising up against him.

The Carter Administration did have an effect on Idaho directly in a number of ways, in some places economically but not least its environment. Carter’s Interior secretary - the only cabinet member to serve all through that administration - was Cecil Andrus, plucked from the Idaho governorship. He had a real impact on federal lands policy, most famously perhaps in Alaska, but to a great degree in Idaho as well. Carter signed the Central Idaho Wilderness Act (pushed by Andrus and Senator Frank Church) in 1980, and it formed the basis of what has become the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness.

Carter may, in fact, have had a closer connection to Idaho in a practical way than any president in the last century. As a naval officer, he worked with the National Reactor Testing Station at Idaho Falls. (The Carter Administration years were a growth time for the site.) He vacationed for several days on the remote Middle Fork of the Salmon, and visited Grand Teton National Park.

Carter took a lot of blame for the reversals in those years in Idaho’s timber industry, though most of the trends that saw its diminishment both predated and followed his time in office. (Northern Idaho’s mining industry cratered during the Reagan years, though Reagan never was blamed for that.) This was on top of the many other complaints against Carter of a national scope, from the economy to the hostages in Tehran to the Panama Canal treaty.

But Carter’s unpopularity in Idaho was something remarkable to see, a ferocious anger out of degree and proportion with whatever disagreements many Idahoans may have had with him, and of a different kind than was normal for Idaho. It was a kind of dismissive fury new to politics in the area, probably made possible by the broader disillusionment of the Vietnam and Watergate periods. And it has carried through over time. Democratic presidents since have been able to gain no traction except in the diminishing blue sectors of the state; the mention that a person or candidate is Democratic often is enough to shut down the listening before another word is said. This was not true a half-century ago.

That change in the social environment was an opportunity for political activists, many of them national rather than local in origin, who fed on a growing sense of cynicism to develop a politics of antagonism - one of far less interest in what one’s own party or preferences could do, and bitter anger toward the other guys, who over time became redefined from loyal opposition to deadly enemies.

These are some of the reasons the Carter years were among the central turning points taking our politics from what was to what is, unfortunately, today. And Idaho turns out to be one of the best case studies for it.

 

Year ending, year beginning

Some stories that ought to have an ending never seem to go away. The Moscow murder case which continued to generate so many Idaho headlines in 2024  began with four deaths in 2022, has gone through various changes of venue and personnel and squabbles over legal issues, but it won’t be tied up until at least well into 2025. And maybe later. It will reliably generate more headlines in the coming year.

And there are stories everyone would like to go away but prove hard to quash. One example would be the invasion of the Snake River system by quagga mussels, which the state has fought since they were spotted in 2023 and hoped were eradicated. Such eliminations are hard to accomplish, and they returned this last year. Will they be back in 2025? We can hope not, but they could be.

Then there are other stories with larger implications which have no clear beginning or end point. They morph into new phases, and Idaho will have to deal with new versions of them in 2025.

One example is the state’s massive suburban growth, mainly in the Boise metro area but to some degree elsewhere too, such as in Kootenai County. There’s more than the usual pressure on for more development , as housing supply in Idaho’s big population centers has remained limited and prices have stayed high, even if they’re not growing quite the way they did a few years ago.

Ada County is poised for another massive explosion in the next couple of years, with new developments recently approved by the city of Meridian and the projected pass expansion of Avimor in the hills above what has been the city of Eagle … among other examples. Those approvals are not the end of the story, but only the beginning. We’ll see more of what comes of it in the next year.

Politically, Idaho voters in 2024 made decisions - which largely aligned - which may put the state’s recent ideological developments on a high speed rail. The election of an even less centrist legislature, coupled with the clear voter rejection of the open primary/ranked choice voter initiative, gives the most hard-core factions in the Idaho Legislature full motivation (and even some surface justification) for plowing ahead as far as they can see.

One of the questions looming over the state ever since election day, then, has been: How far is that?

The ground apparently ripe for seizure seems likely to include passage of school vouchers - another way of saying money transfers from public to private schools - which has been frustrated for years. This next session starting in a matter of days is likely to be a different story, with changes in overall membership and committee leadership.

Probably there will be much more. While the colleges and universities, and their governing boards, have submitted in advance to demolition of their social equity programs, the legislature is likely to see that as an opening bid begging for a raise. The culture war at the Statehouse is more likely to accelerate than to slow down this session; the point, after all, is not to solve a problem so much as it is to keep stirring the pot, and we can expect plenty of that.

2026 will be a relatively high-end political year in Idaho elections, or at least it may be. All the statewide state offices, including governor, will be up, and so will a U.S. Senate seat (now held by Jim Risch) and two U.S. House seats. Will Risch seek a fourth term, or Representative Mike Simpson his 15th? There’s some potential for a shakeup. And the governor’s office will be the object of a lot of speculation and war gaming. The pieces of all that should be in place by this time a year from now.

And, of course, there will be fallout from the Trump Administration Redux … though I’m offering no predictions at the moment about exactly what form that will take.

Happy New Year, and let’s make the best of it we can.

 

Tolling for thee

In the last few years I’ve been scaling back my use of social media, meaning among other things that I’m not in the crowd using the highly popular app Tik Tok. Which in turn means I have no very strong views about what happens to it, a subject that has become a heated issue - involving critics and users - over the last year or so.

Legislation passed by Congress earlier this year has aimed to stop distribution of the app if its parent company, ByteDance, doesn’t unload it by January 19. Incoming President Donald Trump hasn’t been clear about what he may or may not do about it, and the Supreme Court has said that it will weigh in, so we don’t know what will happen. The specific issue concerns the influence of China's government, and mass data collection from people here, that might be felt through its use. It’s a complex debate that I won’t try to litigate here.

Tik Tok clearly has been exerting itself, however, to lobby people not only in Washington but out to the far reaches of the Northwest. A few days ago, from Tik Tok or some organization acting on its behalf - the provenance wasn’t entirely clear - I received an email which sought to pitch the case that Tik Tok has a big impact on a lot of people and businesses in Idaho. A raft of statistics and analysis was included. That did get my attention.

The mail wasn’t trying to make the case that Idaho’s connections to Tik Tok were notably greater or different from those in other states. Still,  the numbers as cited, if they’re anywhere close to correct - and I have no reason to think they’re not - offer some broader food for thought.

I was directed to a report (apparently crafted at the behest of Tik Tok) from Oxford Economics, an international consulting group based in California, which ran a survey with state-specific information. Idaho’s was not notably unusual, but it was eye-opening anyway.

The survey figured that 440,000 Idahoans (close to a quarter of the state’s population) use Tik Tok, as do about 19,000 businesses. That’s a massive slice of the state, and if you look at usage among younger age groups, the percentage probably is very high.

The report focused mostly on the business impacts. The letter summarized:

“Small business use of TikTok contributed $120 million to GDP and supported 1,300 jobs. SMB activity also generated around $28 million in federal, state, and local tax revenue in the state. Small businesses in Idaho say their business sales increased after promoting their products and services on TikTok, and 68% say their business sold out of a product after promoting it on TikTok. 65% of SMBs in Idaho say TikTok grants them the ability to connect with people from diverse communities who would otherwise be unreachable, and 70% have attracted a new investor or an additional investment through a TikTok interaction.”

And according to the survey, about two-thirds of small and medium sized businesses said they felt they needed to keep using the app, and using it in more advanced ways, owing to its effectiveness.

Say the word(s) Tik Tok, and Idaho isn’t exactly what comes first to mind. But a look at the practical effects do raise some questions. What would happen - would there be negative business impacts in Idaho - if Tik Tok were banished? If it should be, what ought to be done to mitigate the effects, if that can be done? Is there any role here for state or local governments?

We live in an interconnected world. That doesn't mean we have to connect with everything (and I’m no more inclined than I was, personally, to plug in to Tik Tok).

But if we cut ties, we need to be careful about what we’re doing, think through all the effects, and be mindful of the consequences.

As we head into a new presidential era, that principle may be worth application in a bunch of other arenas as well.

 

Leadership factors

Contests for legislative leadership positions often come down to personal qualities: Who do you (meaning the members of a party caucus) better like, or not? Who’s your friend - or, who could do something for you?

Because these contests usually are conducted by secret ballot, it’s hard for outsiders to be sure what the relevant factors were in making a choice between contenders. Sometimes, though, the issues look as if they might imply something a little larger.

With that in mind, consider the just-concluded contest for president pro tem of the Idaho Senate.

“President pro tem” sounds like an honorary title, but in the Idaho Senate it’s actually the top decision-making perch, the in-effect head of the Senate. The president of the Senate is the lieutenant governor, who presides over the chamber and can break a tied vote but otherwise has no real role there.

An aside: Both of Idaho’s current U.S. senators are former state Senate pro tems. The last time pro tem came open due to a lost election, in fact, Jim Risch was outgoing (having lost his Senate seat in the 1988 general) and Mike Crapo replaced him, and the differing public personas of the two played into Crapo’s elevation.

For a long time pro tems usually turned over every two or three terms, but in recent decades it has been held for much longer stretches - Jerry Twiggs from 1992 to 2000, Robert Geddes from 2000 to 2010, Brent Hill from 2010 to 2020. His successor, Chuck Winder of Eagle, seemed to be on track for another run of a decade or so, but he lost his Republican primary, narrowly, in May, stopping his run at two terms.

Winder has been in the Idaho Senate since 2008, and risen through leadership positions during his tenure. He has presented himself very much as what’s usually taken to be an Idaho conservative. But he also has been an institutionalist; you might imagine, though I have no idea if Winder would, a loose correlation here to Mitch McConnell in the U.S. Senate. Winder has been known to slap back at poor, insulting or demeaning behavior, which has happened from time to time.

That behavior has tended to come from the more extreme reaches of his caucus, and its outside backers. Winder has had issues with the Idaho Freedom Foundation as well; these clashes were a big element in his loss. He remarked after the primary, “I think we've had a huge influence from out-of-state people moving here ... All in all, Idaho is going to be fine, but good mainline Idaho people are going to have to get more involved in the party."

But what did the Idaho Senate’s Republican caucus - which controls 29 of 35 seats - conclude?

So far as was visible - we’re looking through a glass, darkly - there were two candidates to replace Winder. One is the next in line in leadership, the majority leader, Kelly Anthon from Burley. The other is Scott Grow of Eagle, the chair of the budget-setting Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee.

Neither seems to be sharply aligned with the splits that led to Winder’s defeat, but there are differences between them.

Anthon has been mostly a lower-profile legislator, and in private life the city administrator at Rupert; you don’t get a major rock-the-boat sense here.

Grow, on the other hand, has as JFAC chair pushed for major changes in budgeting practices, and told the Idaho Capital Sun  he “also would bring changes to the Idaho Senate if named president pro tem. He said he would push for Republicans in the Idaho Senate to meet before the session to develop a list of four or five major priorities for the upcoming session that Republicans agree on. Rather than introducing and debating multiple different bills on a school choice proposal, Grow would push to unite Republicans behind a single bill going into session.”

Other factors may be at play here too, but you get a clear distinction between Anthon and Grow as setters of direction for the Senate.

That the caucus went in Anthon’s direction (we don’t know what the vote was, or whether Grow even remained in contention until it happened) may say something about the caucus’ - and so the Senate’s - preferred direction. Might it mean a desire not to make major changes, to keep a cooler profile in the session ahead?

Don’t bet the bank on it. But leadership contest results sometimes can amount to tea leaves better than most.

 

Maybe saved, thankfully

If you’re in favor of higher education - and today that includes some but clearly not all voters - then the general election had one definite bright spot in the Idaho Panhandle: The voters’ choices to fill three seats on the North Idaho College board.

Count it as something in the Gem State to be thankful for this season.

The college has been teetering on the edge of losing accreditation, which could mean in effect the end of the college. This is not a subtle threat or much in dispute, or unimportant. The college’s future was hanging in the balance with the choices voters made to fill three critical spots on what normally, in most years until recently, has been an obscure governing body. Community college boards are quiet and publicly obscure - like a lot of offices in government - as long as they stay out of trouble.

North Idaho College has no inherent massive problems. There’s nothing about its teachers or students or administrators or facilities or the other people (vendors, community partners) raising any red flags. It long has operated like a normal community college, offering some collegiate courses and some aimed at vocational and technical training. Not terribly contentious there.

Until the Kootenai County Republican organization decided a few years ago to turn the non-partisan board into a culture war battlefield (and in campaigns, vivid apocalyptic imagery). With the support of that organization, which for a couple of decades has been politically dominant in Kootenai, new members were elected to shake things up at the college.

Shake them they did. Their tenure of control, which has extended over not all but most of the last four years - since voters in November 2020 elected a majority which set about demolishing normal practices at the college - has been a time of chaos and uproar at the college, with fired presidents and attorneys and others and a wider mix of key players, some evidently quite capable and others evidently not. The college was in endless uproar for years, and the reason was easy to point to: The elected board.

Finally the regional organization that accredits colleges stepped in and warned that the college’s credentials, which translates to the usefulness and recognition by the outside world of its education program, was at imminent risk of being lost.

That finally seems to have gotten the attention of Kootenai County voters. Not all of them, and far from enough to constitute a landslide at the polls, but enough to change the membership of the board in a direction aimed at restoring the college’s conventional role as a community college.

The stakes were public enough in the last couple of elections, but this year they finally moved front and center, ahead and in front of the bogus culture war topics that dominated so much local attention in previous cycles.

The slate of candidates trying to save the college ran under “Save NIC Now,” and the campaign language was blunt: “They aren’t here to play games; they’re here to clean up the board and get NIC back on track. If you care about NIC and the future of this community, these are the folks you need to vote for.”

It worked.

On November 20, the newly-elected board members, Rick Durbin, Eve Knudtsen and Mary Havercroft, were sworn in amid applause and no doubt deep relief. And they got to work right away on starting to repair the damage from the last few years.

This isn’t the end of the story. Word on ensuring accreditation continues will go on for months, as the accreditors move toward their final decisions. But the odds of success have improved.

What happened politically in Kootenai County could blunt efforts in other parts of the state to take other colleges down the same road NIC traveled. Attempts in southern Idaho were turned back a couple of years ago; thanks to the voters at Kootenai, they may have a harder time gaining traction in future. Maybe some broader lessons will sink in too.

Something to be thankful for, we can hope.

 

The few

Transgender people have been big in politics this year, in Idaho and nationally.

They became a top battleground focus of the winning presidential campaign (especially in television ads from the Trump campaign in battleground states), and in the most recent Idaho legislative session they seldom went unremarked for long in heated debate. Transgender people have become a culture-war centerpiece in the state.

Idaho’s congressional delegation joined in the fray this month, “sending a letter today urging the Mountain West Conference to ban biological males from competing in women’s sports and protect biological female student-athletes.” This being such an obvious federal issue and all.

In September, Attorney General Raul Labrador joined in a letter from attorneys general around the country blasting the American Academy of Pediatrics (these are the leading professionals in health care for younger people) for their policy “Ensuring Comprehensive Care and Support for Transgender and Gender-Diverse Children and Adolescents.” A decision by a professional association so obviously meriting the use of state tax dollars …

From all that, a visitor from afar understandably might think a massive crisis on this subject has suddenly arisen.

They would be wrong.

Before going further, answer in your own mind this question: How many transgender people - what share of the population - do you think there are in Idaho, and in the nation?

Compare what you just thought to these results in a survey of American adults by the polling firm YouGov: “The average response was 21%, or 1 in 5 Americans. This overestimate was not an outlier, as respondents consistently overestimated the size of other minority groups, guessing that 27% of people are Muslim (the reality is 1%), or that 41% of Americans are Black (the reality is 12% to 13%).”

Okay: So what are the real numbers?

According to the Williams Institute in California, which has most thoroughly researched the subject, the nationwide number is about 1.6 million, well under one percent of the population.

In Idaho, the transgender number was about 7,000, or .52% - that’s just about half of one percent - of Idahoans. That’s in a state of two million people.  The numbers in Idaho are well below the national stats, which are not massive to begin with.

The numbers are generally reported as skewing somewhat higher for younger people; attitudes toward gender issues may be a factor in how some people see and act on their gender identity.

Presumably, one hardball political calculation is that if you want to Otherize a group of people for rile-up-the-base purposes, this is a group of people who are too small in size to cast many votes or exert much social influence. Of course, what would that say about beating up on people who can’t easily fight back?

It’s true that there are some legitimate subjects for discussion here. The issue of who should participate in gender-specific athletics is real and legitimate. I’ll not weigh in here specifically on whether the athletes complaining about transgender participation in their ranks have a case; maybe they do. But that ought to be qualified by individual cases. Every one of these transgender people are stories unto themselves. The changes they go through as well as the results are different, on varying time frames and involving different physical realities. A transgender person in one case might in no way reasonably belong on a particular gendered team or group, while another might. Wouldn’t that suggest the smarter way to go would involve addressing these issues case by case, with the specific facts at hand, rather than in making a sweeping judgment?

If the numbers involved were really large, you might argue that broad rules are needed. But, well, the numbers aren’t all that large. The Williams Institute and others have estimated that about 1,000 Idaho teens are transgender.

In general, a case by case approach probably is going to yield the best and fairest results. Doing it that way would, of course, result in less raw meat for the political and anger/fear social media grinders, but … wouldn’t that be a good thing?

There’s no cause for panic here, however extreme an emotional response political ads, and some politicians, might try to induce.