Idaho Republicans are bitterly divided over education spending priorities as the deep red state faces a significant budget shortfall, pitting support for a new Idaho Republicans are bitterly divided over education spending priorities as the deep red state faces a significant budget shortfall, pitting support for a new

Republicans clash in deep-red Idaho as budget crisis pits right wing against moderates

2026/03/17 18:54
2 min read
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Idaho Republicans are bitterly divided over education spending priorities as the deep red state faces a significant budget shortfall, pitting support for a new private school tax credit against funding for distance learning programs that serve rural students.

The $50 million private school tax credit, offering families up to $5,000 per child for private education expenses, has become a flashpoint in the legislature where Republicans hold 90 of 105 seats. However, rural educators argue the state should prioritize preserving its 20-year investment in distance learning programs that provide rural students access to Advanced Placement classes, dual college-credit courses, and financial literacy instruction unavailable locally, reported the New York Times.

Idaho faces a budget gap of approximately $40 million this year, potentially expanding to $600 million to $1 billion in future years. The shortfall stems from tax cuts and declining federal spending on programs like Medicaid, despite strong economic indicators including below-average unemployment and population growth.

Gov. Brad Little has proposed cutting $33 million from distance-learning infrastructure to address the fiscal crisis. The Idaho Digital Learning Alliance alone would lose approximately $10 million — roughly 40 percent of its annual budget. The program serves one in five rural students and one in nine urban students annually.

Education advocates question why lawmakers would eliminate existing programs rather than delay the private school tax credits. Rural superintendents warn that cutting distance learning will harm high-achieving students in remote areas where private schools don't exist.

"I just don't believe you'll see a lot more parents choosing private schools because of the vouchers," said Jim Foudy, superintendent in Blaine County. "Those are not an option in parts of our district."

The ideological shift reflects a broader transformation in Idaho's Republican Party. Since 2022, more conservative candidates have replaced moderate Republicans, pushing the party toward a "no government" philosophy on education spending rather than traditional "small government" conservatism.

Former education committee chair Julie Yamamoto, a Republican, lost her seat in 2024 after opposing private school tax breaks. "We've experienced this huge shift, and it's happened so quickly," she said.

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