Politics & Government
Best Or Worst Legislative Session In Idaho History? That Depends On Whom You Ask.
Democrats, meanwhile, said the session was dominated by a power grab from Republicans, disinformation campaigns and hurtful policymaking.

May 19, 2021
Depending on whom you ask, the 2021 legislative session was either a productive success on multiple fronts, or one of the worst sessions of all time.
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“It’s been a very successful session in that we have passed one of the largest, if not the largest, income tax cut (in state history), along with a rebate that will go directly to every Idahoan,” Bedke told the Idaho Capital Sun late Wednesday night.
House State Affairs Chairman Brent Crane, R-Nampa, had a similar assessment.
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“The issues that we promised our constituents that we would deal with, we have got all of those accomplished,” Crane said in an interview late Wednesday on the House floor. “In my 15-year career, this has to go down as one of the top three legislative sessions.”
Republican approval was not just limited to the House.
“We accomplished a lot, and we haven’t seen a lot about it,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Winder, R-Boise, told senators on the floor late Wednesday night. “If you go back and look at what we’ve done for funding for education, transportation, tax reductions, all the various things we’ve done, in spite of the fact some will say this is the worst session ever in the history of mankind, well maybe even prior to that even, since prior to creation, that this really was successful.”
The Idaho Capital Sun asked Bedke about the length of the session and the nearly $450,000 expense to Idaho taxpayers since legislators returned from their first recess April 6.
“Pretty good for a pandemic year,” Bedke said.
“Yeah, it took us 122 days, but there was a lot of success in that 122 days.”
Idaho Democrats say 2021 session was one of the worst in history
Democrats, meanwhile, said the session was dominated by a power grab from Republicans, disinformation campaigns and hurtful policymaking.
Senate Majority Leader Michelle Stennett, D-Ketchum, said the state is struggling to fund its K-12 education system and about 20 bills were introduced attacking education.
“The legislative session has been chaotic and unprecedented with challenges and delays; unlike most years it took four months to balance a budget,” Stennett said in a press conference Thursday. “Despite this being the longest session in state history — and not over yet — no meaningful legislation was passed to actually help working Idahoans and what was done was done in the last weeks.”
House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel, D-Boise, said the state entered the session amassing the largest budget surplus in state history. Rubel said this should have been the year the Legislature brought full-day kindergarten to Idaho and provided funding.
Instead, House Bill 331, which provided $42.1 million for kindergarten, never made it out of committee.
As things stand now, the state only pays for half-day kindergarten, which is optional for families.
“Many have called this the worst legislative session ever, and it’s hard to dispute that,” Rubel said. “It’s hard to swallow the damage done by the Legislature when viewed in light of the potential good that could have been achieved.”
Democrats also criticized the House’s vote to reject $6 million in federal grant money already approved for early childhood education and said the House should have taken a vote on the rewritten Senate Bill 1193, which would have allowed the state to accept the grant if it passed.
But Bedke stressed in a Thursday press conference that was never going to happen after the first bill, House Bill 226, failed 34-36 on March 2.
“Take my word for it, the votes were not there,” Bedke said Thursday.
Democrats said they were particularly upset about the Legislature’s moves to reduce funding for higher education by $2.5 million after some Republicans claimed universities and professors were indoctrinating students with social justice programs and critical race theory.
Republican leaders say college and universities will be able to tap into federal COVID-19 stimulus relief funds.
“With regard to higher ed, there is a big installment of federal money that is going to come to them,” Bedke told the Idaho Capital Sun on Wednesday. “The institutions of higher education will be OK moneywise.”
The Idaho Capital Sun, the Gem State’s newest nonprofit news organization, delivers accountability reporting on state government, politics and policy.