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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Republicans roll in Idaho - again

Sherri Ybarra, candidate for superintendent of education, is greeted by Gov. Butch Otter at the Republican election night party, Tuesday Nov. 4, 2014, at the Riverside Hotel in Boise, Idaho. (AP/Idaho Statesman / Darin Oswald)
BOISE - It took until Wednesday morning at 7, but GOP newcomer Sherri Ybarra eked out a slim win in the race for Idaho state schools chief, completing a Republican sweep of all statewide offices that echoed results in Idaho elections since 2006. Democrats picked up one seat in the state Legislature thanks to upsets in Moscow and Lewiston, but GOP dominance of the Idaho Statehouse remained otherwise unchanged – 80 percent of seats went to Republicans, down from 81 percent. “It was a good election for Republicans, and they got their voters out,” said Jim Weatherby, Boise State University professor emeritus and longtime observer of Idaho politics. Two factors stood out: The success of independent attack ads in pumping up unfavorable views of previously little-known Democratic candidate for governor A.J. Balukoff, and the Idaho Republican Party’s traditional and continued organizational success in turning out its voters on Election Day. Balukoff “was an unknown,” Weatherby said, “and he was defined by his opposition as a liberal Democrat who loved Obama and wanted to raise taxes.” That’s despite the fact that he’s a former longtime independent, a Mitt Romney supporter, a highly successful Boise businessman and the longtime school board chairman of one of the state’s highest-performing school districts. GOP Gov. Butch Otter, who won a rare third consecutive four-year term – the first Idaho governor to do so since Robert Smylie in 1962 – told Boise TV station KTVB late Tuesday night, “What I believe it says, it says something great about Republican principles, and how enduring, how survivable they are, even when we have major differences in the party. It’s still those principles that people of Idaho want to be governed by.” Otter won his third term with 53.5 percent of the vote, up from the surprisingly low 51.4 percent he received from his own party in the primary, amid splits between tea party supporters and establishment Republicans. In final, unofficial results, Balukoff had 38.6 percent; Libertarian John Bujak trailed with 4.1 percent; independent Jill Humble received 2 percent of the vote; Constitution Party candidate Steve Pankey had 1.2 percent; and “Pro-Life,” formerly known as Marvin Richardson, got 0.7 percent. The Republican Governors Association sent out a news release late on Election Night congratulating Otter on his win, and claiming some of the credit, saying it was “a key investor in Gov. Otter’s re-election victory, spending $1.2 million on paid media,” including three TV ads targeting Balukoff. Balukoff spent more than $3.2 million of his own money on his campaign; Otter raised and spent more than $2 million. Ybarra’s race was much closer. She defeated Democrat Jana Jones, a former chief deputy state superintendent, by 5,715 votes, a razor-thin 50.7 percent to 49.3 percent margin. She did that despite Jones having out-spent the little-known Mountain Home educator by a nearly 3-1 margin, and despite a campaign that was marked by a series of embarrassing gaffes. “She goes in with some serious questions, I think, in people’s minds about how effective she can be, and how effectively she can navigate her way in proposing a schools budget and being effective in persuading legislators to support her and her position on education in Idaho,” Weatherby said. Ybarra said she plans to work with current GOP Superintendent Tom Luna to transition into the job that she’ll start Jan. 1. Both Ybarra and Lawerence Denney, the winner of the race for Idaho Secretary of State, emerged from four-way GOP primary elections with just small pluralities of the vote, 28.7 percent for Ybarra and 37.1 percent for Denney. Plus, Denney had a long and controversial record in Idaho politics, and is the only speaker of the Idaho House ever to be ousted by his own caucus. “I think there was a lot of speculation that that would hurt by Denney and Ybarra, but obviously when the votes are actually counted it didn’t seem to,” Weatherby said. “It seemed to be that Republicans united and the party organizational effort to get out the vote succeeded.” Denney defeated Democratic state Rep. Holli Woodings, D-Boise, with 56.2 percent of the vote to her 43.8 percent. Other GOP candidates for major Idaho offices rolled up larger margins to win re-election. Lt. Gov. Brad Little took 62.8 percent of the vote; state Treasurer Ron Crane, 61 percent. Sen. Jim Risch got 65.3 percent in his successful bid for another six-year term; 1st District Congressman Raul Labrador polled 65 percent against state Rep. Shirley Ringo, D-Moscow, who polled 35 percent. There were no upsets in Panhandle legislative races; a challenge from Democrat Anne Nesse to Rep. Kathy Sims, R-Coeur d’Alene, that was deadlocked in early returns opened up to a 55.3 percent to 44.7 percent victory for Sims by the end of the night. Kootenai County offices also remained in Republican hands. Statewide, Democrats picked up one seat in the Idaho Legislature. Rep. Cindy Agidius, D-Moscow, lost to Democratic challenger Paulette Jordan, while Republican Caroline Nilsson Troy won Ringo’s former seat in the same district. While those amounted to a wash, Rep. Thyra Stevenson, R-Lewiston, was narrowly defeated by Democratic challenger Dan Rudolph in District 6. Idaho voters narrowly rejected a constitutional amendment designed to enshrine legislative review of administrative rules from the executive branch in the Idaho Constitution. The measure, which had unanimous support from the Legislature but was criticized by some legal experts as unnecessary and poorly written, went down to a narrow defeat, with 49.4 percent in favor and 50.6 percent opposed.