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H 259

An Act relative to educational support for children in foster care

194th Legislature (2025-2026) Introduced by Russell Holmes and 4 co-sponsors

Disclosures on political statements financed by expenditures must include the sponsor’s party affiliation, and, if supporting a candidate, the candidate’s party as well.

Accompanied a new draft, see H4599
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Bill Summary · H 259

Idaho H 259 – Summary

Overview

  • Bill Number: H 259
  • Title: Elections – Amends existing law to require disclosure of party affiliation on political statements financed by expenditures; if in support of a candidate, disclose the candidate’s party.
  • Purpose: Improve transparency and reduce voter confusion by ensuring voters can identify the party affiliations behind election-related communications.
  • Status: Reported Printed and Referred to State Affairs
  • Introduced: February 18, 2025
  • Effective Date: July 1, 2025 (emergency clause declared)
  • Fiscal Impact: None reported

Key purpose and intent

  • The Legislature asserts Idaho has a substantial interest in maintaining election integrity and reducing voter confusion and misinformation.
  • The bill extends existing party-affiliation disclosure requirements (which already apply to candidate declarations) to the publication or distribution of political statements financed by expenditures.
  • The goal is to provide voters with context about who is behind a political message, thereby improving trust and reducing misleading or deceptive messaging.

What changes the bill would make

  • An amendment to Idaho Code 67-6614A (Publication or Distribution of Political Statements) to require:
    • Any person who makes an expenditure to finance communications expressly advocating for the election, approval, or defeat of a candidate, measure, or precinct committeeman to be clearly identified on the communication, along with that person’s political party affiliation (if any).
    • If the political statement is in support of a candidate, the party affiliation of the candidate must also be disclosed (if any).
  • Eligible channels covered include a broad range of general public political advertising: broadcasting, print media (newspapers, magazines), online platforms (websites, mobile apps), text messages, outdoor advertising (billboards, signs), direct mail, yard signs, bumper stickers, pamphlets, posters, campaign buttons, and other similar communications.

Who is affected

  • Beneficiaries: Voters, by receiving clearer context about who is financing political messages and the party affiliations involved.
  • Obligated Parties: Individuals or entities that make expenditures to finance political communications (electioneering messages) and the sponsors of those communications.
  • Political candidates: If a statement supports a candidate, the candidate’s party must be disclosed.
  • Campaigns, political committees, advertisers, and distributors of political content.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Legislative actions:
    • Introduced February 18, 2025.
    • Reported Printed and Referred to State Affairs February 19, 2025.
  • Effective date: July 1, 2025, with an emergency declaration to enforce immediately upon that date.
  • The bill includes an emergency clause, making the act in full force on or after July 1, 2025.

Fiscal considerations

  • The accompanying fiscal note states there is no anticipated change in state or local revenue or expenditures; no fiscal impact.

Practical considerations

  • Coverage is broad, potentially affecting a wide array of political messaging across media platforms.
  • Enforcement would require identifying the “person responsible” for a communication and verifying stated party affiliations.
  • The bill does not restrict free speech; proponents argue it enhances transparency and voter understanding.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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