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Legislators Full Roll Call ← Front Page
⚠ Notable
9 Republicans voted NO — joining all 6 Senate Democrats to oppose Idaho's first school choice law. The bill passed anyway 20-15 and was signed by Gov. Little on Feb 27, 2025. These senators voted against parental rights and school choice in a state where conservative voters broadly support both.

Click any senator to expand their contact info and copy a message. All face voters in 2026.

These 20 senators voted YES — supporting parental rights and school choice. All were Republican. A thank-you message lets them know their vote is appreciated and their base is watching their next vote too.
What HB 93 Does

House Bill 93 — the Idaho Parental Choice Tax Credit — establishes Idaho's first private school choice program, creating a $50 million annual fund of refundable tax credits for families who choose private or home schooling for their children.

Key provisions: Up to $5,000 per student for qualified education expenses including tuition, tutoring, textbooks, and curriculum. Students with disabilities qualify for up to $7,500. Families earning up to 300% of the federal poverty level (~$93,600 for a family of four) receive priority in the first year.

Sponsors: Rep. Wendy Horman (R-Idaho Falls), Senate Majority Leader Lori Den Hartog (R-Meridian), House Majority Leader Jason Monks (R-Meridian), and Sen. C. Scott Grow (R-Eagle).

Signed into law: Gov. Brad Little signed HB 93 on February 27, 2025, with an emergency clause making it retroactive to January 1, 2025.

Notable quote against: Sen. Jim Guthrie (R-McCammon) argued: "If we let this kitty out of the cage, it could become a mountain lion." Sen. Brandon Shippy (R-New Plymouth) called it a "redistribution of wealth" that "erodes" home-schooler self-reliance.

Full Roll Call — Both Chambers → Official Bill Text →