www.politico.com Open in urlscan Pro
104.18.41.251  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://apple.news/AmwGhZa75RZGwjqj4bJx53A?articleList=A7Bkyr0PXSXK5RaZxvmShRg
Effective URL: https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/05/19/idaho-moderates-combating-state-extremism-00151819?cid=apn
Submission: On June 06 via api from US — Scanned from AT

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

GET https://www.politico.com/search

<form class="slide-search__form" action="https://www.politico.com/search" method="get">
  <input class="slide-search__input" type="search" name="q" id="searchTerm" aria-label="Search for any story" placeholder="Enter search term...">
  <button class="slide-search__run" type="submit" aria-label="Start search"><b class="bt-icon bt-icon--search"></b><span class="icon-text">Search</span></button>
  <button class="slide-search__close" id="search-close" type="button"><b class="bt-icon bt-icon--close" aria-label="Close Search"></b></button>
</form>

<form class="form-section">
  <input type="hidden" name="subscribeId" value="0000014f-1646-d88f-a1cf-5f46b7bd0000">
  <input type="hidden" name="processorId" value="00000179-61ab-d60d-a9f9-f5bf392e0000">
  <input type="hidden" name="validateEmail" value="true">
  <input type="hidden" name="enhancedSignUp" value="true">
  <input type="hidden" name="bot-field" value="" class="dn">
  <input type="hidden" name="subscriptionModule" value="newsletter_inline_standard_Playbook - POLITICO" class="dn">
  <input type="hidden" name="captchaUserToken" value="" autocomplete="off">
  <input type="hidden" name="captchaPublicKey" value="6LfS6L8UAAAAAAHCPhd7CF66ZbK8AyFfk3MslbKV" autocomplete="off">
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-spinner" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p>Loading</p>
      <svg class="sign-up-21--msg-icon-lg sign-up-21--spinner-icon-lg" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="48" height="48" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none" stroke="#4D8AD2" stroke-width="1" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round">
        <line x1="12" y1="2" x2="12" y2="6"></line>
        <line x1="12" y1="18" x2="12" y2="22"></line>
        <line x1="4.93" y1="4.93" x2="7.76" y2="7.76"></line>
        <line x1="16.24" y1="16.24" x2="19.07" y2="19.07"></line>
        <line x1="2" y1="12" x2="6" y2="12"></line>
        <line x1="18" y1="12" x2="22" y2="12"></line>
        <line x1="4.93" y1="19.07" x2="7.76" y2="16.24"></line>
        <line x1="16.24" y1="7.76" x2="19.07" y2="4.93"></line>
      </svg>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-completed" aria-live="assertive" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p>You will now start receiving email updates</p>
      <svg class="sign-up-21--msg-icon-lg" width="48" height="48" viewBox="0 0 48 48" fill="none" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
        <path
          d="M44 22.1597V23.9997C43.9975 28.3126 42.601 32.5091 40.0187 35.9634C37.4363 39.4177 33.8066 41.9447 29.6707 43.1675C25.5349 44.3904 21.1145 44.2435 17.0689 42.7489C13.0234 41.2543 9.56931 38.4919 7.22192 34.8739C4.87453 31.2558 3.75958 26.9759 4.04335 22.6724C4.32712 18.3689 5.99441 14.2724 8.79656 10.9939C11.5987 7.71537 15.3856 5.43049 19.5924 4.48002C23.7992 3.52955 28.2005 3.9644 32.14 5.71973"
          stroke="#4D8AD2" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"></path>
        <path d="M44 8L24 28.02L18 22.02" stroke="#4D8AD2" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"></path>
      </svg>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-already-subscribed" aria-live="assertive" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p>You are already subscribed</p>
      <svg class="sign-up-21--msg-icon-lg" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="48" height="48" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none" stroke="currentColor" stroke-width="1" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round">
        <path d="M14 9V5a3 3 0 0 0-3-3l-4 9v11h11.28a2 2 0 0 0 2-1.7l1.38-9a2 2 0 0 0-2-2.3zM7 22H4a2 2 0 0 1-2-2v-7a2 2 0 0 1 2-2h3"></path>
      </svg>
      <a href="/newsletters" target="_top"></a>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-error" aria-live="assertive" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="sign-up-21--msg-close">
      <svg width="20" height="20" viewBox="0 0 20 20" fill="none" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
        <path id="close" fill-rule="evenodd" clip-rule="evenodd"
          d="M17.513 16.6291L10.8839 9.99995L17.513 3.37082L16.6291 2.48694L10 9.11606L3.37088 2.48694L2.487 3.37082L9.11613 9.99995L2.487 16.6291L3.37088 17.513L10 10.8838L16.6291 17.513L17.513 16.6291Z" fill="#000"></path>
      </svg>
    </div>
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p style="color:#9E352C">Something went wrong</p>
    </div>
  </div>
  <fieldset class="form-container active">
    <div class="form-row row-email">
      <div class="form-row-container">
        <label class="data-form-label" for="email" aria-hidden="true">Email</label>
        <span class="sign-up-21--error-msg" aria-hidden="true">
          <span class="sign-up-21--exclamation">!</span>
          <span id="email-hint">Please make sure that the email address you typed in is valid</span>
        </span>
        <div class="form-row-container--input">
          <input type="email" name="subscribeEmail" aria-label="Email" placeholder="Your Email" required="">
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
    <div class="form-row row-secondary-questions active">
      <div class="sign-up-21--secondary-questions-container">
        <div class="form-row-container">
          <label class="data-form-label" aria-hidden="true">Employer</label>
          <div class="form-row-container--input">
            <input type="text" name="job_employer" required="" aria-label="Employer" placeholder="Employer">
          </div>
        </div>
        <div class="form-row-container">
          <label class="data-form-label" aria-hidden="true">Job Title</label>
          <div class="form-row-container--input">
            <input type="text" name="job_title" required="" aria-label="Job Title" placeholder="Job Title">
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
    <div class="form-row row-notice">
      <span class="sign-up-21--notice">
        <span class="color-red">*</span> All fields must be completed to subscribe. </span>
      <button type="submit" class="submit-button" aria-disabled="true">Sign Up</button>
    </div>
    <div class="row-bottom">
      <p class="form-policy"> By signing up, you acknowledge and agree to our <a href="https://www.politico.com/privacy" target="_blank">Privacy Policy</a> and <a href="https://www.politico.com/terms-of-service" target="_blank">Terms of Service</a>.
        You may unsubscribe at any time by following the directions at the bottom of the email or by <a href="https://www.politico.com/feedback" target="_blank">contacting us here</a>. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
        <a href="https://policies.google.com/privacy" target="_blank">Privacy Policy</a> and <a href="https://policies.google.com/terms" target="_blank">Terms of Service</a> apply. </p>
      <button type="submit" class="submit-button" aria-disabled="true"> Sign Up </button>
    </div>
  </fieldset>
</form>

Text Content

Skip to Main Content


POLITICO POLITICO LOGO

 * Congress
 * Pro
 * E&E News
 * Search
   Search


WASHINGTON & POLITICS

 * Congress
 * White House
 * Elections
 * Legal
 * Magazine
 * Foreign Affairs
 * Latest on POLITICO


2024 ELECTIONS

 * News
 * Results
 * Trump criminal cases
 * Trump trial live updates


STATE POLITICS & POLICY

 * California
 * Florida
 * New Jersey
 * New York


GLOBAL POLITICS & POLICY

 * Brussels
 * Canada
 * United Kingdom


POLICY NEWS

 * Agriculture
 * Cannabis
 * Cybersecurity
 * Defense
 * Education
 * Energy & Environment
 * Finance & Tax
 * Health Care
 * Immigration
 * Labor
 * Sustainability
 * Technology
 * Trade
 * Transportation


NEWSLETTERS

 * Playbook
 * Playbook PM
 * West Wing Playbook
 * POLITICO Nightly
 * POLITICO Weekend
 * The Recast
 * Inside Congress
 * All Newsletters


COLUMNISTS

 * Alex Burns
 * Victoria Guida
 * John Harris
 * Ankush Khardori
 * Jonathan Martin
 * Michael Schaffer
 * Jack Shafer
 * Nahal Toosi


SERIES & MORE

 * Breaking News Alerts
 * Podcasts
 * Video
 * The Fifty
 * Biden’s Billions
 * Women Rule
 * Matt Wuerker Cartoons
 * Cartoon Carousel


POLITICO LIVE

 * Upcoming Events
 * Previous Events


FOLLOW US

 * Twitter
 * Instagram
 * Facebook

 * My Account
 * Log In Log Out



Letter from Idaho


NORTH IDAHO HAS DRIFTED TO THE EXTREME RIGHT. ONE REPUBLICAN THINKS IT’S HIT ITS
LIMIT.

One candidate is testing the power of a moderate coalition to stand up to
extremism in a region that has been powerless to its advance.



Jim Woodward on his property in Sagle, Idaho on April 2, 2024. Woodward is
running against opponent Scott Herndon for both Senate and for Precinct. |
Photos by Margaret Albaugh for POLITICO

By Cassidy Randall

05/19/2024 12:00 PM EDT

 * 
 * 

 * * Link Copied
 * * 
   * 
   * 

Cassidy Randall is a freelance journalist based in Montana. Her stories have
appeared in Rolling Stone, TIME, the New York Times, National Geographic, and
elsewhere.

SANDPOINT, Idaho — Jim Woodward was an Idaho state senator from 2019 to 2022,
and, although a moderate politician by local standards, he voted yes on all the
laws that would ultimately make the state’s abortion ban one of the strictest in
the country.

Idaho’s ban, which automatically took effect when Roe v. Wade was overturned in
2022, begins at conception and doesn’t make an exception for the future health
of the mother. In 2020, Woodward, a Republican, voted yes on a law that requires
physicians to prove that a mother’s life is at risk before performing an
abortion or face fines, lawsuits, jail time and revoked medical licenses. In
March of 2022, Woodward voted yes on another law that allows family members,
including those of rapists (although not rapists themselves), to sue providers
for performing abortions.



So it was surprising that, two years later, on a snowy north Idaho night this
January, Woodward was at the seat of his pickup, navigating around roads closed
due to the fierce weather on his way to attend a viewing of “On the Brink,” the
“Nightline” episode on the impact of states’ restrictive abortion laws on
women’s health and lives. In Idaho, the documentary showed, the laws he voted
for have put women’s lives at risk, sent physicians fleeing the state for fear
of jail time and losing their medical licenses and contributed to Sandpoint’s
Bonner General Hospital closing its labor and delivery ward to leave 50,000
people in the region without obstetrical care.




Jennifer Quintano is north Idaho’s lone abortion rights organizer as director of
the Pro-Voice Project, which uses storytelling campaigns to advocate for
abortion access and reproductive rights.

He was headed there thanks to an unusual invitation from Jennifer Quintano,
north Idaho’s lone abortion rights organizer as director of the Pro-Voice
Project, which uses storytelling campaigns to advocate for abortion access and
reproductive rights. When he arrived, he found himself the only male attendee.
He was likely also the only Republican, which made the crowd uncommon in a
county where Republicans outnumber Democrats five to one.

But Woodward didn’t see it as a step into “enemy territory,” even though none of
these attendees, as Democrats, could vote for him in Idaho’s closed primary. He
saw it as an opportunity to listen to some of the many voters galvanized by the
fallout of the state’s ensuing extreme abortion laws after Roe v. Wade was
overturned — laws that the state legislature is only trying to make even more
restrictive.




In 2022, Woodward, 55, lost his Senate seat in north Idaho to far-right
candidate Scott Herndon, an abortion abolitionist who believes the procedure
should be treated as murder and punished with jail time or even the death
penalty. In the 2023 session, Herndon tried to remove the rape and incest
exception from the state’s total abortion ban, calling rape “an opportunity to
have a child … if the rape actually occurred.”

Woodward is running to re-take his seat in the Republican primary on May 21, and
central to his platform is reclaiming his community from the extremism that has
taken over the GOP in the region. That includes opposing hostile ideological
takeovers of public schools and unrestricted concealed-carry on campuses and,
especially, protecting women’s health. Two days after the “Nightline” viewing,
which strengthened his conviction that Idaho had gone too far in its restrictive
law, he shared stories from the episode with attendees at a campaign meet and
greet of Republican voters as examples of why Idaho needs to walk back the
abortion policies that put women’s lives at risk and caused a physician exodus —
both of which he’d voted into law. Now, he brings up women’s health care
messaging at every campaign gathering he goes to or event that he speaks at.

Want to read more stories like this? POLITICO Weekend delivers gripping reads,
smart analysis and a bit of high-minded fun every Friday. Sign up for the
newsletter.

After years of Idaho, and north Idaho in particular, creeping ever more
rightward, Woodward and Quintano are both willing to publicly work to find
common ground to advance moderate positions—a bold move in a region where
extremists mount increasingly bold displays of armed intimidation and routinely
out those who don’t fall in with far-right views.

Woodward still does not believe in elective abortion, but he is campaigning on
changing language in the abortion ban that only allows exceptions for the life,
and not the health, of the mother, and that criminalizes physicians. These
policy shifts might sound small, but they will have large ramifications for
women’s health in Idaho. And his willingness to call out others’ extremism on
both abortion and other issues has created an opening for more moderate and more
left-leaning slices of voters to support him.

A blue wave like that seen in other states and regions would never transform
north Idaho’s electoral map — Democrats make up only 12.6 percent of registered
voters in the entire state. In addition to the state’s strict abortion laws,
north Idaho has for decades been known as one of the most notorious havens for
militia, white supremacy and anti-government extremism. Instead, voters on the
left have reconciled themselves to working with moderate Republicans. “If you’re
going to have a voice on important issues, you have to find connections in the
dominant party,” Quintano says. (The Pro-Voice Project received 501c3 status in
mid-March after this reporting; neither Quintano nor the organization endorses
politicians or participates in campaigning.)

Woodward’s is just one example of a growing trend in the region of moderate
Republicans, Independents and the few Democrats joining together to reverse a
range of far-right changes in their communities, including school board
takeovers and library censorship. In these cases, the hope goes, bringing in
moderate and left-leaning voters to give money, publicly show support or vote
for more Republican candidates in the primary could counteract the loss of
support from those on the further right; some Democrats in north Idaho even
switch their party affiliations to vote for Republicans in the primary.

If Woodward’s campaign fundraising to date is any indication, a moderate wave
fueled by people willing to reach across the center line could be working.
Woodward’s primary race is one of the most expensive in the state. By early May,
he had raised nearly $99,207 to Herndon’s $88,989, and the number of local
donations to Woodward’s campaign from within the district outnumbered Herndon’s
more than two to one.


MOST READ


 1. A POLLING DO-OVER FINDS TRUMP’S LEAD SHRANK AFTER GUILTY VERDICT


 2. UKRAINE FRUSTRATED WITH US OVER F-16 PILOT TRAINING


 3. BYRON DONALDS EXPRESSES NOSTALGIA FOR THE JIM CROW ERA, WHEN ‘THE BLACK
    FAMILY WAS TOGETHER’


 4. 2 OF HUNTER BIDEN’S EXES DESCRIBE HIS YEARS OF DRUG ABUSE


 5. APPEALS COURT HALTS TRUMP’S CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS IN GEORGIA AMID SCRUTINY OF
    FANI WILLIS



The political shift happening in north Idaho is taking place just as the rest of
the country is seeing increasing extremism in state legislatures and far-right
brinksmanship in Congress. If north Idaho preceded other states and the country
in its drift toward extremism over the past several decades, the embrace of
political moderation in this race could tell a new story: of how extremism can
eventually go too far and spark a broader effort to finally beat it back.

But speaking out against extremism — the way Woodward is on extreme abortion
laws and efforts to dismantle public schools — can be dangerous for politicians.
In north Idaho, even pursuing moderate Republican policies can result in
censures and RINO (“Republican-in-name-only”) labels from the
far-right-controlled local and state party committees and caucuses. Openly
working across party lines is a fraught venture on both sides — which is why,
says Mistie DelliCarpini-Tolman, Idaho state director for Planned Parenthood
Alliance Advocates, the trend is mostly underground. “Moderate Republicans may
not think that left-leaning support will help their cause, and left-leaning
organizations don’t want to hurt the chances of a moderate Republican by being
public with their support,” she says. “So I think you see a lot of work being
done in the background to support these candidates.”

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Idaho’s slide to extremism can be traced in part to a history of economic
depression when the timber industry collapsed in the 1970s and 80s. “You had
towns emptying out that became attractive to people who saw the remote
wilderness geography as an appealing place to retreat to and hide from the
government,” says Betsy Gaines Quammen, historian and author of books about
western history.

Those people included the founders of the white supremacist groups Aryan Nations
and the Northwest Territorial Imperative. In 1992, U.S. marshals sought out NTI
member Randy Weaver at his cabin on Ruby Ridge, north of Sandpoint, after he
failed to attend a trial on firearms charges. The resulting standoff and
firefight — which left Weaver’s wife, son, dog and a U.S. Marshal dead — sparked
the modern militia movement with its epicenter in rural north Idaho.

In 2011, after the Idaho Republican Party sued the state to close its primary on
the grounds that party loyalists, not leftist crossovers, should choose
Republican candidates, Idaho passed a law that voters could only vote for the
party in which they were registered — a development that many people believe
also contributed to the state’s rise in extremist politics. In the rural West,
where voters have historically been known to vote for individual people rather
than based on blind loyalty to parties, closing the primary instantly changed
the political landscape here.



Top: Jim Woodward on his property in Sagle, Idaho. Bottom: Jim Woodward and his
son Avery at a job site for his construction business in Sagle, Idaho.

“You close a primary, and then the people participating in that election are
more ideologically oriented,” Shelby Rognstad, who served as Sandpoint mayor
from 2016-2022, explains. He was an independent before 2011, he tells me, and
then switched to Republican to have a vote. But 27 percent of registered voters
in Idaho are still independent, meaning more than a quarter of voters are shut
out from casting primary ballots.




Many Idahoans I spoke to said that it was mostly in recent years that the
culture of fear and public armed intimidation has swelled and pushed the state’s
government and politics even further right. They attributed this to two things:
In 2011, the political migration and prepper movement, the American Redoubt,
began encouraging conservative “Christian patriots” to flock here from populated
areas to settle and defend themselves when the country collapses, which led to a
rise in Christian nationalism in the region. Second, since the pandemic,
far-right out-of-state transplants have surged.

Jo Len Everhart, a Bonner’s Ferry resident whose children went to high school
with Woodward, says the shift in the feel of the community is palpable. “We
always were a gun culture,” she says. “But now I’ll go into stores and the
clerks have pistols on, I’m in a bridge club and one of the players has a huge
pistol on his hip.”

In just the last two years, north Idaho’s local and rural campaigning has also
been infused with national-style politics that promote an extremist bent. Now,
far-right extremist groups “are coalescing in north Idaho, and trying to create
a model for how to take over other communities and other states,” says Quammen.

Woodward saw for himself that shift. “The Idaho I grew up in was a live and let
live state,” he says. He grew up in Bonner’s Ferry, on the north end of this
district. After college, 21 years in the military and then a few years on the
local utilities board in Sandpoint, he ran for state Senate in 2018, in a
primary race against two other Republicans — including Scott Herndon, a general
contractor, father of seven, and outspoken Christian who’d moved to Sagle,
Idaho, 14 years before from California.

That first primary looked like typical rural western campaigning. Woodward drove
around in his pickup knocking on doors, talking to people and handwriting lists
of who wanted yard signs. He spoke at candidate forums with Herndon. “It was
civilized,” Woodward says. “We all treated each other with respect.” Woodward
won that primary with 48 percent of the vote. Herndon pulled in 22 percent.

In Idaho, which maintains a citizen legislature that meets every January through
March, senators run every two years. Woodward had no challengers in 2020, and
then Herndon returned to run in 2022. This time, he hired a political consulting
firm headquartered in Las Vegas called McShane (motto: “Take It By the Horns”)
to run his campaign, which also worked on national campaigns like Senator Steve
Daines’ and Representative Matt Rosendale’s in neighboring Montana.



Herndon’s campaign flavor markedly changed. It became personal and
attack-driven, with mailers and local ads calling Woodward “Liberal Jim,”
showing him wearing a mask, claiming he would “control your kids by turning
schools into ‘woke’ indoctrination centers” and that he supported critical race
theory and allowing transgender children to compete in school sports. The
campaign also made ads pasting Woodward’s face next to Biden’s. This time,
Herndon won with 56.17 percent.

Woodward says he was blindsided by the “the viciousness of it.” He hadn’t
campaigned all that hard in retaliation, figuring that as the four-year
incumbent in a small community, people knew him well enough to dismiss Herndon’s
claims.



Jo Len Everhart, a Bonner’s Ferry resident whose children went to high school
with Woodward, says the shift in the feel of the community is palpable.

Everhart, a lifelong Republican, said she had friends and relatives, “good
Christian Republicans, who saw those smear ads and didn’t vote for [Woodward].
The problem is that the far right is willing to campaign on lies,” she says.
“And Idaho is a place where people are scared to speak out otherwise.”




Everhart, though, has been a vocal supporter of Woodward’s, hosting meet and
greets, writing letters to the editor, and posting a yard sign — regardless of
the possible intimidation that could result. She told me that she worried that
political rivals could “slash my tires, burn our house, shoot me,” based on
other high-profile instances of armed intimidation in north Idaho. In the last
few years alone, armed militia descended on a Black Lives Matter march in
Sandpoint led by high schoolers to harass them, the Bonner’s Ferry librarian
resigned after gun-toting locals packed the library and threatened her at home
when she refused to censor books, and 31 people associated with a white
supremacist group were arrested for allegedly plotting to riot at a Pride
festival in Coeur d’Alene.



Herndon didn’t campaign much publicly while he was in the thick of the
legislative session; he’s picked it up since the session ended to host and
appear at campaign events. But he did enter campaign donors into free giveaways
of guns — a semiautomatic rifle on New Year’s, a handgun on Valentine’s Day — a
tactic that he says adds “a little bit of fun to fundraising.” Herndon is
emblematic of far-right politics in north Idaho: In addition to his track record
and views on abortion (his YouTube channel features videos of him handing out
anti-abortion propaganda with graphic images to students on a sidewalk outside
of a Coeur D’Alene high school and of his seven children harmonizing on a song
that calls abortion “a Holocaust disguised” and “child sacrifice”), he’s head of
the Bonner County Republican Central Committee that’s been censuring local
politicians for not voting in far-right lockstep. He’s a founding member of the
Idaho Freedom Caucus, modeled on the congressional House Freedom Caucus; and was
voted the most conservative legislator in 2023 by the Idaho Freedom Foundation,
which holds itself up as “the arbiter of true conservatism.” He’s a concealed
carry advocate who introduced legislation in this session to allow guns into the
Sandpoint Music Festival and on college campuses, and sponsored legislation that
would have diverted state money from public schools to private and religious
schools.

Woodward has changed his mind on specific parts of the abortion ban, but on
these other issues, his positions have remained mostly the same since his
earlier campaigns. He supports gun rights but opposes proposals to allow school
staff to carry concealed weapons on campuses without criminal liability. He’s
religious himself but has opposed efforts to use state funds for religious
schools. In terms of public lands and wildlife, he supported Idaho’s policy to
remove 90 percent of its wolf population but opposes federal land transfer.
These comparatively moderate stances haven’t changed, but Herndon’s candidacy
has allowed Woodward to draw a firmer contrast with his own campaign this
election.

I ask Herndon how he responds when people label him an extremist. He says that
it’s common that his bills “get a lot of bipartisan support, or at least
unanimous Republican support. So anybody who uses that label must think that
anyone in the legislature is extreme, or every Republican is extreme.”

Bev Kee, who is Woodward’s campaign manager this time around, says that she
doesn’t think the majority of voters’ views became more extreme over those four
years between Woodward’s election and his loss. Rather, she says, a lot of
people didn’t think Woodward would lose in 2022, and so didn’t vote that May.
Forty-four percent of Bonner County’s voters turned out in the primary compared
to 65 percent in the general; Woodward lost by a matter of 1,707 votes.

That’s why in this cycle, Woodward is focusing on overcoming the usual voter
apathy in the primaries, running “May Matters” as one of his main campaign
slogans. In his district, as in most of heavily right Idaho where Democrats have
little chance in the general election against a Republican, winners are decided
in the primary. “We’re trying to get people to understand that if they want to
be part of the decision, they have to vote in May,” he says.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In April of 2023, partially as a result of Idaho’s total abortion trigger ban
and associated abortion laws — all of which Woodward had voted for — Bonner
General closed its labor and delivery ward, with hospital executives citing
“Idaho’s legal and political climate” in which “the Idaho legislature continues
to introduce and pass bills criminalizing physicians for medical care nationally
recognized as the standard of care.” One recent study found that more than 50
OBGYNs have fled the state as a direct result of those laws.




Since Woodward lost his seat to Herndon, Idaho’s legislature has gone even
further on abortion restrictions, passing a law to criminalize helping minors
cross state lines for an abortion without parental consent. The legislature also
disbanded the state’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee before it could
investigate the effects of its restrictive abortion laws, making it the only
state without such a committee — even as Idaho’s maternal death rate rose 121.5
percent from 2019 to the highest now in the nation. Bills in the 2024 session
include one that would remove the rape and incest exception from the abortion
ban and one that would change language in Idaho law from “fetus” to “preborn
child.”

While up to 13 other states will have ballot initiatives to protect abortion
access in this election cycle, there’s barely a whisper of one in Idaho yet.
Instead, in the past 22 months since Roe was overturned, reproductive rights
proponents and moderate voters have begun throwing their support behind moderate
Republicans in hopes of rolling back some of the most extreme laws.

Back in the fall of 2023, Quintano had invited Woodward for coffee to learn
where he stood on reproductive rights issues — or at least on bringing back
labor and delivery services to the region. Reproductive care had become a
flashpoint in the community, and while abortion is polarizing, Quintano points
out, the fallout from abortion bans isn’t. “We can all agree that we want to be
able to birth babies in this community, that we want women to have access close
by to all kinds of reproductive health care, not just obstetrics,” she says.
“We’ve lost all of that here.”

The impact of the closing of the labor and delivery ward, physicians leaving and
anecdotes like the ones on the “Nightline” episode all played into Woodward’s
decision to campaign on modifying the language in the total abortion ban that
threatens doctors with felony convictions and loss of medical licenses and
allows for abortion only in the cases of life-threatening emergencies. Such
stringency, and particularly the question of when a medical emergency is
sufficiently life-threatening, has been shown to put women’s lives and future
ability to have children at risk. Changing his position, Woodward says, “comes
from keeping an open mind, listening to the people in the district and not being
stuck on an ideology. When you get new information, you get a different output.”



Since Woodward lost his seat to Herndon, Idaho’s legislature has gone even
further on abortion restrictions, passing a law to criminalize helping minors
cross state lines for an abortion without parental consent.

He hasn’t changed his mind on the fact that elective abortion should be illegal.
And he wasn’t afraid to say so when Quintano invited him to speak in February at
a monthly gathering hosted by the Bonner County Democrats and the Pro-Voice
Project. Sixty-five people showed up — almost twice the usual head count —
packing the little downtown bakery where the event was held. “I said, ‘I do not
believe in elective abortion,’” Woodward recounts, “‘but I do know that we
created a problem with our health care system, in particular in regards to
women’s health and having babies, and we need to get that straightened out.’”




Quintano says the response was split down the room, “between very liberal
Democrats who will never vote for a Republican, and moderate Democrats who were
excited about what he had to say, excited about his chances of winning in May,
and wanted to support him.” While most advocates and left-leaning voters seem to
agree that Woodward’s views fall far short of the ideal goal of ensuring women’s
legal reproductive rights, for some, his candidacy at least represents progress,
and better than what Idahoans would get with abortion abolitionists in office.

It’s not just his stance on reproductive health care that is resonating with
these voters; Woodward has been making appearances at other events to discuss
his moderate stances on education, guns and public lands and resources. While
many moderate and left-leaning north Idaho voters I spoke to were also receptive
to Woodward’s stances on these other issues, for them, reproductive care in the
region is at a crisis moment and has been the biggest impetus to supporting
Woodward.

Woodward sees campaigning on reproductive health care simply as listening to
what his constituents want. A poll released earlier this year found that 58
percent of Idahoans support expanding exceptions to the state’s abortion ban.
“The job is to know the thoughts of the community and represent the people in
the community,” he says. “It’s not to create division.”

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Woodward’s willingness to be seen at such events isn’t without risks. Another
Republican candidate had refused to meet with Quintano in public, calling it
“political suicide.” Indeed, Herndon seized on Woodward’s appearance at the
bakery and at a March rally outside Bonner General to restore reproductive
health care access. “Liberal Jim,” Herndon’s March 17 newsletter stated, “has
been campaigning (as a Republican) with the Bonner County Democrats. We even
have photos of him from a recent pro-abortion Bonner Country Democrat event in
Sandpoint.”

Moderate Republicans face more than risks to their political careers. When
Rognstad was Sandpoint mayor, his wife Katherine Greenland tells me, people
often drove past their house to hurl obscenities at their children playing
outside; she says one of their sons escaped an attempted kidnapping. When
Rognstad chose to run for governor in 2022 on an anti-extremist campaign, he
received hate mail and death threats.



A Republican candidate has refused to meet with Quintano (top) in public,
calling it “political suicide.” Indeed, Herndon seized on Woodward’s appearance
at the bakery and at a March rally outside Bonner General to restore
reproductive health care access.

But DelliCarpini-Tolman of Planned Parenthood sees Woodward’s messaging as far
from harmful to his candidacy; campaigning on reproductive rights has already a
proven winning tactic in other races across the country, she says.

“People are starting to see that reproductive rights are wildly popular,”
DelliCarpini-Tolman continued. “Based off the polling on it, I wouldn’t be
surprised if we see bigger numbers at the polls in this state primary than we’ve
seen in years.”




There’s another way the few Democrats in North Idaho are trying to flex what
little muscle they have, which several people told me about in whispers or
anonymously. Many change their party affiliation for the primaries in order to
have some impact on who’s elected, and then switch back for the general — an
onerous process thanks to the closed primary, but one that voters are motivated
to take on to act as a counterweight to extremism.

Several people told me they were doing so this spring specifically to vote for
Woodward. Kate Painter, a Bonner’s Ferry resident who hosted a meet and greet
for Woodward, is one of those. “It helps me participate and hopefully keep
extremists who are in the minority, like Herndon, off the main ballot. And then
in the general, I just vote for good people, since there are so few choices from
the Democratic Party.” While registered Democrats make up a small portion of the
Idaho electorate, rural races are often decided on slim margins; Woodward lost
his 2022 race to Herndon by just 1,707 votes.

Painter and her husband Gray are also part of a movement of Idahoans working
toward other, more structural solutions to make the state’s politics more
moderate. They’re active volunteers on the Open Primaries Initiative, a
bipartisan, citizen-led group aiming to collect enough signatures for the
initiative to appear on the November ballot to let voters choose to re-open the
primaries. The group needs 63,000 signatures, and has collected 66,000 as of
March 1; it’s aiming for 100,000 to parry any accusations of invalid signatures.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Moderates galvanized by extremism to find common ground, and act on it, have
already scored one big win in North Idaho.

In mid-February, I join Woodward to drive the half hour from Sandpoint to Priest
River, to a meeting where he was asked to speak. He spends a lot of time in his
pickup these days, attending meet and greets hosted in people’s homes, meetings
and events all over the district. Where we’re headed tonight, he says, is an
example of the powerful impact moderate voters can have when they’re motivated
to combat the extremism that’s affecting their daily lives.

The Recall Replace Rebuild West Bonner County School District (RRR) group was
started by a group of Priest River moms — both Republicans and Democrats — when
their school board was infiltrated by far-right culture warriors in the 2022
election. In June 2023, those members, who held a majority as three of the five
trustees on the board, elected a superintendent, Brendan Durst, with zero
state-required education certifications and ties to the Idaho Freedom
Foundation, a far-right political activist organization that aims “to defeat
Marxism and socialism”; it has called public schools “the most virulent form of
socialism.” Militia members began showing up at school board meetings, the
school levy that funds basic operations failed to pass as residents became
divided into camps “for” or “against” public education, curriculum slipped out
of state compliance, and Durst began working to have intelligent design taught
in biology classes and offer an Old Testament course (neither came to pass). The
resulting chaos, social and political division, and lack of resources sent
nearly 50 teachers, counselors and a principal fleeing the district. Many
families left as well. Durst told one reporter that “his takeover was a ‘pilot’
others could learn from.”

Less than three months after Durst was hired, RRR gathered enough signatures to
hold a recall election — framed not along party lines, but as those who cared
about a functioning school district for their children against those embracing
extremism. An astonishing 60.9 percent of voters turned out, and two of the
three far-right board members were voted off. Durst resigned the following month
when the State Board of Education blocked his certification.

“Eight hundred people voted in the 2022 election where those three board members
were elected, and they won by a handful of votes, literally single digits,”
Woodward says as we pull up to the community center. “But when 2,100 people
showed up to vote in the recall election, then two of those same people were
told to pack their bags. When you get a bigger slice of the population showing
up, you get a decision that really reflects the values of the community.”



Woodward is optimistic that a stronger moderate showing in the election will
empower more moderate lawmaking.

The RRR meeting tonight is attended by at least 50 people, in a town of only
1,700 on a rainy Monday night; there’s a lot of work to be done still to pass a
levy to fund the school district. It’s clear that there’s no love in the room
for Herndon. People say he escorted Durst into the first school board meeting
where Durst was considered as superintendent, which was packed with militia
members (Herndon says he was at the meeting, but did not escort Durst). After
finishing the meeting agenda, Dana Douglas, one of the group leaders and a
self-described conservative Christian, introduces Woodward with a reminder to
the group that in the 2022 election, “only a third of Priest River turned out to
vote. And of those votes, 75 percent went to Herndon and 25 percent went to
Woodward. We want to flip that this time, and we need your help.”

Even if Woodward does win this race, it’s doubtful how much he can accomplish in
a legislature with a far-right caucus bullying legislators into voting in
lockstep. But he’s optimistic that a stronger moderate showing in the election
will empower more moderate lawmaking.

“It takes leadership and a few strong individuals to do the right thing,” he
says. “If the voters are supportive of a more moderate position, then
legislators can step forward and do that. The party’s controlled by the minority
position, so that silent majority needs to step up and let people know that they
want to be represented.”




 * Filed under:
 * Republicans,
 * Moderate Republicans,
 * Idaho,
 * Letter From ...




PLAYBOOK

The unofficial guide to official Washington, every morning and weekday
afternoons.


Playbook

The unofficial guide to official Washington, every morning and weekday
afternoons.

By signing up, you acknowledge and agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of
Service. You may unsubscribe at any time by following the directions at the
bottom of the email or by contacting us here. This site is protected by
reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Loading

You will now start receiving email updates

You are already subscribed

Something went wrong

Email ! Please make sure that the email address you typed in is valid

Employer

Job Title

* All fields must be completed to subscribe. Sign Up

By signing up, you acknowledge and agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of
Service. You may unsubscribe at any time by following the directions at the
bottom of the email or by contacting us here. This site is protected by
reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Sign Up

SPONSORED CONTENT

Recommended by

 * About Us
 * Advertising
 * Breaking News Alerts
 * Careers
 * Credit Card Payments
 * Digital Edition
 * FAQ
 * Feedback
 * Headlines
 * Photos
 * Press
 * Print Subscriptions
 * Request A Correction
 * Write For Us
 * RSS
 * Site Map

 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Manage Preferences

© 2024 POLITICO LLC




WE CARE ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

We and our 835 partners store and/or access information on a device, such as
unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your
choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate
interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will
be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.


WE AND OUR PARTNERS PROCESS DATA TO PROVIDE:

Use precise geolocation data. Actively scan device characteristics for
identification. Store and/or access information on a device. Personalised
advertising and content, advertising and content measurement, audience research
and services development. List of Partners (vendors)

I Accept
Show Purposes



ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY



Your Opt Out Preference Signal is Honored


 * YOUR PRIVACY


 * FUNCTIONAL COOKIES


 * SOCIAL MEDIA COOKIES


 * STRICTLY NECESSARY COOKIES


 * PERFORMANCE COOKIES


 * TARGETING COOKIES


 * GOOGLE


 * STORE AND/OR ACCESS INFORMATION ON A DEVICE 671 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE


 * PERSONALISED ADVERTISING AND CONTENT, ADVERTISING AND CONTENT MEASUREMENT,
   AUDIENCE RESEARCH AND SERVICES DEVELOPMENT 795 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE


 * USE PRECISE GEOLOCATION DATA 256 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE


 * ACTIVELY SCAN DEVICE CHARACTERISTICS FOR IDENTIFICATION 123 PARTNERS CAN USE
   THIS PURPOSE


 * ENSURE SECURITY, PREVENT AND DETECT FRAUD, AND FIX ERRORS 502 PARTNERS CAN
   USE THIS PURPOSE


 * DELIVER AND PRESENT ADVERTISING AND CONTENT 494 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE


 * MATCH AND COMBINE DATA FROM OTHER DATA SOURCES 354 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS
   PURPOSE


 * LINK DIFFERENT DEVICES 325 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE


 * IDENTIFY DEVICES BASED ON INFORMATION TRANSMITTED AUTOMATICALLY 480 PARTNERS
   CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

YOUR PRIVACY

We process your data to deliver content or advertisements and measure the
delivery of such content or advertisements to extract insights about our
website. We share this information with our partners on the basis of consent and
legitimate interest. You may exercise your right to consent or object to a
legitimate interest, based on a specific purpose below or at a partner level in
the link under each purpose. These choices will be signaled to our vendors
participating in the Transparency and Consent Framework.
More information

List of IAB Vendors‎

FUNCTIONAL COOKIES

Functional Cookies


These cookies enable the website to provide enhanced functionality and
personalisation. They may be set by us or by third party providers whose
services we have added to our pages. If you do not allow these cookies then some
or all of these services may not function properly.

Cookies Details‎

SOCIAL MEDIA COOKIES

Social Media Cookies


These cookies are set by a range of social media services that we have added to
the site to enable you to share our content with your friends and networks. They
are capable of tracking your browser across other sites and building up a
profile of your interests. This may impact the content and messages you see on
other websites you visit. If you do not allow these cookies you may not be able
to use or see these sharing tools.

Cookies Details‎

STRICTLY NECESSARY COOKIES

Always Active

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched
off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you
which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy
preferences, logging in or filling in forms. You can set your browser to block
or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work.

Cookies Details‎

PERFORMANCE COOKIES

Performance Cookies


These cookies allow us to count visits and traffic sources so we can measure and
improve the performance of our site. They help us to know which pages are the
most and least popular and see how visitors move around the site. All
information these cookies collect is aggregated and therefore anonymous. If you
do not allow these cookies we will not know when you have visited our site, and
will not be able to monitor its performance.

Cookies Details‎

TARGETING COOKIES

Targeting Cookies


These cookies may be set through our site by our advertising partners. They may
be used by those companies to build a profile of your interests and show you
relevant adverts on other sites. They do not store directly personal
information, but are based on uniquely identifying your browser and internet
device. If you do not allow these cookies, you will experience less targeted
advertising.

Cookies Details‎

GOOGLE

Google


Allowing third-party ad tracking and third-party ad serving through Google and
other vendors to occur. Please see more information on Google Ads here.

Cookies Details‎

STORE AND/OR ACCESS INFORMATION ON A DEVICE 671 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

Store and/or access information on a device


Cookies, device or similar online identifiers (e.g. login-based identifiers,
randomly assigned identifiers, network based identifiers) together with other
information (e.g. browser type and information, language, screen size, supported
technologies etc.) can be stored or read on your device to recognise it each
time it connects to an app or to a website, for one or several of the purposes
presented here.

List of IAB Vendors‎ | View Illustrations 

PERSONALISED ADVERTISING AND CONTENT, ADVERTISING AND CONTENT MEASUREMENT,
AUDIENCE RESEARCH AND SERVICES DEVELOPMENT 795 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

Personalised advertising and content, advertising and content measurement,
audience research and services development


 * USE LIMITED DATA TO SELECT ADVERTISING 606 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Advertising presented to you on this service can be based on limited data,
   such as the website or app you are using, your non-precise location, your
   device type or which content you are (or have been) interacting with (for
   example, to limit the number of times an ad is presented to you).
   
   View Illustrations 
   Object to Legitimate Interests Remove Objection

 * CREATE PROFILES FOR PERSONALISED ADVERTISING 492 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS
   PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Information about your activity on this service (such as forms you submit,
   content you look at) can be stored and combined with other information about
   you (for example, information from your previous activity on this service and
   other websites or apps) or similar users. This is then used to build or
   improve a profile about you (that might include possible interests and
   personal aspects). Your profile can be used (also later) to present
   advertising that appears more relevant based on your possible interests by
   this and other entities.
   
   View Illustrations 

 * USE PROFILES TO SELECT PERSONALISED ADVERTISING 487 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS
   PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Advertising presented to you on this service can be based on your advertising
   profiles, which can reflect your activity on this service or other websites
   or apps (like the forms you submit, content you look at), possible interests
   and personal aspects.
   
   View Illustrations 

 * CREATE PROFILES TO PERSONALISE CONTENT 216 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Information about your activity on this service (for instance, forms you
   submit, non-advertising content you look at) can be stored and combined with
   other information about you (such as your previous activity on this service
   or other websites or apps) or similar users. This is then used to build or
   improve a profile about you (which might for example include possible
   interests and personal aspects). Your profile can be used (also later) to
   present content that appears more relevant based on your possible interests,
   such as by adapting the order in which content is shown to you, so that it is
   even easier for you to find content that matches your interests.
   
   View Illustrations 

 * USE PROFILES TO SELECT PERSONALISED CONTENT 189 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Content presented to you on this service can be based on your content
   personalisation profiles, which can reflect your activity on this or other
   services (for instance, the forms you submit, content you look at), possible
   interests and personal aspects, such as by adapting the order in which
   content is shown to you, so that it is even easier for you to find
   (non-advertising) content that matches your interests.
   
   View Illustrations 

 * MEASURE ADVERTISING PERFORMANCE 706 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Information regarding which advertising is presented to you and how you
   interact with it can be used to determine how well an advert has worked for
   you or other users and whether the goals of the advertising were reached. For
   instance, whether you saw an ad, whether you clicked on it, whether it led
   you to buy a product or visit a website, etc. This is very helpful to
   understand the relevance of advertising campaigns.
   
   View Illustrations 
   Object to Legitimate Interests Remove Objection

 * MEASURE CONTENT PERFORMANCE 355 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Information regarding which content is presented to you and how you interact
   with it can be used to determine whether the (non-advertising) content e.g.
   reached its intended audience and matched your interests. For instance,
   whether you read an article, watch a video, listen to a podcast or look at a
   product description, how long you spent on this service and the web pages you
   visit etc. This is very helpful to understand the relevance of
   (non-advertising) content that is shown to you.
   
   View Illustrations 
   Object to Legitimate Interests Remove Objection

 * UNDERSTAND AUDIENCES THROUGH STATISTICS OR COMBINATIONS OF DATA FROM
   DIFFERENT SOURCES 449 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Reports can be generated based on the combination of data sets (like user
   profiles, statistics, market research, analytics data) regarding your
   interactions and those of other users with advertising or (non-advertising)
   content to identify common characteristics (for instance, to determine which
   target audiences are more receptive to an ad campaign or to certain
   contents).
   
   View Illustrations 
   Object to Legitimate Interests Remove Objection

 * DEVELOP AND IMPROVE SERVICES 531 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Information about your activity on this service, such as your interaction
   with ads or content, can be very helpful to improve products and services and
   to build new products and services based on user interactions, the type of
   audience, etc. This specific purpose does not include the development or
   improvement of user profiles and identifiers.
   
   View Illustrations 
   Object to Legitimate Interests Remove Objection

 * USE LIMITED DATA TO SELECT CONTENT 121 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE
   
   Switch Label
   
   Content presented to you on this service can be based on limited data, such
   as the website or app you are using, your non-precise location, your device
   type, or which content you are (or have been) interacting with (for example,
   to limit the number of times a video or an article is presented to you).
   
   View Illustrations 
   Object to Legitimate Interests Remove Objection

List of IAB Vendors‎

USE PRECISE GEOLOCATION DATA 256 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

Use precise geolocation data


With your acceptance, your precise location (within a radius of less than 500
metres) may be used in support of the purposes explained in this notice.

List of IAB Vendors‎

ACTIVELY SCAN DEVICE CHARACTERISTICS FOR IDENTIFICATION 123 PARTNERS CAN USE
THIS PURPOSE

Actively scan device characteristics for identification


With your acceptance, certain characteristics specific to your device might be
requested and used to distinguish it from other devices (such as the installed
fonts or plugins, the resolution of your screen) in support of the purposes
explained in this notice.

List of IAB Vendors‎

ENSURE SECURITY, PREVENT AND DETECT FRAUD, AND FIX ERRORS 502 PARTNERS CAN USE
THIS PURPOSE

Always Active

Your data can be used to monitor for and prevent unusual and possibly fraudulent
activity (for example, regarding advertising, ad clicks by bots), and ensure
systems and processes work properly and securely. It can also be used to correct
any problems you, the publisher or the advertiser may encounter in the delivery
of content and ads and in your interaction with them.

List of IAB Vendors‎ | View Illustrations 

DELIVER AND PRESENT ADVERTISING AND CONTENT 494 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

Always Active

Certain information (like an IP address or device capabilities) is used to
ensure the technical compatibility of the content or advertising, and to
facilitate the transmission of the content or ad to your device.

List of IAB Vendors‎ | View Illustrations 

MATCH AND COMBINE DATA FROM OTHER DATA SOURCES 354 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

Always Active

Information about your activity on this service may be matched and combined with
other information relating to you and originating from various sources (for
instance your activity on a separate online service, your use of a loyalty card
in-store, or your answers to a survey), in support of the purposes explained in
this notice.

List of IAB Vendors‎

LINK DIFFERENT DEVICES 325 PARTNERS CAN USE THIS PURPOSE

Always Active

In support of the purposes explained in this notice, your device might be
considered as likely linked to other devices that belong to you or your
household (for instance because you are logged in to the same service on both
your phone and your computer, or because you may use the same Internet
connection on both devices).

List of IAB Vendors‎

IDENTIFY DEVICES BASED ON INFORMATION TRANSMITTED AUTOMATICALLY 480 PARTNERS CAN
USE THIS PURPOSE

Always Active

Your device might be distinguished from other devices based on information it
automatically sends when accessing the Internet (for instance, the IP address of
your Internet connection or the type of browser you are using) in support of the
purposes exposed in this notice.

List of IAB Vendors‎
Back Button


COOKIE LIST

Filter Button
Consent Leg.Interest
checkbox label label
checkbox label label
checkbox label label

Clear
checkbox label label
Apply Cancel
Confirm My Choices
Allow All