The Neal Larson Show

6.29.2026 - Abortion Initiative Fight | OB-GYN Shortage Claims | Candidate Interview Fallout

1 h 41 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio 6.29.2026 - Abortion Initiative Fight | OB-GYN Shortage Claims | Candidate Interview Fallout

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Supreme Court decision day had Neal Larson and Julie Mason glued to SCOTUSBlog, tracking rulings in real time and waiting (again) for the Idaho “Fairness in Women’s Sports” decision—only to learn from Rep. Barbara Ehardt that the opinion wouldn’t drop today, and that tomorrow is likely the final day. Along the way, they reacted to the Court’s split decision allowing states to count some late-arriving ballots (and Justice Alito’s warning about public confidence), plus additional rulings tied to executive power and agency leadership. The live, “breaking-news” pacing brought plenty of whiplash—mixed reports, quick clarifications, and that familiar end-of-term SCOTUS suspense. The other big throughline was a candid post-mortem of their earlier interview with Democratic congressional candidate Ellie Gilbreath, especially her evasions on abortion specifics and the way Idaho Democrats frame an OB-GYN shortage around abortion access. Neal and Julie pushed back hard on calling abortion a mere “cultural issue,” argued that Idaho’s abortion initiative is far broader than many voters realize, and urged listeners to press lawmakers directly rather than letting them hide behind talking points. The hour also detoured into lighter (and local) moments—Meridian’s flash-flood videos, Fourth of July fireworks speculation, the “migraine meal” TikTok trend, and a sharp discussion of the WNBA’s failure to protect Caitlin Clark—before ending with the expectation that tomorrow could finally bring the rulings everyone’s waiting for. Highlights - Real-time Supreme Court watch: late-arriving ballots upheld in a 5–4 split, with Alito warning the ruling could erode election confidence.   - Rep. Barbara Ehardt update: no Idaho “Fairness in Women’s Sports” decision today; tomorrow may be the last SCOTUS decision day.   - Neal and Julie’s blunt takeaway from the Ellie Gilbreath interview: “cultural issue” framing is used to dodge abortion specifics and elective abortion reality.   - Listener call challenges the “OB-GYNs are leaving Idaho because of abortion law” narrative and questions the evidence behind it.   - WNBA/Caitlin Clark segment: they argue the league is “botching” a major moment by allowing unchecked physical play and ugly optics.   - Lighter local beats: Meridian’s sudden flooding, Fourth of July forecast talk, and the viral “McDonald’s migraine meal” debate (salt, caffeine, electrolytes—or placebo?). Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode INTERVIEW: CD2 Candidate Ellie Gilbreath (D) on resources, abortion, 2A artwork

INTERVIEW: CD2 Candidate Ellie Gilbreath (D) on resources, abortion, 2A

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] In a recent interview on Newstalk 107.9, Ellie Gilbreath, the Democratic nominee for Idaho’s 2nd Congressional District, shared her policy priorities and vision for the state. Speaking with hosts Neal Larson and Julie Mason, Gilbreath positioned herself as a moderate focused on collaborative problem-solving as she prepares to challenge longtime incumbent Mike Simpson in the upcoming November election. A significant portion of the discussion centered on the protection of Idaho’s natural resources. Gilbreath highlighted the potential threat posed by large-scale data centers to the state’s water and energy supplies. She proposed federal legislation modeled after Idaho’s current moratorium on open-loop data centers, which can consume millions of gallons of water daily. Gilbreath emphasized that protecting water is a top priority for Idahoans, particularly those in the agricultural sector. The interview also addressed Gilbreath’s position within the Democratic Party in a deeply conservative state. She described herself as a centrist, stating that her background in mediation and conflict resolution informs her approach to governance. When questioned about party loyalty, Gilbreath asserted that her primary duty would be to represent her district rather than party leadership. “My job as a representative is to represent Idaho, district two, every day, every vote,” she told Larson and Mason, adding that she believes the role of a member of Congress is to be a servant to their constituents. On the topic of healthcare, Gilbreath framed reproductive rights as a critical component of medical access and family stability. She expressed concern over the departure of OBGYN practitioners from Idaho and the closure of labor and delivery services in rural hospitals. While she faced pointed questions regarding specific restrictions on abortion, Gilbreath maintained that medical decisions should remain between families, doctors, and their faith. She also voiced support for Medicaid expansion, noting its popularity among Idaho voters. Regarding the Second Amendment, Gilbreath stated that the right to bear arms is a fundamental part of the state’s culture and must be protected. However, she declined to make blanket promises on future gun control legislation, reiterating that any vote she casts would be based on the specific needs and consensus of her district. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

Ayer24 min
episode 6.29.2026 - Abortion Initiative Fight | OB-GYN Shortage Claims | Candidate Interview Fallout artwork

6.29.2026 - Abortion Initiative Fight | OB-GYN Shortage Claims | Candidate Interview Fallout

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Supreme Court decision day had Neal Larson and Julie Mason glued to SCOTUSBlog, tracking rulings in real time and waiting (again) for the Idaho “Fairness in Women’s Sports” decision—only to learn from Rep. Barbara Ehardt that the opinion wouldn’t drop today, and that tomorrow is likely the final day. Along the way, they reacted to the Court’s split decision allowing states to count some late-arriving ballots (and Justice Alito’s warning about public confidence), plus additional rulings tied to executive power and agency leadership. The live, “breaking-news” pacing brought plenty of whiplash—mixed reports, quick clarifications, and that familiar end-of-term SCOTUS suspense. The other big throughline was a candid post-mortem of their earlier interview with Democratic congressional candidate Ellie Gilbreath, especially her evasions on abortion specifics and the way Idaho Democrats frame an OB-GYN shortage around abortion access. Neal and Julie pushed back hard on calling abortion a mere “cultural issue,” argued that Idaho’s abortion initiative is far broader than many voters realize, and urged listeners to press lawmakers directly rather than letting them hide behind talking points. The hour also detoured into lighter (and local) moments—Meridian’s flash-flood videos, Fourth of July fireworks speculation, the “migraine meal” TikTok trend, and a sharp discussion of the WNBA’s failure to protect Caitlin Clark—before ending with the expectation that tomorrow could finally bring the rulings everyone’s waiting for. Highlights - Real-time Supreme Court watch: late-arriving ballots upheld in a 5–4 split, with Alito warning the ruling could erode election confidence.   - Rep. Barbara Ehardt update: no Idaho “Fairness in Women’s Sports” decision today; tomorrow may be the last SCOTUS decision day.   - Neal and Julie’s blunt takeaway from the Ellie Gilbreath interview: “cultural issue” framing is used to dodge abortion specifics and elective abortion reality.   - Listener call challenges the “OB-GYNs are leaving Idaho because of abortion law” narrative and questions the evidence behind it.   - WNBA/Caitlin Clark segment: they argue the league is “botching” a major moment by allowing unchecked physical play and ugly optics.   - Lighter local beats: Meridian’s sudden flooding, Fourth of July forecast talk, and the viral “McDonald’s migraine meal” debate (salt, caffeine, electrolytes—or placebo?). Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

Ayer1 h 41 min
episode 6.25.2026 - INTERVIEW: Sen. Jim Risch, Rep. Barb Ehardt | Mormon Stories lawsuit | Property Tax Repeal artwork

6.25.2026 - INTERVIEW: Sen. Jim Risch, Rep. Barb Ehardt | Mormon Stories lawsuit | Property Tax Repeal

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason opened the show with a fast-moving Washington update from U.S. Senator Jim Risch, who walked through the stakes of Iran’s nuclear ambitions and why he believes the Trump administration’s posture has fundamentally changed how Tehran calculates risk. Risch also weighed in on the housing package that cleared Congress with overwhelming Senate support, saying he still expects it to be signed despite mixed messaging, and he talked through the uphill-but-not-dead effort to pass the SAVE Act—potentially by attaching it to reconciliation. From there, the focus moved back to Idaho with Representative Barb Ehardt in-studio, as the team kept one eye on the Supreme Court opinion releases—still waiting on Idaho’s women’s sports case. Hart reflected on the experience of seeing a law she authored argued at the Court, then pivoted into one of the day’s biggest conversations: a serious push to eliminate property taxes on a primary residence and replace that revenue with a higher sales tax (including her estimate of what that rate change could look like). The hour also hit the state GOP convention results, skepticism about whether the marijuana initiative will even make the ballot, and sharp warnings about the abortion initiative language. Later, Neal and Julie broke down the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ lawsuit involving the “Mormon Stories” podcast and why branding/trademark confusion—not just a single word—is at the center of the dispute, with a listener calling in to share their experience with the show’s tone and content. ## 2. Highlights - Senator Jim Risch on Iran: why he argues the deterrence landscape is “very different” under President Trump, and what that means going forward. - Risch predicts the bipartisan housing bill still gets signed—calling it a needed step toward restoring the “American dream” of homeownership. - Rep. Barb Ehardt reacts in real time as SCOTUS opinions drop (but not Idaho’s women’s sports ruling yet), and describes watching her own legislation argued at the Supreme Court. - A deep dive into eliminating property tax on a primary residence—Hart cites an estimate of roughly $932M to replace and a possible sales tax move from 6% to 7.75%. - The show’s blunt breakdown of Idaho’s abortion initiative language, and why they believe it’s being marketed with “nice wrapping” while hiding major consequences. - Neal and Julie unpack the “Mormon Stories” lawsuit: trademark/branding confusion, disclaimers, and a caller’s take that the content is “pretty negative and kind of dark.” Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

26 de jun de 20261 h 28 min
episode 6.24.2026 - Election Panic Talk | D91 Infighting | Property Tax Reboot INTERVIEW: Paul Haacke, Julie Nawrocki artwork

6.24.2026 - Election Panic Talk | D91 Infighting | Property Tax Reboot INTERVIEW: Paul Haacke, Julie Nawrocki

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason dug into the ongoing tension inside Idaho Falls School District 91—starting with this year’s teacher contract talks and widening into a broader conversation about trust, transparency, and leadership. Former IFEA leader Julie Nawrocki joined the show to explain how negotiations moved from “everything’s going well” to a sudden push toward mediation, and why that shift—especially when money talks go behind closed doors—creates suspicion among teachers and patrons. D91 Vice Chair Paul Haacke countered with the board’s math: state funding was essentially frozen, the district faced a major health insurance cost jump it chose to absorb (about $1.4 million), and the union’s initial 5% proposal felt disconnected from what was actually available. From there, the discussion turned to a growing Change.org petition calling for a no-confidence vote in Superintendent Karla LaOrange. Nawrocki described what she sees as concrete transparency and communication breakdowns (including schedule changes tied to “minutes” calculations that staff say were never clearly documented, and district documents temporarily disappearing during a software transition). Haacke agreed transparency matters, explained why some processes limit board involvement (especially investigations and appeals), and emphasized that D91 also has real wins—improving graduation rates and test scores, a strong CTE pipeline, and disciplined budgeting. The show wrapped with Neal and Julie reflecting on how organizations get “stuck” in cycles of distrust, plus a spirited side conversation on Trump, election rhetoric double standards, New York’s lurch toward socialism, and whether Idaho can realistically replace property taxes with a sales tax increase. ## 2. Highlights - Julie Nawrocki says negotiations felt positive—until the district abruptly pushed toward mediation once financial proposals hit the table.   - Paul Haacke defends a “0% increase” position by pointing to frozen state funding and the district absorbing a $1.4M insurance increase.   - Debate over whether D91’s use of attorneys in bargaining is responsible stewardship—or a costly distraction from students.   - No-confidence petition specifics: alleged transparency gaps, unanswered emails, schedule changes, and concerns about retaliation/fear culture.   - Neal and Julie torch what they see as a double standard: 2020 “stolen election” claims were taboo, but 2028 “Trump will cancel elections” talk is mainstream.   - Property tax repeal talk: trading primary-residence property taxes for roughly a 1.5% sales tax increase—plus listener math on potential savings. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

24 de jun de 20261 h 21 min
episode 6.23.2027 - Blue M&Ms Gone? | Consumer Recalls | Idaho Politics Roundup artwork

6.23.2027 - Blue M&Ms Gone? | Consumer Recalls | Idaho Politics Roundup

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason opened with a sobering update in the Nancy Guthrie case, after reports that a second ransom note suggests something “unexpected” happened and that she may have died—raising new questions about what’s real, what’s a scam, and why key details were held back for weeks. From there, the show moved into District 91’s latest turbulence, with Neal and Julie arguing the union-heavy dynamic has helped create a recurring cycle of conflict and public messaging—setting up tomorrow’s planned conversation with Julie Niroki from the teachers union for their side of the story. The rest of the morning mixed sharp political commentary with lighter, high-energy cultural talk. They reacted to viral National Mall vandalism (the reflecting pool liner damage and “86 47” carved into the grass), debated accountability and double standards, and contrasted that media obsession with what they described as underplayed bombshell claims around COVID origins and Fauci. They also dug into Idaho GOP platform momentum to curb or eliminate property taxes on primary residences, discussing tradeoffs like a possible sales tax increase. Finally, an interview replay with Pocatello IT leader Ollie Khan (Moat IT) walked through data centers, closed-loop cooling, power and water concerns, and why community-negotiated requirements could turn tech growth into local jobs—before the show wrapped with a surprisingly fun run of food news (barbecue philosophy, Mountain Dew donuts, and the possible disappearance of blue and brown M&Ms) and a practical consumer recall alert from Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador. ## 2. Highlights - A grim twist in the Nancy Guthrie case: a note claims she died and is “buried with nature,” prompting skepticism about ransom-note authenticity and law enforcement strategy. - District 91 negotiations blow up again—Neal and Julie argue the union dynamic fuels a pattern, and preview tomorrow’s interview with union leader Julie Niroki. - National Mall chaos: the reflecting pool liner gets a reported 250–300 foot gash, an Olympic canoeist is arrested, and Neal draws a straight line to “two can play at this game” sentencing standards. - Ollie Khan (Moat IT) breaks down data center realities: closed-loop water cooling, power infrastructure, and what “100 jobs” really means when you count downstream economic impact. - Idaho GOP platform push: Scott Herndon’s anti–property tax plank sparks a serious discussion about ending taxes on primary residences and the political pain of cutting spending. - Snack-and-culture detour: Kansas City vs. Texas BBQ, Mountain Dew donuts, and why blue/brown M&Ms may be headed for extinction. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

23 de jun de 20261 h 14 min