Your Representative Voted Against You. Here's the Proof.
How to Read This
This page lists the Treasure Valley's state legislators by district and the key votes from the 2026 session. Find your district. See who represents you. See how they voted. The bills are linked to their official pages on legislature.idaho.gov where you can read the full text and the complete roll call record.
Not sure which district you are in? Go to voteidaho.gov and enter your address. Idaho has 35 legislative districts. Each has one senator and two representatives (Seat A and Seat B).
The Bills That Matter
These are the key bills from the 2026 session that directly affect the lives of Treasure Valley residents. Each is cited with its bill number and aggregate vote count.
HB 752: Transgender Bathroom Ban. Makes it a crime (misdemeanor, then felony on second offense) to use a public restroom that does not match biological sex. Passed the House 54-15. Passed the Senate 28-7. Sponsored by Rep. Cornel Rasor, R-Sagle.
Budget Rescissions Act: 4% Agency Cuts. Applied a 4% across-the-board budget reduction to most state agencies. First budget bill signed into law. Exempted K-12, Medicaid, Corrections, and State Police from the additional 1% cut.
Medicaid Budget: $45 Million in Cuts. Governor Little's budget proposed $45 million in Medicaid reductions, including a permanent 4% provider reimbursement cut and potential elimination of dental coverage and disability services. The Health and Welfare budget (SB 1375) initially failed on the Senate floor before being reworked.
IDLA Funding Cut: $13.4 Million. Reduced funding for the Idaho Digital Learning Alliance, which provides online courses to rural districts that cannot afford specialized teachers. Bypassed the House Education Committee after it rejected a nearly identical bill.
HB 559: Federal Tax Conformity. Conformed Idaho's tax code to the federal One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Cost the state $155 million in the current fiscal year and $175 million in FY2027. Signed by the governor in February.
SB 1430: Firearms Preemption Enforcement. Creates civil penalties and permanent injunctions against local governments that enact gun ordinances stricter than state law.
HB 623: Moment of Silence. Requires a moment of silence at the start of every public school day.
District 14: Eagle, Star
Seat A: Ted Hill (R)
Seat B: Josh Tanner (R)
District 14 covers Eagle and Star, fast-growing communities in the western Treasure Valley. Sen. Grow co-chairs JFAC, the budget-setting committee that approved the across-the-board agency cuts and directed the Medicaid reductions. His PAC received a $200,000 single contribution in March 2026. Check the roll call records for HB 752 and the budget bills on legislature.idaho.gov to see how Hill and Tanner voted on each.
District 15: North Boise
Seat A: Steve Berch (D)
Seat B: Dori Healey (R)
District 15 is the most competitive district in the Treasure Valley. The Senate seat flipped Republican in 2024 by 912 votes, a 3.6-point margin. Rep. Berch held Seat A by just 227 votes, a single point. This is a split delegation: one Democrat, two Republicans, in a district where every election is decided by hundreds of votes.
Sen. Galloway has already withdrawn from the 2026 re-election. The seat is open. Rep. Berch has consistently voted against HB 752, Medicaid cuts, and the IDLA defunding. Rep. Healey's votes on these bills are available on the roll call records. This district is proof that 227 people are the difference between representation and its absence.
District 16: West Boise
Seat A: Soñia Galaviz (D)
Seat B: Annie Haws (D)
All-Democratic delegation. All three voted against HB 752, against the Medicaid cuts, and against the IDLA defunding. Their votes are consistent with their district's positions.
District 17: Central Boise
Seat A: John Gannon (D)
Seat B: Megan Egbert (D)
All-Democratic delegation. Voted against HB 752, the budget rescissions, and the Medicaid reductions. In a 61-9 House and a 29-6 Senate, the Democratic minority cannot block legislation. Their votes are on the record. Their ability to affect outcomes is structurally zero.
District 18: Southeast Boise
Seat A: Ilana Rubel (D)
Seat B: Brooke Green (D)
All-Democratic delegation. Rep. Rubel serves as House Minority Leader. These three represent a district where the Democratic position is clear and the general election margin is comfortable. The relevant question for District 18 residents is not how their representatives voted. It is whether the system allows those votes to matter.
District 19: Downtown Boise, Bench
Seat A: Chris Mathias (D)
Seat B: Monica Church (D)
All-Democratic delegation. Sen. Wintrow noted on the Senate floor that HB 752 is the 30th bill targeting Idaho's transgender community since 2020. Rep. Church publicly criticized the IDLA cuts, calling the program "a lifeblood for schools, for our rural districts, for our families." Rep. Mathias argued on the House floor that HB 752 unfairly targets transgender Idahoans. In the minority, their opposition is recorded and powerless.
District 20: South Meridian
Seat A: Joe Palmer (R)
Seat B: James Holtzclaw (R)
All-Republican delegation. Sen. Keyser defeated former Senate President Pro Tem Chuck Winder in the 2024 primary. Winder was considered one of the last moderate Republican leaders in the Senate. Keyser moved to Idaho from Southern California in 2018. He won the primary that Winder lost, in a closed primary that a quarter of the district's voters could not participate in. Check the roll call records on legislature.idaho.gov for Palmer and Holtzclaw's individual votes on HB 752, the budget rescissions, and HB 559 (tax conformity).
District 21: North Meridian, Kuna
Seat A: James Petzke (R)
Seat B: Jeff Ehlers (R)
All-Republican delegation. District 21 includes rapidly growing suburban areas where property taxes and school funding are top constituent concerns. The tax conformity bill (HB 559) that cost the state $155 million in revenue will likely increase pressure on local levies. Check how Petzke and Ehlers voted on HB 559 and the education budget bills at legislature.idaho.gov.
District 22: Nampa, Caldwell
Seat A: John Vander Woude (R)
Seat B: Jason Monks (R)
All-Republican delegation. Rep. Vander Woude chairs the House Health and Welfare Committee. He told JFAC he had a bill drafted to cut $21 million from residential habilitation, the service that allows people with disabilities to live at home instead of in institutions. He also said he was working on a bill to repeal Medicaid expansion, which 60.6% of Idaho voters approved by ballot initiative in 2018. Canyon County has some of the highest uninsured rates in the Treasure Valley. The people who would lose coverage under Medicaid cuts are Vander Woude's own constituents.
Verify It Yourself
Every vote cited in this article is a matter of public record. The Idaho Legislature publishes complete roll call records for every floor vote. Go to legislature.idaho.gov, search for any bill number, and find the full vote breakdown showing exactly how each of the 70 House members and 35 Senators voted.
The individual roll call records show you the name of every legislator and their vote: Aye, Nay, or Absent. This is the data. It does not require interpretation. When your representative votes to cut Medicaid in a district where thousands rely on it, the vote speaks for itself.
This is the transparency The Future Party builds into its governance model by default. Every vote, every dollar, verifiable by anyone. Not because politicians voluntarily disclose. Because the architecture makes concealment impossible. The platform specifies how. If you want to replace the people who voted against your interests with a system that cannot, start at thefutureparty.org/join.
Related: The full breakdown of every major bill from the 2026 session. Why 258,900 voters had no say in who these legislators are. How to run against them as an independent.