Boise City Council incumbents kept their seats and an open-space levy gets overwhelming support in the capital city. Boise State Public Radio rounds up the 2025 Idaho election results.
Voter turnout was mixed across Southeast Idaho on Tuesday, despite local counties having multiple contested municipal and school board races.
Many officials in North Idaho will stay in office after Tuesday’s election. Two exceptions are the mayors of Coeur d’Alene and Post Falls.
Here’s a look at who will be on the ballots in the runoff elections in Idaho Falls and Pocatello. Early voting in Idaho Falls began Thursday, Nov. 13. Idaho Falls One of the runoff elections in Idaho Falls will be between Lisa Burtenshaw and Jeff Alldridge,
Polling locations for both Ada County and Canyon County will be open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and anyone in line by 8 p.m. will still be able to vote.
A runoff election will take place on Dec. 2 for two races in Idaho Falls and one in Pocatello. Just a handful of Idaho cities have runoff elections, which are required if no candidate receives 50% of the vote plus one,
As the final tallies are processed from Idaho Falls' municipal election, the results show two City Council seats have been secured, while the highly contested Mayoral race and City Council Seat 2 are officially heading to a runoff election.
Treasure Valley voters cast their ballots for their preferred candidates in numerous races on Tuesday, including Boise City Council Districts 2 and 6, the Garden City Mayoral race, and the Boise open-space levy. Two Boise City Council incumbents were seeking reelection, but each faced two challengers.
Rick Hogaboam, a familiar name in Nampa, emerged victorious in the four-candidate race. He served as Debbie Kling's chief of staff from 2020 to 2023.
Lisa Burtenshaw (left) and Jeff Alldridge (right) will see a runoff election. | Courtesy photos IDAHO FALLS — With a mayoral race split by only 62 votes, and a city council race differing by just 13%,
Elections are moments of truth. They reveal what voters value and what they’re ready to leave behind. At this moment, voters are rejecting the chaos, corruption, and cruelty that define
If we are to steer clear of the fever tearing North Idaho apart, we have to find issues less likely to provoke the Legislature | Opinion