Former West Des Moines Teachers Get Organized To Call Out Ashley Hinson

Screenshot of packed house from Bleeding Heartland YT

Here’s the story by Joanna Schroeder, Iowa Capital Dispatch
May 16, 2026

Dozens of former West Des Moines teachers expressed their disappointment with U.S. Rep. Ashley Hinson Saturday at the Iowa State Capitol during the launch of a new grassroots organization, Iowans for Decency.

During the event, bipartisan retired educators accused Hinson, R-Iowa, who is running for U.S. Senate, of failing to demonstrate decency. In a letter signed by more than 60 retired educators, they highlighted 14 specific areas in which they said she has failed to represent Iowans.

“Your votes, allegiances, and beliefs do not represent common decency, the heart of what we wanted you to learn here,” the letter states. “We believe it is not time for you to graduate to the United States Senate, but rather for you to reflect. Who have you become?”

Retired teachers stood at the podium holding up lined black signs with chalked messages detailing how participants believe Hinson has failed to demonstrate decency. Areas highlighted included: hurting Iowans, starting wars, kidnapping immigrants, spending recklessly, starving Americans, destroying nature, defunding education, taking down the media, eliminating health care, alienating allies, lying to constituents, disapproving of others, ignoring corruption and dismantling the future.

Kathy Meyer, retired teacher from West Des Moines, expressed concern for Hinson’s support of the current administration, one reason why she joined Iowans for Decency.

“When she was growing up, she was gifted a lot of privilege and now she has privilege and power,” Meyer said. “She’s used that to make the Big Beautiful Bill instead of a Big Beautiful Life for our kids and my grand kids. I just want to know who she has become.”

Retired West Des Moines English teacher Nick Nelsen and Iowans for Decency member, spoke about the current level of corruption and also highlighted Hinson’s claim she will be the president’s biggest ally in the Senate as a major issue for him.

“Historically, when you look at our current politicians, how has that level of decency declined, especially over the last 10 or 15 years? The coarseness in public discussion is unacceptable,” Nelsen said. “But it’s really the policies that bother me the most. We have a president who is using genocide as a negotiating tool, threatening to wipe out an entire civilization.”

Nelsen cited a sign outside the Capitol rotunda that said, “Nothing is politically correct that is morally wrong.”

“We are making some morally wrong decisions, morally wrong policies,” he said, and asked during the event, “Why don’t you act with integrity?”

The retired teachers expressed education as a major concern.

“You received an outstanding public education in West Des Moines. However, now because of your record of defunding districts and privatizing education in Iowa, we are fearful of what you will do to further eliminate public education as a senator,” their letter stated. “You back an administration who has hollowed out the Department of Education, reversed civil rights protections, wiped out higher education funds and eliminated programs for our most vulnerable students. Why don’t you value education for others?”

Defunding education is also happening at the state level, Meyer said. “The State of Iowa has constantly defunded public education and the voucher system is just driving our schools to bankruptcy. It’s just insidious.”

Erika Cook, Ph.D., agrees. She began her educational career in the West Des Moines School District then moved away. She returned as an associate principle of academics at Valley High School and then became an administrator and chief academic officer for the State of Iowa until her retirement. In this role she was in charge of teaching, learning and educator quality.

Over the past 20 years, Iowa has dropped from the top five in education to somewhere in the middle according to a report by U.S. News & World Report.

“Our educational system in Iowa has been perpetually underfunded for many years,” Cook said. “When we start squeezing money and we only give schools less than 3% every year, it does not even keep up with inflation. What you see is cuts in educators, and 80% of a district’s budget is made up of personnel.”

Cook said teachers and personnel are the most important elements in a school since they are the ones who work with the children. “When it’s cut and they’re cut, that reduces services and programming for students. We’re seeing schools in rural Iowa go down to four days a week and close and consolidate. It’s very sad,” she said.

Despite persistent underfunding, Cook said students still have the very best teachers in front of them to give all the tools, skill and knowledge they need to succeed in the world. “What they do with it is their choice. Some people go out to make the world a better place and they do amazing things,” Cook said, “and then unfortunately, there might be a few that choose to do differently.”

The letter ended by stating, “You are failing your state and country. Your actions are antithetical to good and just decency. We hoped you had learned stronger values after being raised in West Des Moines.”

The Hinson campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Peter Hedges, author, Valley West High School graduate and a founder of Iowans for Decency, holds up a teacher appreciation card May 16, 2026 at the Iowa Capitol during a launch of the grassroots organization. (Photo by Joanna Schroeder for Iowa Capital Dispatch)

Iowans for Decency was founded by a group of former Valley West High School graduates who were concerned about a lack of decency in current politics. One of the founding members, and master of ceremonies, Peter Hedges, is best known for his novel and film, “What’s eating Gilbert Grape,” set in Iowa. During the presentation, he along with all the speakers, shared how a teacher impacted their life.

Organization treasurer Dr. Jay Brown said that while Iowans for Decency members see their role largely as truth tellers, they have no intention of making personal attacks. Their concern, Brown said, is around the indecent policies that Hinson enacts and big-monied interests that she serves.

“Corruption is a given. Any other administration that would have had corruption at this level we would have had astounding protests,” Nelsen said. “We would have had calls for change, but somehow that’s acceptable to a certain segment of the population. And Ashley is his biggest supporter.”

Nelsen noted the wealth gap is now larger than it has ever been. “This looks like an administration that’s looking to enrich the richest people. People I’m working with in the schools aren’t going to be billionaires. They’re going to want jobs. They’re going to want clean water. They’re going to want healthy food. They’re going to want insurance. They’re going to want a compassionate government that cares for them,” he said.

Cook said she believes what is happening now is not conversative versus liberal policies, but right versus wrong. “I believe that now is a time that we have to stand up for decency. I know Iowans are smart enough to see when she says that she is going to be Trump’s top ally in the Senate that that’s not going to start when she becomes a senator, but it’s been happening since she’s been a congresswoman.”

Cook added, “I actually think the saddest part is that we see a lot of corruption coming out of Washington, D.C., and she’s voting. She’s just not saying anything. I think Iowans know the difference between right and wrong. I think Iowans should stand up for what’s right.”

“It’s going to take all of us to keep our democracy strong.”

Iowa Capital Dispatch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com.

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Video of event at Bleeding Heartland YT channel

More coverage:

The Iowa Mercury Substack

iowansfordecency.org/post/letter-dear-ashley-hinson

IowansforDecency.org

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America Is No Longer The Dominant World Power

It saddens me to write this, yet the undeclared Iran War is heading to be the worst defeat in American history. While Iran’s tenacity in times of conflict is well known, the current administration appeared ignorant of their resilience as it initiated war without the consent of the Congress. Our country expended a boatload of missiles—depleting half or more of key stockpiles—in the first two months of the war.

According to the Center for Strategic Studies, the military used these critical munitions:

  • Patriot Air Defense Interceptors: Nearly 50% of the total pre-war inventory was expended within the first few weeks.
  • Precision Strike Missiles (PrSM): At least 45% of the stockpile was consumed.
  • THAAD Interceptors: Between 50% and 80% (up to 290) of the THAAD inventory was used, creating severe near-term shortages.
  • Tomahawk Cruise Missiles: The U.S. used over 1,000 Tomahawks, which accounts for roughly 30% to 50% of the total available U.S. arsenal.
  • SM-3 Interceptors: Nearly half of the inventory was expended during the campaign.
  • JASSM & ATACMS: More than 20% of the long-range JASSMs, as well as approximately 1,000 ATACMS and other ground-based missiles, were used.

What did we get for that? Closure of the Strait of Hormuz, destruction at our regional military bases, and little else. Joe Cirincione described the president’s position, “Simply put, Trump is out of cards to play.”

This week, the president was on a state visit to China. He is damaged goods. Cirincione presents the analysis of David Rothkopf as follows:

Trump has so damaged the core U.S. relationships with countries worldwide that he is seen more as a pariah than any American leader ever. Certainly, as an enemy of democracy and supporter of strong men worldwide, Trump can no longer claim, as past U.S. presidents did, to be the “leader of the free world.”

Indeed, in many ways, this trip will mark the end of the idea that America’s president is the world’s most powerful person.

Where do we go from here? That’s an open question, however, I never want to hear the words “American Exceptionalism” again.

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Changes In Iowa Early Voting

Voting early by mail.

Early voting for the June 2, 2026 primary election began on Wednesday, May 13. I voted early because I am working on election day. Early voting feels almost like a non-event this year compared to the role it played in the Obama presidential campaigns of 2008 and 2012. Republican opposition to President Obama emerged quickly. He did win Iowa both years.

Fueled by investments by wealthy conservative and libertarian donors, along with authentic grassroots opposition to President Obama and the Affordable Care Act, a conservative backlash movement grew in the first year of Obama’s presidency. It included spontaneous local protests soon after Obama was sworn in, the April 15, 2009, Tax Day TEA Parties, and confrontations at congressional town hall meetings over the Affordable Care Act. This conservative movement energized Republican volunteers in the 2010 midterm elections.

2010 was a turning point in U.S. political history in which Obama faced serious resistance. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was the most significant reform of U.S. health care since Lyndon Johnson signed legislation to create Medicaid and Medicare in 1965. It passed the Congress without a single Republican vote.

In the Republican resurgence in the 2010 midterm elections, they gained 63 seats in the U.S. House, made Rep. John Boehner Speaker, and gained six U.S. Senate seats. Democrats maintained control of the Senate yet had lost their filibuster-proof majority.  In addition, Republicans made major gains in governorships and state legislatures. This positioned them to shape post-census redistricting in ways that strengthened their electoral position. The political polarization of 2010 endures today.

After the 2010 election, many Republican-led states enacted voter ID laws, reduced early voting periods, tightened absentee rules, and altered registration requirements. It is worth revisiting the election-law changes Iowa Republicans made after gaining unified control of state government in 2017.

In 2008 and 2012, Democratic organizations—the Obama campaign specifically—used early voting laws as a key part of their get out the vote efforts. They were successful. Republicans clearly noticed and moved to change voting law as soon as they gained control in Iowa.

The first election law change after Iowa Republicans won the trifecta in 2016 was House File 516 which reduced the early voting period from 40 to 29 days. They followed with another in 2021, Senate File 413, which further reduced the early voting period to 20 days. That leaves Iowa with an early voting period that is workable, but considerably less expansive than it once was. I believe this was part of the Republican intention.

Republican legislators made other changes to voting rules and processes. In 2017, HF 516 established Iowa’s voter ID requirements, required signature verification for some absentee ballots, changed absentee-ballot request procedures, and expanded procedures intended to prevent duplicate or ineligible voting. In 2021, the list of changes was longer:

  • Polls closing at 8 p.m. instead of 9 p.m. on Election Day.
  • Shorter deadlines for requesting and returning absentee ballots.
  • Requiring most absentee ballots to arrive by Election Day, rather than allowing some postmarked ballots to arrive later.
  • Restricting county auditors from mailing absentee-ballot request forms unless voters specifically requested them.
  • Limiting counties to one ballot drop box location.
  • Tightening rules on who could return another voter’s absentee ballot.
  • Requiring petitions for additional satellite voting locations.
  • Expanding procedures for moving inactive voters off registration rolls.
  • Increasing state oversight and potential penalties for local election officials.

A primary election is not the best time to evaluate how Democratic organizations manage early voting. Because there are high-profile Democratic primaries for the open U.S. Senate seat, in some congressional races, and in supervisor races, each campaign does their own thing regarding early voter turnout. The effort gets reduced in language to some form of “vote on or before June 2,” rather than any obvious canvassing to harvest early ballots. The new laws prohibit intermediaries from collecting completed absentee ballots.

That I characterized early voting as a “non-event,” indicates the routine nature the process has become. However, it is important to remember how we got here if Democrats want to make it easier to vote going forward.

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Watch: Iowa U.S. Senate Democrats Primary Debate

Last night.

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Watch Democratic Candidate Forum For Congress In IA-02

Primary season is almost over. Early voting is underway.

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Sioux City Democrat Running For JD Scholten Statehouse Seat

Shawn Olorundami is a public school teacher and Sioux City native. Check out this lively interview and more candidate interviews at Insufferable Wenches YT Channel

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From the Desk of State Senator Weiner


Iowa Senate Democratic Leader Sen. Janice Weiner
latest constituent newsletter:

First, I want to say thank you – thanks for following along, paying attention, and being involved. Thanks to my caucus and our outstanding caucus staff – we all work as a team, and teamwork was wonderful this session. I feel fortunate to work with them all!

Now that session is (finally) done, I’m still working – but enjoying the little things. Like dropping my granddaughter at school every morning and picking her up in the afternoon. Like going out for ice cream with her in the middle of the week. Like sitting at my dining room table or on my deck to work – with the dogs. It’s why we do the work!

I’m sorry to say that this legislative session got ugly in the end, as the majority party tried to figure out how to bring it to a close. They’ve been in control for a decade, but it did not feel as if they knew how to “land the plane” – end the session. Instead, it felt as if the House and Senate Republicans and Governor’s office were all squaring off in their separate corners of some political boxing match called Iowa, and they had to bring it into multiple extra rounds in order to stagger to the finish.

The signs were there that they were not working together. The first sign, as I’ve noted previously, was that they came into this session with three different proposals on what was supposed to be their signature issue, property tax reform, rather than presenting a unified proposal at the outset, and then battled over it until the final hours of the session. That’s no way to govern. In the end, we had almost no time to work through the final proposal, and then it was thanks to our outstanding staff who were also working on it after 30+ hours of no sleep. One positive about the final bill is that it does not come into effect immediately, which gives us a chance to go back at it and fix problems. Our Republican colleague running the Senate version of the bill, Dan Dawson, essentially fell on his sword to maintain a soft cap and give cities and counties some flexibility. It’s not the bill we would have written, but a “hard cap” – with no flexibility – would have been a death knell for local governments. We’ll be working on this with cities and counties over the interim, no doubt about it.

The second sign was that they ended up with two conference committees. That happens when a bill bounces back and forth between the two chambers and in the end, there is no agreement. When one party controls both the House and the Senate, they’re not *supposed* to end up with conference committees. That means there are fundamental policy disagreements.

The third sign was the amount of sway a lame duck governor held. I’m still trying to understand that. In some cases, she was more aligned with the House than the Senate; in others, she was still pushing her own agenda (on charter schools and on Early Childhood Iowa, for example). The best I can figure is that with the House and Senate Republicans not in sync, she had more room to push her agenda.

The fourth sign was how long it took the majority party to get their act together on a water quality package. While I’m glad they at least finally recognized the need to highlight the issue, and there is some real money in the package, they rolled it out two days before the session drew to a shuddering close – in other words, when we were already well into legislative overtime. And it was, unfortunately, a one-party press conference. There is money for good practices in it, in addition to expanding capacity for the Central Iowa Waterworks to reduce the nitrates in the water. The good agricultural practices funds are again voluntary. And they still don’t like the UI Hydroscience Department – IIHR. Funds for their continuous water monitoring shifted at the last minute to the Department of Natural Resources, and IIHR must now apply for them. Purity tests are not helpful – if there is an issue on which we should be working together, it is water quality.

Then they closed out the session with a bang, not a whimper, pushing through a bill that won’t help Iowa women who need access to telehealth and mifepristone. We already have the worst ratio in the country of OB/GYNs to women – it takes weeks, if not months, to get an appointment. How is a woman in rural Iowa in particular going to be able to get an urgent appointment that lands within the scope of the six-week abortion ban? Maybe that’s the point. It puts women’s lives at risk for a whole host of reasons.

The House also passed the resolution needed to push a measure onto the November ballot that will tie the hands of the legislature when it comes to income taxes. If it passes, a two-thirds vote of both houses of the legislature would henceforth be needed to raise them. I don’t know anyone who wants to raise taxes on working Iowans. But it’s not responsible to put that on the ballot when we are in year two of a $1 billion plus budget deficit (being backfilled from one-time taxpayer relief funds), when we are bleeding money into the voucher system, funding plenty of Iowans who don’t need the tuition help. It sounds good in theory, but there are huge uncertainties right now – some caused by the “Big Beautiful Bill” and its coming cuts to Medicaid and already existing cuts to ACA subsidies; others caused by the war with Iran and the huge spike in gas and diesel prices that are starting to have serious knock on effects; and some caused by the tariffs. All will hit Iowa hard, including rural Iowa. Meanwhile, wealthy Iowans will continue to get their tax breaks, and if it turns out additional revenue is needed essentially to keep the lights on, it will have to come from somewhere – most likely the most regressive tax, sales tax.

There were also consistent attempts during the session to limit the *next* governor’s power. Here’s the thing: Iowans keep telling us they hate the culture wars; they hate the partisanship and want us to figure out a way to come together and govern for the good of all Iowans. My Senate Democratic Colleagues and I are up for it – but there’s no sign of it in practice. And so far, our majority party colleagues have not paid the price at the ballot box. Again, they didn’t run a single one of our bills – and guess what, there’s no monopoly on good ideas.

In my closing speech that was submitted for the record (we didn’t give them on the Senate side), I noted that at the outset of the session, I’d said that Iowans will remember what we do in this chamber this year. What will they remember? That the majority party was focused on taking away rights, on not helping Iowans – and on doing everything they could this session, just in case they can’t next session. That’s not governing for all Iowans. I’d be interested to hear your thoughts.

Finally, we saw the beginning of more balance – since we broke the GOP supermajority via special elections in 2025 and were able to vet gubernatorial appointees. That’s a start. We’ll see where we are next session. Again, you for following along – please continue to do so during the interim. It’s an honor to serve you all, regardless of your political leanings. We are public servants, and we work for all Iowans.


Sine Die: The 2026 Legislative Session is Over

Our stop and start week ended with a marathon, 35-hour-plus weekend at the Capitol as the chambers worked to finalize budget details, negotiate policy, and bring the curtain down. Nearly two weeks into overtime, the Senate convened at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday, May 2, and ran straight through until we finally adjourned for the year at 7:08 p.m. on Sunday, May 3.

For this end-of-session newsletter, I’m going to give a brief overview of where things ended up for some of the biggest issues of the year.

The Budget

Republican lawmakers passed a state budget for FY27 that spends just over $9.64 billion. Iowa will now run back-to-back billion-dollar budget deficits and Republican lawmakers will raid our reserves to cover their deficit spending with one-time funds.

In service of filling their massive budget shortfalls, the majority is implementing creative solutions that raise costs for Iowans. HF 2739, for example, is designed to begin filling their Medicaid shortfall by raising taxes on health insurance companies, who, in turn, will pass those tax hikes onto consumers. That means farmers, small business owners, and Iowa families whose healthcare costs are already on the rise will pay more for health insurance. Or take HF 2770, the budget for the justice system, which has a provision to nickel and dime Iowans with increased fees for court filings.

There are some positive pieces to be found in the budget – like expanded funding for water quality efforts – but they are far outweighed by negative elements. Most of the budget pieces that benefit Iowans have been given either status quo funding (no change, regardless of need) or have seen cuts.

Property Tax Reform

In one of the final acts of the 2026 session, the legislature passed SF 2472, a negotiated agreement between the House and Senate on property tax reform.

The bill is not perfect. But it brings real property tax relief for homeowners, avoids the hard cap on our local governments, and moves Iowa away from prioritizing commercial interests.

Our caucus’ guiding principles throughout this effort were that any solution would need to prioritize middle class homeowners and allow our communities to continue providing the essential services on which Iowans rely. That’s why, in the end, the bill saw strong bipartisan support in the Senate.

Eminent Domain

The legislative session concluded without a resolution on this issue.

More Restrictions on Abortion

On the last day of the session, the Senate passed HF 2788, which restricts Iowans’ access to medication abortion. The bill limits telehealth access for mifepristone and misoprostol, requiring patients to now visit a healthcare setting in person in order to receive a prescription. Iowa is already last in the country for OB-GYNs per capita and as healthcare access continues to shrink, especially in rural Iowa, this will severely impact Iowans’ ability to get the reproductive care they need.

Constitutional Handcuff to Go Before Voters

The Iowa House passed SJR 11 on the final day of the session. The joint resolution, which passed through both chambers during the previous General Assembly, and passed the Senate in 2025, would amend the Iowa Constitution to say that any attempt to increase income tax rates in the future – regardless of how dire our fiscal situation may be – will require a two-thirds majority of the general assembly. This is not a requirement for any other fiscal matters – private school vouchers did not require a two-thirds majority for approval, for example. It would also likely mean that in the event the legislature needed to raise revenues, the increase would happen to the state’s sales tax, which disproportionately affects everyday Iowans. The resolution will go before Iowa voters this November.

A Few Positives Worth Noting

While we won’t look back on the 2026 legislative session with fondness, there were a handful of good, bipartisan victories this year that are worth celebrating.

For one, the legislature took some small, positive steps on addressing Iowa’s ongoing cancer crisis. HF 2297 ensures that all new single- and multi-family residential construction includes passive radon mitigation systems. SF 2480 sends $3 million annually to the University of Iowa’s Stead Family Children’s Hospital for pediatric cancer research.

We also unanimously voted to elevate animal torture from a misdemeanor to a felony with HF 2348, and the Agriculture and Department of Natural Resources budget (HF 2771) includes some elements addressing Iowa’s water quality issues.

Stay tuned for more updates as we wait for the governor’s final action on bills approved by the legislature.

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Poll: Iowa Democrat Already Within Margin Of Error

“I think there certainly is a growing recognition of what we had with Tom Miller as a dignified, not particularly partisan attorney general, and we see the contrast now. Iowans are simply not taking the Attorney General position for granted as perhaps they, to some degree might have, over Tom Miller’s long tenure.” – Nate Willems

Links on Bleeding Heartland YT channel to the poll, ad, and lawsuit discussed.

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Senate File 75 Gets Real

Old Capitol in Iowa City, Iowa

When Governor Kim Reynolds signed Senate File 75 into law on April 11, 2025, the legislative fight gave way to an organized implementation that changed the politics of affected counties. The law requires Johnson, Story, and Black Hawk counties—those with public universities—to shift from at-large to district-based elections for county supervisors, with changes taking effect during the 2026 election cycle. The change is getting real.

Iowa City attorney Jim Larew filed a lawsuit to request a temporary injunction to stop the law. When a district court judge denied the request, the counties got to work implementing the changes as best they could. I live in Johnson County, and some things stand out:

  • None of the counties refused to implement the law.
  • Each county used the Legislative Services Agency to draw district maps.
  • Every supervisor seat is on the ballot in 2026, including supervisors elected two years ago to a four-year term.
  • There are plenty of candidates for supervisor, especially in Johnson County where there are 14 candidates for 5 supervisor positions.

The highest profile race in Johnson County is between incumbents Rod Sullivan and V Fixmer-Oraiz in District 4. Sullivan is a long-serving progressive supervisor, while Fixmer-Oraiz represents a newer progressive challenge. That race has generated substantial local activism. Neither of them would have had this kind of campaign in the at-large system.

The increase in Johnson County candidate filings is noteworthy. With so many candidates, there is a sense county politics will change dramatically under the district system. That is the hope of candidates like Republican Phil Hemingway, running for county supervisor in his sixth campaign, this time in District 2. According to the May 7, Solon Economist:

Hemingway referred to SF 75 as an opportunity for small towns, like Solon, to not feel overshadowed by Iowa City’s political composition. Rural residents, who are smaller in number, feel diluted by surrounding urban interests. Solon, he said, has a very different political alignment than Iowa City.

I don’t think Hemingway (or the Solon Economist) did the election math. In District 2, where Solon lies, there is a mix of regions: rural, small city, a substantial number of Iowa City proper precincts. There is also the large Newport precinct that behaves like an Iowa City precinct. This doesn’t fit the talking point Republicans who favored Senate File 75 assert—better representation for small cities and rural residents. Based on where Democratic votes are located, the Iowa City precincts in District 2, along with Newport, have enough to determine the general election outcome despite Republican leaning precincts like Lone Tree, Solon, and Big Grove. Regardless of the winner of the three-way District 2 Democratic primary, Hemingway should plan to lose again.

District 2 is the crux of a new politics. The Republican meme about rural voters electing one of their own gives way to the reality that candidates will have to build credibility across an electorate that includes incompatible priorities. The new politics is about building coalitions.

Rural voters may feel frustrated if they expected Senate File 75 to create distinctly rural districts and instead find themselves still electorally tied to Iowa City voters. The biggest question is whether the district system diluted or preserved Iowa City’s influence. This stands out in District 2.

It seems obvious, but voters inside a district won’t vote as a monolith. The coalition a successful supervisor candidate will have to build includes university-affiliated progressives, older liberal homeowners, renters focused on affordability, labor-oriented Democrats, environmental activists, senior citizens, farmers, rural residents, families with school aged children, and more. My point is any candidate who treats “Iowa City” or “rural residents” or “small city folk” as a monolith has signed his candidacy’s death warrant. A successful candidate has to connect rural land use, watershed protection, food systems, road funding, housing growth, affordable housing, and taxes with the same needle and thread.

The better question for candidates is how do they build a coalition that actually decides turnout? The answer is far more nuanced than the original legislative debate over Senate File 75 suggested. Things are getting real as early voting starts at the Johnson County Auditor’s office on May 13.

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Pivot To The Primary

Iowa State Capitol

When the legislature adjourned sine die at 7:08 p.m. last Sunday, the governor responded with a press release hitting my inbox at 7:12 p.m., proclaiming the 2026 session was a success. Long story short, “Republicans are delivering big for Iowans,” Governor Reynolds asserted in a statement. If you believe that, stand on your head.

Republican governance has been so bad, they even passed a law to hobble Reynolds’ replacement, assuming it will be Democrat Rob Sand. They tried this before with Sand as auditor and with Attorney General Tom Miller. The efficacy of this move is wearing thin.

Water quality is such a compelling issue in Chris Jones’ campaign for Secretary of Agriculture, Republicans passed a do-nothing water quality bill in the last week of session. If I didn’t know better, I’d say Republicans are on the run.

For now, the rhythm of Iowa politics shifts, trading the urgency and headlines of floor debate for something quieter but consequential. The June 2 primaries are upon us. The relative quiet of this coming month is not inactivity so much as a change in where and how politics happens.

Campaigns are no longer ramping up—they are knuckling down. Instead of large, highly publicized events, they focus on smaller gatherings: county meetings, fundraisers, informal meet-and-greets. Messaging becomes more targeted. Endorsements, local networks, and turnout operations take priority over broad visibility. Much of the real work happens in conversations rather than speeches—in living rooms, community events, and local party circles. Organizing for the election becomes more granular.

In the Republican primary, all eyes are on the governor’s race to see if any of four other candidates can beat Randy Feenstra. All five are serious candidates as far as that is possible for a Republican, far to the right of average Iowans. Rob Sand’s clear path to the general election put’s him in a better position with each passing week as Republicans jockey for position and votes.

I wrote about the Democratic primary races here. The most interesting of those are the county supervisor races under the new system Republicans put in place in three counties with a regents university. My sense is that regardless of what the current Johnson County board of supervisors has done recently, the election is a jump ball, not governed by logic or reasoning, but a desire for something new. From where I sit, the electorate is preoccupied with other things, such as making financial ends meet under Republican governance.

It is not too late to get involved with a primary campaign in a race important to you. My advice is don’t let the quiet lull you into inaction. Too much is at stake in November and the race to the general begins in earnest on June 2.

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