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News / Northwest

Ammon Bundy running for Idaho governor

Anti-government activist targets state taxes, federal lands

By Ian Max Stevenson, Idaho Statesman
Published: June 21, 2021, 7:40pm

BOISE, Idaho — At a rally on Saturday evening, Ammon Bundy formally announced his run for governor with a platform centered on abolishing most state taxes and claiming federal public land for the state.

After an afternoon picnic with “Bundy burgers” at Kleiner Park, in Meridian, the man from Emmett who is banned from the Idaho Statehouse grounds announced he is running for governor to a crowd of a few hundred people on a platform to “Keep Idaho Idaho.” News of his bid first broke in May, when he filed paperwork with the Secretary of State’s office.

Bundy, a far-right, militant activist who has been arrested at least five times since August 2020 for protests at the Idaho Capitol and for refusing to wear a mask in the Ada County Courthouse, joins a crowd of Republican candidates nearly a year away from the 2022 primary election that includes Janice McGeachin, Idaho’s lieutenant governor. Gov. Brad Little has not officially declared he will seek re-election.

On Saturday, Bundy laid out a wide-ranging plan to overhaul Idaho’s government. He told supporters he wants to end “immoral” taxation, including “all property tax in our state” as well as personal income tax. In their place, he said the state will meet its budgetary needs by levying only sales tax, which he said he believes is acceptable because people can “voluntarily” choose what they purchase.

Bundy also proposes bringing federal lands under state control, which he says will allow Idahoans to “spread out” across the state.

“I am willing to fight to the very end to ensure that land rights stay with those to whom they properly belong,” he said.

To accomplish this, Bundy told the Idaho Statesman in an interview he would go through an “incremental process” that would involve requesting the lands from the federal agencies that manage them.

Bundy is known for disputing federal ownership of public land. In 2016, he and others took part in a six-week-long armed takeover of a wildlife reserve in Malheur, Ore., that left one occupier dead.

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In his speech, Bundy said that the affordable housing issues in Idaho are “simply a supply and demand issue,” which he said would be solved by opening up federally protected lands to agriculture and development. He said he opposes dense growth.

“If we build up and create dense and congested cities with large populations, traffic and pollution, we will lose our conservative, traditional values,” he said.

The 45-year-old’s father, Cliven Bundy, who is known for a decadeslong refusal to pay grazing fees on federal land his cattle graze on in Nevada, also spoke at the Saturday event in support of his son’s candidacy.

In an interview, he told the Statesman his son wants people to understand “the difference between freedom and communism” and that his son stands for “the Ten Commandments and the Constitution of the United States.”

During his speech, Ammon Bundy mocked the practice of stating one’s gender pronouns, saying, “From here on out, I’m going to identify as a man, an American man, using he, him and his pronouns.”

He added: “Oh, the outrage, right? How dare I declare my gender? … Who would have ever thought America would become something so ridiculous?”

Bundy’s pitch for governor also includes plans to ban abortion, repeal the state’s health care exchange, open up nonapproved FDA drugs for consumer use and end financial assistance programs for poor Idahoans, according to his campaign website.

It’s not the Bundy family’s first foray into politics. In 2018, Ammon Bundy’s brother Ryan ran for governor of Nevada as an independent. He received just 1.4 percent of the vote.

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