OPINION
Voices from the Idaho EdNews Community

Credibility is not a lifetime appointment. It is earned through accuracy, honesty, and reliability. When those are missing, past titles and reputation are not enough.

For years, Jim Jones has relied on former titles to portray himself as a neutral legal authority while advancing claims that are not merely debatable, but repeatedly and demonstrably false. Yet Idaho newspapers continue to publish his opinions as though they still carry unquestioned authority. Recent history suggests otherwise.

Consider his claims about school choice. In early 2025, Jones declared the Parental Choice Tax Credit unconstitutional. He warned lawmakers they would be knowingly violating the Idaho Constitution if they passed it. He made these claims plainly, repeatedly, and without qualification, presenting his view as settled law.

It wasn’t.

On February 5, 2026, the Idaho Supreme Court unanimously upheld the program. Every justice rejected the argument Jones had been advancing. The court awarded attorney fees and costs against his side. This was not a close call. It was a complete repudiation.

Yet, there was no acknowledgment, no correction, no explanation to readers how he got it so wrong.

This pattern constantly repeats itself. In 2024, Jones dismissed opposition to Proposition 1 as coming from “the extremist branch of Idaho’s Republican Party.” Idaho voters rejected it 70-30.

In March 2026, he suggested legislative hesitation over my office’s budget “indicates broad unhappiness with my legal performance.” The House Majority Leader rejected his characterization on the floor the next day, and the Legislature approved my budget enhancement by wide margins. 

In April, Jones attacked my position on birthright citizenship for the children of illegal aliens as bowing to Donald Trump’s “royal edict.” That criticism was particularly revealing because minimal research would have shown I held this constitutional position long before Trump became president.

Which brings us to his two most recent columns. In one, Jones criticized me for endorsing David Worley over State Senator Jim Guthrie. He labeled Worley, an Army National Guard infantry officer, a “Christian nationalist” and “disgraced National Guard officer.” while calling Guthrie, who had an affair with another married legislator, the “epitome of courage and leadership.” That’s rich.

Jones implied that I endorsed Worley because I “have cozied up with Christian nationalist groups” like Alliance Defending Freedom, citing the Southern Poverty Law Center as his authority for this characterization. A few days after newspapers printed his column, a federal grand jury indicted the SPLC on 11 counts of wire fraud, false statements to a federally insured bank, and conspiracy to commit money laundering, alleging it funneled millions to individuals tied to the Ku Klux Klan and Aryan Nations between 2014 and 2023. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said the SPLC was “manufacturing racism to justify its existence.”

In another column, Jones accused my office of sending a letter to Twin Falls School Board Chairman Eric Smallwood for political reasons, timed to influence the May primary. The facts say otherwise. The school district called a mandatory meeting with the teacher’s union to discuss the Republican primary, held it on public property, and advocated against specific candidates. The conduct was publicly reported in January. My office completed its legal review in April through our normal process. Our letter was sent without a press release or media campaign. If the intent had been political, we would have publicized it widely. We did not. Once again, Jones substitutes speculation and his own political views for truth and evidence.

Jim Jones is the worst kind of political pundit: the self-righteous moralizer who treats policy disagreements not as legitimate debates over competing ideas, but as proof that his opponents are corrupt, hateful, or morally deficient. Rather than engage arguments on their merits, he relies on character assassination, which is why he gets so much about Idaho wrong.

This consistent pattern matters because Idaho newspapers treat him as a neutral legal authority rather than what the record shows: a political actor with a clear and longstanding point of view who served as treasurer for Democrat Tom Arkoosh’s campaign for Attorney General against me. That background is never mentioned when his columns run, leaving readers without the context they need to evaluate what they are reading.

The problem isn’t that Jones disagrees with conservative policy. Reasonable people can disagree. The problem is that Jones makes sweeping claims without substantiating them, refuses to acknowledge errors when proven wrong, and substitutes speculation for evidence. Credibility depends on accuracy and intellectual honesty. Increasingly, Jones lacks both.

At some point, given his record of getting so much wrong, the question becomes unavoidable: why is Jim Jones still treated as a credible voice?

Raul Labrador Attorney General

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