A liberal Idaho PAC with funding from a super PAC in Washington, D.C., has entered the West Ada School District trustee election.

School board races are nonpartisan, but PACs on both sides of the aisle have now spent a total of $12,226 to support or oppose candidates running in Idaho’s largest school district.

Idaho Students First PAC on Thursday reported $5,453 in independent expenditures to support the two challengers — Dara Ezzell-Pebworth and Meghan Brown — and oppose the two incumbents. In Zone 1, Ezzell-Pebworth is running against incumbent Lori Frasure. In Zone 3, Brown is running against incumbent Angie Redford.

West Ada trustee candidates Meghan Brown, left, and Dara Ezzell-Pebworth listen to a question from the crowd at a League of Women Voters forum on Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025, at Meridian City Hall. (Sean Dolan/Idaho EdNews)

West Ada made national headlines this year when district officials told a teacher to remove an “Everyone Is Welcome Here” poster, which featured multiracial hands. Brown and Ezzell-Pebworth support inclusion and have been critical of the district’s response.

The chair of Idaho Students First, Elle Casner, is also a vice chair for the Idaho Democratic Party. Casner wrote in an email to EdNews Monday that she is the bookkeeper. The PAC’s spokesperson is Marji Bass, a former teacher and West Ada grandmother. EdNews was unable to reach Bass on Monday.

The PAC received one individual contribution this year, but in 2024 reported a $20,000 donation from the National Education Association Advocacy Fund, a D.C.-based super PAC associated with the nation’s largest teachers’ union, and a $5,000 donation from Take Back Idaho PAC.

West Ada trustees Angie Redford, left, and Lori Frasure at a school board meeting on Monday, Oct. 27, 2025, in Meridian. (Sean Dolan/Idaho EdNews)

Idaho Students First spent more money in the Zone 3 race than Zone 1. The group spent $3,096 in advertising and postage to support Brown and oppose Redford. In the other race, the group spent $2,356 to support Ezzell-Pebworth and oppose Frasure.

The spending from Idaho Students First comes one week after the conservative Idaho Majority Club PAC spent $6,773 in independent expenditures to support Frasure and Redford.

Idaho Majority Club has reported hundreds of donations from a mix of individuals and companies, with the majority of its money in the past two years coming from in-state. The group this year received $85,000 from Wyoming-based Make Highways Great Again LLC and $35,000 from Meridian-based Blackrock Homes.

Idaho Students First has a total of three donations: $1,000 from Eagle resident Brenda Balantyne and the two contributions from PACs last year. Most of its funding comes from out of state.

Election Day is Nov. 4.

PAC spending in West Ada races

Total: $12,226

  • Idaho Majority Club PAC
    • Support: Lori Frasure, $3,994
    • Support: Angie Redford, $2,779
    • Total: $6,773
  • Idaho Students First PAC
    • Support: Dara Ezzell-Pebworth, $1,178
    • Support: Meghan Brown, $1,549
    • Oppose: Lori Frasure, $1,178
    • Oppose: Angie Redford: $1,549
    • Total: $5,453

Note:  PAC spending, or independent expenditures, are separate from individual candidates’ campaign finances.

Campaign finance in West Ada races

  • Lori Frasure
    • Contributions: $8,850
    • Expenditures: $425
  • Dara Ezzell-Pebworth
    • Contributions: $757
    • Expenditures: $60
  • Angie Redford
    • Contributions: $7,125
    • Expenditures: $1,779
  • Meghan Brown
    • Contributions: $1,725
    • Expenditures: $1,140

Note: This is the data available on Idaho Sunshine as of Oct. 27. Candidates in Idaho are required to file campaign finance reports on the 10th of each month, for the previous month. We won’t know how much candidates have spent and raised in October until Nov. 10, the Monday after Election Day.

Sean Dolan

Sean Dolan

Sean previously reported on local government for three newspapers in the Mountain West, including the Twin Falls Times-News. He graduated from James Madison University in Virginia in 2013. Contact him at sean@idahoednews.org.

Get EdNews in your inbox

Weekly round up every Friday