The Intimidation Game Comes to Idaho
What happens when a federal law enforcement agency is used to punish political enemies?
In 2015, Wisconsin became ground zero for one of the most egregious abuses of prosecutorial power in recent political memory. During a heated recall campaign against Republican Governor Scott Walker—sparked by his efforts to rein in public-sector unions—left-wing prosecutors launched secret investigations targeting conservative activists, donors, and advocacy groups who supported his reforms.
Under the guise of the state’s so-called “John Doe” law, prosecutors and special investigators carried out early morning raids, issued gag orders, and demanded private communications from organizations that had backed Walker. Families were woken by law enforcement. Children watched agents seize computers. People were silenced and threatened for their political beliefs. No charges were filed. No crimes uncovered. But the damage was done. It was, as Wall Street Journal columnist Kim Strassel later chronicled in The Intimidation Game, a coordinated effort to weaponize law enforcement in order to silence opposition and enforce an ideological agenda.
It was a dangerous escalation of a political playbook designed to silence opposition and scare others in to compliance. The message was clear: Do what we say or we’ll weaponize law enforcement against our political enemies!
At the time, conservatives across the country were united in outrage. The left had crossed a line—using state power to punish political enemies and scare the rest into silence.
We were supposed to remember that moment. To never become what we once condemned.
But here in Idaho, nearly a decade later, the same tactics are rearing their ugly head. And this time, it’s not the left pulling the strings. It’s far-right operatives who’ve taken control of the Idaho Republican Party, using the threat of federal law enforcement to punish a Republican legislator who refuses to bend to their demands.

On March 26, Ryan Spoon, Vice Chair of the Ada County GOP, bragged on X that he had reported Rep. Mickelsen’s family farm to ICE. “I reported her on January 21st. They raided her businesses on January 27th,” he wrote. Then came the insult: “Told ya so, Rep. Stephanie ‘Plantation Mistress’ Mikkkelsen. Stop hiring illegal farm slaves for your businesses! This is not the end, it’s just the beginning.”

This wasn’t really about immigration. This looked like retribution—an attempt to publicly humiliate a sitting Republican lawmaker who dared to push back against the far-right’s attempts to enforce their ideological supremacy and control.
Mickelsen had broken no law. Her family’s farm followed federal hiring protocols. The employee ICE detained had been documented at the time of hiring. His legal status changed later—something employers are not allowed to track without violating federal discrimination laws. The facts didn’t matter. The goal was to hurt her. And to send a chilling message to other legislators.
This was the kind of political intimidation we used to fight against—the kind we rightly labeled as Marxist, authoritarian, and un-American. Now it’s being repackaged and sold under the banner of “freedom” by people who say they support the Constitution while stomping on its core principles.
Why Was Rep. Mickelsen Targeted?
As a Republican legislator and fourth-generation Idaho farmer, Mickelsen is exactly the kind of leader the far-right machine can’t control. She’s conservative, pragmatic, and rooted in her community. And in Bonneville County, her defiance of the local former party boss made her a threat to their political ambitions.
For years, the local GOP in eastern Idaho was controlled by Doyle Beck and Bryan Smith—two men who seemed to treat the party like their personal fiefdom. They censured moderates, supported attack campaigns against Republicans who were not loyal to their precious Idaho Freedom Foundation, and appeared to use SLAPP lawfare to bankrupt and silence opposition—an effective way to scare people into compliance.
Beck and Smith help control the IFF through their board of director seats.
Mickelsen was elected, twice, by huge margins by Republican voters in Beck’s backyard. She supported a precinct-level effort to take back the Bonneville County Republican Central Committee. Voters responded. Rational local Republicans organized, ran for precinct seats, and won. In 2024, Beck’s tiny kingdom crumbled and he lost control of the local party.
Beck’s dislike of Mickelsen goes back years, and he opined about it in the local paper. He even listed her in a lawsuit filed by him for being fingered as part of a “secret society” working to organize precinct campaigns to oust his control of the local party in 2016.
So when Ryan Spoon publicly took credit for triggering an ICE raid on her family business, it wasn’t some grassroots act of concern. It appeared to be a coordinated response—retribution masquerading as anti-immigrant outrage.
And it wasn’t just Spoon.
Matt Edwards, head of the Citizens Alliance of Idaho, quickly joined the campaign and spun the raid into a manufactured scandal.
Sen. Brian Lenney repeated the lie about Rep. Mickelsen, a sitting state senator, and it looks like he disparaged a fellow member of the Idaho legislature, a blatant violation of decorum. Sadly, members of the Senate are too afraid of the machine to submit an official ethics complaint.
They needed to hurt Mickelsen. Her election wins were not just offensive to them—she proved that their political machine can be beaten. And for an overzealous local millionaire who appears to desire dominion over Idahoans, that’s an intolerable risk.
The Outrage Machine
The campaign against Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen didn’t emerge from a vacuum. It was launched by a network—small in number, large in view on X (Twitter), and in what appears to be a coordinated effort.
At the center of this machine is Doyle Beck. Over the past decade, he’s become one of the most influential financiers and puppet masters of Idaho’s far-right insurgency, using his status as a small time millionaire to fund campaigns, PACs, and influence the Idaho Freedom Foundation network of operatives.
This is where Citizens Alliance of Idaho comes in—run by Matt Edwards, but modeled after and tightly connected to the national Citizens Alliance of America, a political machine built by Cliff Maloney. Edwards plays the role of independent Idaho conservative, but peel back the branding, and it’s all recycled from Maloney’s national playbook. Beck donated directly to the Citizens Alliance of Idaho. Edwards is the face of the Idaho messaging. And the money circulates—much of it routed right back into Maloney’s Florida-based for-profit firm, Mobilize the Message. It’s less a grassroots operation and looks more like an ideological political laundering operation with money moving in circles.
When Spoon’s ICE smear went public, Edwards didn’t hesitate. He quickly began framing the incident online as proof of criminal wrongdoing, parroting a narrative designed to justify Spoon’s vile actions.
Ryan Spoon, Vice Chair of the Ada County GOP and former Idaho Freedom PAC operative who admitted helping a Democrat defeat the Republican senate candidate in the 2024 general election, is one of the most obnoxious voices in Idaho’s far-right faction, inciting the baseless ICE reporting. Then he bragged about it online—posting racist, incendiary language and making it clear the goal wasn’t justice but humiliation. Spoon’s ignorance of the Constitution and immigration law was apparent when he suggested that an American citizen should be sent to an El Salvador prison.
Lauren Walker brings the amplification. She positions herself as a grassroots voice, but her online presence says otherwise. Walker posts hundreds of times a day on X, amplifying white nationalist rhetoric, anti-semitic conspiracy theories, and pro-Kremlin narratives—all while trying to build clout within the Steve Bannon-style “woke-right” influencer economy. She’s not broadcasting to Idahoans—she’s broadcasting to Elon Musk’s X platform algorithm.
And then there's the media arm: Gem State Chronicle, run by Brian Almon. A former Idaho Freedom Foundation staffer who was quietly separated from the organization, Almon now serves as a paid media contractor for GOP Chair Dorothy Moon, who herself was elevated to power with help from party bosses like Beck. The Chronicle functions as the propaganda outlet for the far-right machine, pumping out “news” and providing a platform for operatives in an attempt to legitimize them. We don’t get to know who else is paying Almon, as transparency looks like his kryptonite.
Each operative plays a role. Each knows their job. And when they target someone like Mickelsen, it’s not just about her. It’s about making an example for anyone in the party who is considering standing up.
The Blatant Lie They Want You To Believe
Mickelsen Farms followed the law. Like every legitimate employer, they used the federally required I-9 process. The employee detained by ICE had provided valid documentation at the time of hiring. Once that’s done, employers are prohibited from re-checking status unless certain documents expire. Digging further would violate federal anti-discrimination law.
That legal reality and verifiable facts didn’t stop Ryan Spoon from declaring online that Mickelsen was “hiring illegal farm slaves.” It didn’t stop Matt Edwards from posting that she employed a “wife-breathing [sic], meth-using illegal alien.” It didn’t stop Lauren Walker from amplifying the claims across far-right channels. None of it was true—but for these operatives, the truth is a casualty in their war against rational Republicans.
Edwards, in particular, says nothing about his own benefactor, Doyle Beck, when a company he owned faced federal scrutiny. Beck’s firm, Yellowstone Partners, was involved in a huge financial scandal. Dave Hansen, who served as CEO of the company Beck owned, was sentenced to five years in federal prison for defrauding clients out of millions.
There were no breathless posts from Edwards. No outrage from Walker. No public statements from Spoon calling Beck an “employer of criminals.” They save that language for people like Rep. Mickelsen—because that’s what they are likely told to say. It’s a scheme, seemingly cooked up by IFF leadership and executed by their operatives.
They dishonestly framed Rep. Mickelsen as a lawbreaker for doing exactly what federal law requires. They used a single ICE arrest as proof of wrongdoing when it was nothing of the sort. And they’ve continued to double down, using racialized language, false claims, and coordinated messaging to create a scandal where there was none.
The Real Victims Left in The Wake Of Spoon’s Lies
The smear campaign against Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen didn’t just target her—it sent a warning to every Republican in Idaho who works in agriculture: toe the line, or we’ll come for your livelihood. We will destroy you, your family, and everyone you support.
ICE’s visit to Mickelsen Farms was the result of a political stunt with real consequences. It created fear among business owners, confusion among workers, and a new kind of pressure inside the Idaho Statehouse: vote how we tell you—or we’ll do to you what we did to her.
In Idaho, many lawmakers also own or operate ag-related businesses. These are the people who grow the state’s economy—literally. They rely on legal immigrant labor, follow the rules, and understand the reality of the food supply chain better than any far-right keyboard warrior who recently moved to Idaho from California.
But after watching what happened to Mickelsen, how confident are the other ranchers and farmers serving in the legislature that following employment law as best as they can will protect them from the manufactured outrage machine?
This is legislative coercion—an intimidation tactic meant to influence how elected officials vote. The message is clear: don’t question the “conservative” political machine, don’t block their bills, and don’t dare push back on their agenda. Otherwise, they’ll turn their followers on you, drag your name through social media, and maybe even submit false reports to federal law enforcement agencies to show up at your place of business. There is little difference between this and the SWATTING tactic they are attempting to legislate against.
The bills that come out of this fear aren’t about good policy. They’re culture war fodder—dehumanizing, conspiracy-laced attempts to inflame voters and keep the machine’s loyalists in office. And the longer this pressure campaign goes unchecked, the more Idaho’s legislative process becomes a hostage to fear-driven theatrics and fringe ideology.
Understanding The Astroturfing and Gaslighting Playbook
What happened to Rep. Mickelsen wasn’t a one-off. It was a rehash of the same playbook used by conflict entrepreneurs and perfected by dishonest far-right political operatives. It effectively paralyzed legislators, and the “conservative” slate of bills passed in the 2024 legislative session proves it.
This is the far-right coercive playbook in Idaho. It doesn’t rely on debate or elections. It relies on intimidation, deception, and fear. It’s fast, repeatable, and intentionally detached from truth.
Here’s how it works:
Step 1: Identify a Republican who won’t play ball. Never a Democrat—they serve only as narrative pawns as they hold no real power. Be sure the target is someone who can influence other Republicans through their experience, effectiveness, and fearless representation of their constituents.
Step 2: Manufacture outrage. Find something—anything—that can be spun into a scandal. Immigration status. Voting against a performative, conspiracy-driven bill. Testifying against a bad bill. It doesn’t need to be real. It just needs to be loud.
Step 3: Deploy the network. Spoon fires the first shot. Edwards reframes it. Walker floods social media. Gem State Chronicle legitimizes the attack with a narrative dressed up like news. The message is coordinated. The racist language is intentional. The goal: make the lie louder than the truth.
Step 4: Turn it into policy. Loyal legislators like Sen. Brian Lenney, Sen. Tammy Nichols, or Rep. Josh Tanner pick up the torch and push legislation tailored to the outrage, even if the premise is false. In Mickelsen’s case, it was Immigration reform legislation. Next time, it’ll be something else. The culture warriors can find plenty of outrage-inducing ideas on Alex Jones’ Infowars…
Step 5: Weaponize the backlash. If anyone pushes back? Accuse them of being a RINO. Every challenge of the lies being told becomes proof that you’re right— watch for them to say, “If you are taking flak you must be over the target.” Every call for accountability is framed as persecution and they attempt to shut it down.
This confrontational politics playbook is exclusively deployed against Republicans by those who demand we call them “conservatives.”
How Long Before The Intimidation Machine Turns on You?
It wasn’t a Democrat who tried to destroy Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen. It wasn’t a leftist watchdog. It wasn’t a rogue federal agency.
It was her fellow Republicans. The ones who call themselves “conservatives” appear to be serving the ambitions of Doyle Beck and his political machine.
They didn’t come after her for breaking the law—she did no such thing. They came after her because she stood in their way, and they needed to make an example out of her.
Doyle Beck and his operatives will tell you they’re patriots. They’ll appear to wrap themselves in an “Appeal to Heaven” flag while quietly dismantling the very Constitution they claim to defend. They don’t want a Republic. They want a theocracy of fear, enforced by intimidation and backed by a base of vile supremacists who are eager to show their hatred towards anyone who is not a straight, white, Christian Nationalist.
This has all happened before.
Remember, in 2015, Wisconsin’s left-wing prosecutors used midnight raids and gag orders to crush dissent during the recall of Governor Scott Walker.
Kim Strassel wrote in The Intimidation Game that when the left couldn’t stop conservatives at the ballot box, they turned to threats, harassment, and lawfare to drive them out of public life. What she may not have foreseen is that the same tactics would one day be used by so-called “conservatives” against Republicans.
The overreach of the left enabled Donald Trump to win Wisconsin in 2016. Will the duplication of the Intimidation Game playbook by the far-right backfire on them? Probably not. This playbook is effective as most Republicans seek to avoid contention and quietly walk away from any drama. That’s a feature of the plan, not a bug.
What happens when this machine gets what it wants? When the legislative district chairman’s tribunal can decide who can register as a Republican? When social media posts become evidence of party disloyalty? When questioning the party line, brands you a traitor worthy of government-backed action?
They’re counting on your silence. On your exhaustion. On your fear. They think you won’t check the facts, ask questions, or stand up.
But if you’ve been following Political Potatoes, you see it.
You see the gaslighting—the astroturfing. The cut-and-paste lies spread by professional manipulators hoping you’re too busy to do something about it.
So fight back.
Be angry. Be loud. Support people like Rep. Mickelsen who stand for reason, not rage. Show up. Speak out. All it takes is a simple post on Facebook, a personal thank you card or note, a supportive email… these small acts matter.
Because the only thing more dangerous than this intimidation machine is a majority manipulated into silence.
About the Author
Gregory Graf is the creator of Political Potatoes and a lifelong conservative Republican. His articles often criticize the hypocrisy committed by far-right grifters who’ve taken control of the GOP. Graf is the CEO of Snake River Strategies, a strategic communications and political consulting firm based in Eagle, Idaho. You can follow Graf’s work on X, Threads, or Facebook.
Disclaimer
The following is intended to convey an opinion on newsworthy events of public concern regarding public figures and/or public officials in exercising their official duties. No implications or inferences—beyond those explicitly stated in the preceding— are intended to be conveyed or endorsed by the Author. Wherever available, hyperlinks have been provided to allow readers to directly access any underlying assertions of fact upon which this opinion is based.
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Thank you for this piece. We all have to fight this slide into White Nationalist Authoritarian ism.
And just like what’s happening today, reasonable Republicans need to find some common ground with Democrats to fight back against that white nationalist ideology.