Sober Minded, Selfless Service | Jerry Holton for Jerome County Commissioner, District 2
TUE 2026
Vote in the Republican Primary

Idaho's most important elections are won in the primaries. If you want to have a say in how Jerome County is run, you have to vote in the primary.

Leadership Is a Privilege

Sober Minded, Selfless Service

Leadership is a privilege. It requires a sober mind and a willingness to sacrifice — doing the right thing consistently, during the day, after hours, when no one is watching, and when everyone is watching.

Public service is not a title. It is a standard of daily behavior — and the only way to keep it is to keep it on the days nobody is applauding.

Years
Tracking Lava Ridge, SWIP-N, and county P&Z proceedings before filing to run
Every packet
Agenda packets read cover-to-cover before each meeting
On record
Questions raised in public meetings where they belong
May 19
2026 Idaho Republican Primary — Tuesday, May 19, 2026

What “Sober-Minded” Actually Means

Sober-minded is not about one vice or another. It is about clarity under pressure. It is the willingness to sit with a hard decision, read the statute, listen to the people it affects, and vote the way the facts point — even when the easy vote would be smoother socially or politically.

The Standard I Hold Myself To

Before I cast a vote, I will answer three questions out loud: what does the statute say, what does the ordinance say, what do the people it affects say. If I cannot answer all three, the vote is premature.

Already Doing the Work

What That Looks Like in Office

Why This Matters for Policy

A commissioner who has not read the packet cannot usefully vote on the item. Preparation is not a nicety — it is the precondition for representative government.

Key Points

Read Before Voting

Every agenda item read before the meeting. Staff report is a starting point, not a substitute.

Show Up Early

Present at working-group meetings and agency hearings — not just the televised ones.

Answer the Phone

Residents get return calls. Filing a records request should not be necessary for acknowledgement.

Own the Outcome

When a vote goes wrong, say so on the record. Fix it in the next meeting.

References & Sources

Every claim on this page is grounded in public law, public records, or directly observable public conduct.

"Leadership is doing the right thing consistently — during the day, after hours, when no one is watching, and when everyone is."
— Jerry Holton

Questions? Want to volunteer?

Email Jerry Call (208) 420-3174 Get Involved