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Tammy Nichols


tammy nichols

District 10 Senate

Tammy Nichols: Idaho Republican Incumbent for Senate District 10

Tammy Nichols is a Republican member of the Idaho State Senate seeking a third term in District 10, which covers Middleton and the surrounding area in Canyon County. Nichols lives in Middleton, where she has resided since 2002, and has served in the Idaho Legislature continuously since 2018, first in the House and now in the Senate. She is running unopposed in the May 19, 2026 Republican primary, as confirmed on her Ballotpedia profile. Democrat Letishia Silva is running in the general election.

Background

Nichols was born in February 1976 in Boise, Idaho, and graduated from Boise High School in 1994. She earned an Associate of Applied Science degree from Brigham Young University-Idaho, as noted on her Ballotpedia profile. She describes herself on her campaign website as a seventh-generation Idahoan with deep roots in farming and a pioneer heritage. She grew up in a family that owned and operated private schools and daycare centers in the Boise area and began working at age six, as described in her Idaho Republican Party candidate profile. She is a small business owner in property management, a precinct committeeman in Canyon County, and a state director of Women In Government, as listed on her Idaho Legislature member page. She has received the Phyllis Schlafly Eagle Award, the American Conservative Union Foundation Award, and the Club for Growth Defender of Economic Freedom Award. She has five children and lives in Middleton.

Political Career

Nichols was first elected to the Idaho House of Representatives in 2018, winning a five-way Republican primary for the District 11B seat before defeating the Democratic nominee. She was re-elected to the House in 2020, then moved to the Idaho Senate in 2022, winning election to District 10, as documented on her Ballotpedia profile. She won re-election in 2024, defeating challenger Lori Bishop in the Republican primary with 64.1% of the vote, as reported by the Idaho Press, then defeating Democrat Letishia Silva in the general election.

She currently chairs the Senate Agricultural Affairs Committee and also serves on the Commerce and Human Resources and Education committees, per her Idaho Legislature member page. She serves as co-chair of the Idaho Freedom Caucus, alongside Rep. Heather Scott.

Her most widely covered legislative action was the 2023 introduction of House Bill 154, co-sponsored with Rep. Judy Boyle, which would have made it a misdemeanor to administer any mRNA vaccine to a human or mammal in Idaho, as reported by KTVB. Nichols told the House Health and Welfare Committee that the COVID vaccines had been fast-tracked and that there was “no liability, no informed consent, no data.” She subsequently reintroduced a revised version removing the mammal provision after hearing concerns from the agriculture community. She also sponsored SB1038, the Education Choice Act, a school choice bill, in January 2023, as documented on Wikipedia.

Policy Positions

Nichols’s publicly stated priorities, drawn from her campaign website and Gem State Chronicle candidacy announcement, center on tax relief, education, agricultural affairs, and constitutional conservatism.

She has supported income tax reductions, property tax relief efforts, and expanded tax credits for families during her Senate tenure. She supports school choice and has sponsored legislation to allow public education funds to follow students to the school of their choice. As chair of the Senate Agricultural Affairs Committee, she has emphasized the concerns of farmers, ranchers, and small business owners. She consistently opposes vaccine mandates and government-imposed medical interventions.

Political Alignment

Nichols is a Far-Right Extremist. As co-chair of the Idaho Freedom Caucus, she occupies the organizational leadership of Idaho’s far-right legislative network. She has received consistently high ratings from the Idaho Freedom Foundation and endorsements from the Citizens Alliance of Idaho. Her 2023 mRNA vaccine ban legislation, which relied on claims that contradict established FDA and CDC guidance on COVID-19 vaccines, reflects a pattern of legislating based on medical misinformation. Taken together, her Idaho Freedom Caucus co-chairmanship, IFF and CAI alignment, and medically disputed vaccine legislation place her at the far-right end of Idaho’s Republican spectrum.

Campaign and Endorsements

Nichols is running unopposed in the May 19, 2026 Republican primary, as confirmed on Ballotpedia. Her documented endorsements include the Citizens Alliance of Idaho and the Canyon County Republican Central Committee. She has received consistently high ratings from the Idaho Freedom Foundation. The general election is November 3, 2026.

FAQ

Who is Tammy Nichols, Idaho? Tammy Nichols is a Republican state senator from Middleton serving her second Senate term in Idaho Senate District 10. She is a small business owner, co-chair of the Idaho Freedom Caucus, and chair of the Senate Agricultural Affairs Committee who has served in the Idaho Legislature since 2018.

What district does Tammy Nichols represent? Nichols represents Senate District 10, which covers Middleton and the surrounding area in Canyon County.

Is Tammy Nichols an incumbent? Yes. Nichols was first elected to the Senate in 2022 and re-elected in 2024. She is seeking a third term and is running unopposed in the May 19, 2026 Republican primary.

What committees does Tammy Nichols serve on? Nichols chairs the Senate Agricultural Affairs Committee and also serves on the Commerce and Human Resources and Education committees, per her Idaho Legislature member page.

What are Tammy Nichols’s main policy positions? Nichols’s stated priorities include tax relief, school choice, agricultural policy, opposition to vaccine mandates, and constitutional conservatism.


Profile published by IdahoVoters.com. Last updated April 2026. This profile will be updated as additional information becomes available.



News Stories

News • Jason Wilson, SPLC Hatewatch • 03/15/2023

Third-term Idaho state Sen. Tammy Nichols has associated publicly with several extremists in recent weeks, first posting a photo of herself at a GOP fundraising event with a white nationalist YouTuber she praised as “amazing,” and last week appearing on the show of a far-right livestreamer to promote a state House bill that would criminalize the administration of COVID-19 vaccines.

News • Bruce Y. Lee, Forbes • 02/18/2023

If two Idaho state lawmakers get their way, it would become a criminal misdemeanor to administer a Covid-19 mRNA vaccine in Idaho. Yep, you heard that correctly. State Senator Tammy Nichols and State Representative Judy Boyle, both Republicans, have co-sponsored House Bill (HB) 154 for Idaho, otherwise known as the “Gem State.” Yeah, this bill is quite a gem if you’ve been collecting all of the “WTF” moments from the Covid-19 pandemic.

News • Tracy Bringhurst, Boise Weekly • 06/14/2022

While counter protesting an abortion-rights rally held at the Idaho Capitol on May 14, Rep. Tammy Nichols, R-Middleton, was photographed with convicted felon Bryan Jacob Hayhurst.

In 2009, the Idaho Department of Corrections described Hayhurst, who then went by Bryan McGonigal, as a "dangerous" sex offender. In 2004, a Bannock County judge sentenced him to prison for felony injury to a child, court records show.

News • Keith Ridler (AP), KTVB • 10/14/2021

A far-right Idaho Republican lawmaker has posted a meme on Twitter appearing to advocate violence against journalists, educators, conservationists, the state’s largest university and other organizations ahead of an upcoming election in November.

Rep. Tammy Nichols on Tuesday posted an image showing former President Donald Trump, a red-colored Idaho image covering his head and face, carrying a barbwire-wrapped baseball bat and others behind him with their heads covered with logos representing 11 groups, including KTVB and Boise State University.

News • Haley Hardin and Audrey Dutton, Idaho Statesman • 07/28/2020

A Treasure Valley state legislator is under fire from local health system employees after she shared a Facebook post about a Caldwell pediatric nurse practitioner who died from complications of COVID-19. The post, which Rep. Tammy Nichols, a Middleton Republican, shared Wednesday without comment, referred to news coverage of Samantha Hickey, who died July 13 at age 45 from a cardiac complication of COVID-19. The Facebook post by a person named Cate Tedeski implied that Hickey’s death was being misrepresented by the news media to scare the public.

News • Daniel Walters, Investigate West • 05/13/2024

Freedom Caucus Network power broker Maria Nate blasted controversial state Rep. Heather Scott for support of “moderate” House speaker


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