Trump Data Grab Will Likely Motivate Voters

In bid for voter data, Trump’s DOJ lays groundwork to undermine confidence in midterms

by Jonathan Shorman, Iowa Capital Dispatch
March 17, 2026

The U.S. Department of Justice has begun connecting its push to obtain sensitive personal data on millions of voters to whether the upcoming midterm elections will be fair and secure, laying the groundwork for the Trump administration to potentially cast doubt on the results.

The Justice Department has sued 29 states and the District of Columbia over their refusal to provide unredacted voter rolls that include the driver’s license and partial Social Security numbers of voters. The department has lost three of those lawsuits so far this year.

But as the Justice Department begins appealing the losses, it has filed emergency motions warning the “security and sanctity of elections” would be questioned in those states — California, Michigan and Oregon — without immediate rulings.

Election experts told Stateline that federal appellate courts are unlikely to move quickly for the Justice Department. Instead, the department’s court filings suggest that without the data, the Trump administration may question the validity of the midterm elections in November.

“Absent a final Court determination on this matter there is no other process to ensure a fair election in 2026,” the Trump administration’s motions say.

President Donald Trump has made identifying noncitizen voting, an extremely rare occurrence, a priority of his administration, and the Justice Department has said the detailed personal data is necessary to ensure states are properly maintaining their voter rolls. At least a dozen Republican-led states have provided the information.

Democratic election officials, and some Republicans, have condemned the demands as an invasion of voters’ privacy and have voiced concerns the Trump administration plans to use the information to target political opponents or create a national voter list. Other Republican election officials and the Trump administration and have downplayed privacy concerns and said the data will help ensure only eligible voters cast ballots.

The DOJ’s sense of urgency comes after the department spent months sending letters to state officials demanding voter data, followed by successive rounds of lawsuits against states that refused to comply — all in what department officials said was the pursuit of noncitizen voters.

“We know this isn’t a big problem nationwide,” said David Becker, executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research and a former senior trial attorney in the Justice Department’s Voting Section during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.

“We know the states have adequate safeguards,” Becker said. “We see Republicans — Republicans — coming out and saying this repeatedly. So there is no problem that urgently needs to be solved in advance of the election.”

But the Trump administration has increased its attention on elections in recent weeks. In early February, Trump voiced a desire to “nationalize” elections. He demanded Congress pass a proof of citizenship voter registration requirement and strict voter ID rules. The U.S. Senate is expected to debate the bill next week, but it is unlikely to have enough votes to advance.

The FBI has also seized ballots from the 2020 election in Fulton County, Georgia, and the Arizona Senate complied with a federal grand jury subpoena for records related to its 2020 audit of that year’s election results in Maricopa County, Arizona.

Michigan responded to the Justice Department in a March 6 court filing by asserting that its case involves no emergency. Lawyers representing Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, wrote that the appeal doesn’t challenge any state election law or rule and that the outcome of the case would have little to no effect on the 2026 election.

In response to an interview request, Benson’s office referred Stateline to a news release that quoted the secretary as urging election officials across the country “to stand up to the federal government’s overreach and to safeguard citizens’ private voting information we’ve been entrusted to protect.”

Oregon Democratic Secretary of State Tobias Read said in an emailed statement to Stateline that he’s “confident in our case, and trust the courts will continue to uphold the Constitution and the privacy rights of all Oregonians.”

California Democratic Secretary of State Shirley Weber didn’t respond to an interview request.

Federal judges have so far ruled that even though states must perform maintenance on their voter rolls, federal law doesn’t give the Justice Department authority to obtain full voter lists.

While the Justice Department now claims the security and sanctity of upcoming elections necessitates the need for speed, the department hasn’t alleged any states are violating federal voter list maintenance requirements, said Derek Clinger, senior counsel and director of partnerships at the State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School.

“This is the first time in all the litigation that DOJ has claimed that there’s an urgent need to resolve the cases,” said Clinger, who is tracking the voter data lawsuits.

This is the first time in all the litigation that DOJ has claimed that there’s an urgent need to resolve the cases.

– Derek Clinger, State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School

Even if courts ultimately determine that states must provide the voter data, it’s not clear that the Justice Department could make effective use of it before the midterms.

Federal law generally prohibits states from conducting significant purges of registered voters less than 90 days before primary and general elections. For example, that period will begin in Michigan on May 6 ahead of the state’s Aug. 4 primary election.

The Justice Department has asked for all court documents in its Michigan appeal to be filed by April 1. Even if the appellate court immediately ruled in the department’s favor, only 35 days would be left until the pre-primary blackout period.

Lawyers for Michigan wrote in its court filing that it is “dubious” that any serious assessment of the state’s 7.3 million voters could occur in that time frame.

Still, Rosario Palacios, a naturalized U.S. citizen who leads the good-government group Common Cause Georgia, said she’s worried the federal government could wrongly flag her or others like her as noncitizens if the Justice Department eventually obtains her state’s unredacted voter roll.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security operates a powerful online program called SAVE (Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements) that it uses to verify citizenship. It has previously invited states to run their voter rolls through the program, and the Trump administration in September confirmed the Justice Department is sharing state voter roll data with Homeland Security. But SAVE has faced criticism from some election officials for mistakenly flagging U.S. citizens for review.

After the department sued Georgia for refusing to turn over its data, Palacios and Common Cause intervened in the lawsuit to oppose the demand.

Palacios said in an interview she’s worried some may choose not to participate in the election. “The fear alone of this is going to make people withdraw.”

Some GOP states share voter data

The Justice Department has offered few details about how it intends to analyze the voter data it obtains. The agency didn’t answer questions from Stateline and declined to comment.

Idaho Republican Secretary of State Phil McGrane last month said he wouldn’t turn over voter data. McGrane declined an interview request, but in a Feb. 26 letter to the Justice Department he raised concerns about data security.

“While I appreciate the Department’s representations that Idaho’s data will be safeguarded, I cannot take that now-apparent risk in the absence of clear legal duty to do so,” McGrane wrote.

Some Republican election officials have decided to share their state’s data, however.

Eric Neff, the acting chief of the Justice Department’s Voting Section, wrote in a March 2 court filing that 18 states had either shared voter data or planned to do so soon. He didn’t name those states.

The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, which tracks the voter data requests, has identified at least a dozen states that have provided the data: Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming.

Two of those states — Alaska and Texas — provided their voter rolls after signing a memorandum of understanding, or MOU, with the Justice Department.

The document, marked confidential, says that after the state provides its voter roll, the department agrees to test, analyze and assess the information. Each state agrees to “clean” its voter roll within 45 days by removing any ineligible voters. States would then resubmit their list.

Tennessee Elections Coordinator Mark Goins, who works under Tennessee Republican Secretary of State Tre Hargett, said in an interview that the state had shared its voter data after concluding that DOJ was entitled to it as part of its authority to enforce federal voting law. But Goins said Tennessee had decided against signing the memorandum of understanding because of concerns that the agreement conflicted with the National Voter Registration Act, which sets rules on when election officials can remove voters from their lists.

“When you’re dealing with this much data, and we have 4 million registered voters here, there could be a false flag and you certainly don’t remove anyone improperly,” Goins said.

In Texas, it’s unclear when the Justice Department will provide feedback on the state’s voter list. The state is currently in the preelection blackout period on sweeping changes to its voter registration list ahead of a May 26 primary runoff election, a spokesperson for Texas Republican Secretary of State Jane Nelson told Stateline.

Texas already ran its voter roll of more than 18 million voters through Homeland Security’s SAVE program last year, identifying 2,724 potential noncitizens registered to vote. County election officials were then left to investigate the flagged voters.

Christopher McGinn, executive director of the Texas Association of County Election Officials, said he’s unsure what would happen now, given that the state’s voter roll was recently examined by SAVE.

“Especially since those noncitizens were, in theory, cleaned up,” McGinn said.

In Alaska, the decision to share voter data has produced blowback from some state lawmakers. The state constitution guarantees a right to privacy that “shall not be infringed.”

Alaska Director of Elections Carol Beecher faced skeptical lawmakers during hearings last week that probed her refusal to waive attorney-client privilege to divulge the legal advice she received before providing the voter roll. In response to questions from Stateline, Beecher’s office referred back to her remarks to lawmakers.

“At this point, I am not willing to waive that privilege,” Beecher said at an Alaska Senate hearing.

Alaska state Sen. Bill Wielechowski, a Democrat who was among those who questioned Beecher, in an interview predicted the state will soon face lawsuits challenging the data sharing. He also said lawmakers are looking into pursuing legislation that would direct state officials to seek the return of the information from the Justice Department.

“I just think there’s a total lack of trust in what the federal government will do with this information,” Wielechowski said.

Stateline reporter Jonathan Shorman can be reached at jshorman@stateline.org.

This story was originally produced by Stateline, which is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network which includes Iowa Capital Dispatch, and is supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity.

Iowa Capital Dispatch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com.

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Joe Trippi And Laura Belin Talk Iowa

This is a great conversation between Laura Belin of Bleeding Heartland and Joe Trippi, who Iowans might know best as Howard Dean’s presidential campaign manager.  This podcast marks the premiere episode of Trippi’s On The Ground series at Lincoln Square Media. There were some lively exchanges and interesting insights shared. Trippi indicated he plans to interview U.S. Senate candidates Zach Wahls and Josh Turek, so we’ll be looking forward to that.

There was much of interest here.  The senate race and all of the congressional races were covered. One highlight was around the question of why Joni Ernst decided not to run for a third term.  The obvious reasons she decided against were discussed – the infamous “we all are going to die” town hall, and her hesitation on the Hegseth nomination resulting in her being the target of a crazed MAGA backlash, were two.  Belin noted the Pro Publica report about possible ethics issues  due to questionable relationships could have been in the mix as well. See Ethical Concerns Surround Sen. Joni Ernst’s Relationships With Top Military Officials Who Lobbied Her Committee.

Kudos to Belin who mentioned that except for her, the Pro Publica story got no Iowa press coverage that she knew of and she seemed perplexed about why the Iowa press didn’t touch it.  She noted that in any event, Ernst would have been forced to confront the issue on the campaign trail once the opposition ads began to air.  Blog for Iowa has been opining about the Iowa press failure to appropriately cover Republican electeds for years.  Dave Bradley posted about the Pro Publica story here.

And lastly, on the reasons why Joni Ernst declined to run for a third term, Belin had this to offer about the Hegseth backlash:  “I don’t think anybody enjoys being the target of that much MAGA hate.”

For sure.

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Something New Is Happening In Iowa Agriculture

I feel hopeful about this.  Change is in the air in Iowa.

From The Lobe Rangers Facebook page: 

“Something new is happening in Iowa agriculture.

The Lobe Rangers are three farmers who are farming the Des Moines Lobe who believe the future of farming can be both profitable and responsible. For over a decade we’ve been using practices like strip-till, cover crops, and in-season nitrogen management to grow strong crops while protecting the soil and water that make Iowa what it is.

We started the Lobe Rangers because the conversation around agriculture is often missing the voices of farmers who are actually doing the work.

This isn’t about pointing fingers.

It’s about sharing what’s possible.

If Iowa is going to move forward, it will take farmers, communities, leaders, and everyday Iowans working together and asking better questions about the future of our land and water.

We invite you to join the movement.

Follow along, share the message, and be part of the conversation.

Follow the Lobe Rangers on social:  Facebook   YouTube   Tik Tok coming soon.

Learn more at Theloberangers.com

The future of Iowa agriculture starts with honest conversations — and we’re just getting started.

#LobeRangers #IowaFarmers #CleanWaterIowa #SoilHealth #IowaAgriculture #farming

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Nanny State — School Board Edition

One-room school house

The Ankeny Community School District defined SSA (State Supplemental Aid) as the cost of living adjustment for school budgets. “To keep pace with rising costs, SSA needs to at least match inflation. If it does not, we would need to thoughtfully consider our budgeting strategy and staffing plans,” according to their website. Each cycle public debate is whether the amount approved by Republicans meets Democratic expectations to support public schools. Mostly it does not and Iowa Republicans have been in the majority longer than kindergarten students have been alive. They have the votes to pass what they will.

Tuesday’s front page headline that Iowa City Schools were years behind in audits is not making the case for more money in SSA. While next year’s level of two percent was approved in February, the financial issues cast a cloud over the school board’s independence. Republicans with a mind to consolidate government operations at the state level might be salivating at the prospects manifest in this local failure.

When I was covering the Iowa City School Board for the North Liberty Leader newspaper, I had a working relationship with their Chief Financial Officer, which I needed to write my stories. While the superintendent tried to maneuver him away from me, I usually got answers I needed. I spent decades in management at a large company and the district’s CFO was as good as any financial officer I have known. What happened, besides changing CFOs?

“The district’s most recent audit — completed two years after the end of that fiscal year — details corrective action needed, including previous district leadership not appearing to properly reconcile the district’s balance sheet,” according to the Cedar Rapids Gazette. “What reconciliations were available contained unknown variances.”

During a board meeting this week (March 5), board member Jayne Finch asked interim Chief Financial Officer Kim Michael-Lee to describe the status of the district’s books “in a few words.” Michael-Lee responded: “Unbalanced, unreconciled,” according to KGAN, the local CBS affiliate.

It’s not a good look found in a financial records audit by an outside firm just before a vote on budget cuts.

At a March 10, meeting, the school board voted to table a proposed $7.5 million budget cut until district finances could be presented in reasonable order. Because of inaccurately applying property tax revenue to appropriate budget line items, board members were unclear as to whether they could meet financial demands, including bond obligations, by June 1.

This is all a long lead in to: WTF Iowa City? Applying revenue to accounts is boilerplate accounting. If you can’t balance the checkbook, you keep working until you figure it out. Basic incompetence calls attention to the problems and when they see a problem like this, elected officials may use the only plan in their playbook: consolidate authority for school board finances at the state level.

Here’s hoping the Iowa City Community School District straightens things out in a timely manner. Let’s not give Des Moines any reasons to make Iowa more of a nanny state.

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Conventions And Candidates

Howard Dean at the 2004 Democratic National Convention

My week in Iowa politics was about planning the county convention and finding a Democratic candidate to run for House District 91 and Senate District 46. One success and two failures.

At our precinct caucuses I volunteered to be on the committee on committees and attended the county-wide Zoom meeting. As in previous cycles, I volunteered for the Arrangements Committee where my background in transportation and logistics prepared me for anything that might happen. The co-chairs of the committee are great and the team put together what has the potential to be a valued convention. My first contribution was writing a paragraph about spreading contagious diseases for the convention booklet as follows:

Respiratory illnesses such as COVID-19 and influenza continue to circulate in our communities. To help reduce the risk of transmission, the Arrangements Committee will make face masks available at check-in for any attendee who wishes to use one.

I also volunteered to be an usher, directing people to designated sections of the seating area, to help set up and tear down, and be a general floater. We are almost ready with one week to go.

The search for candidates to run for the state house has been challenging. Because of a lack of interest in running for a seat currently occupied by a Republican, we have been seeking a person to prevent the Democratic ballot from being blank. In my experience, that’s not the best situation for voters or for candidates. While we are part of the so-called “liberal Johnson County,” our area has been trending Republican after twice voting for Obama as president and for Trump three times. I have been represented by a Republican House member beginning in 2013, and a Republican Senator after redistricting in 2023. Last cycle, no Democrat on our precinct ballot was the top vote-getter.

In the 2022 Iowa Senate election, Republican Dawn Driscoll and Democrat Kevin Kinney duked it out in an expensive election to determine the future of the new district. The senate district leans Republican and Driscoll became our current senator, also defeating Democrat Ed Chabal in 2024. A few Democrats were kicking the tires on a run this year, yet no one is apparently collecting nominating petitions. District 46 does not have an election this year.

Finding a Democrat to run in House District 91 has also been challenging. Elle Wyant ran in 2022, and Jay Gorsh in 2024. Both were great people who had commitments at work that held them from proper campaigning. As of the filing deadline, no one has stepped forward.

The secretary of state continues to review petition signatures and will release names once the paperwork has gone through the process. Click here to access the 2026 primary candidate list.

Even though the right candidate could beat Republicans in this district, after ten years of Bobby Kaufmann, and a new district favoring Republicans in 2022, I am resigned to work with Republicans to get anything done. My email contacts with my state senator and representative have been cordial and their responses quickly delivered. There is not much else to do if no Democrat will run.

Another local political issue took time this week: the event we are holding for Democratic candidates for county supervisor on March 28. Thanks to the Republican nanny state, we are electing supervisors in new districts instead of at large. The result is a slew of Democratic contenders to run against incumbents across the county. More on this next Saturday.

Keep working it, people. You know that’s the only way to win back our state!

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Upcoming NO KINGS Trainings

No Kings Activists,

March 28th is less than three weeks away — and communities across the country are getting ready to say it together: We Don’t Do Kings in America.

We want No Kings to be massive, loud, joyful, and safe for everyone who shows up. That’s why we’ve put together a series of trainings just for you! We want folks to know how to have conversations that move people around No Kings, and ensure that everyone knows their rights.

Please join us for these trainings so that you are ready and prepared to join us in saying “No Kings” on March 28th.

Next Week: 

  • Wednesday, March 18th from 8-9pm ET: 
    • Know Your Rights: Protest Rights and Safety Practices
      • In this ACLU-led training, participants will learn about the Constitutional right to peacefully protest and about best practices for reducing risks when attending protests like the upcoming No Kings mobilization on March 28.

 

  • Thursday, March 19th starting at 8pm ET:
    • No Kings 3 Kick-off Call 
      • Join our March 19 Kickoff Call to learn more about the vision, urgency, and strategy behind this national day of action. Whether you’re brand new or a seasoned organizer, the time to act is now! You’ll hear from movement leaders about the strategic and moral imperative behind the next No Kings mobilization.

 

Coming Up:

We can’t wait to see you in the streets on March 28th. Together, we are united against kings. It’s in our DNA as a country.

In solidarity,

The No Kings Team

A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events.

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Checklist For War

Former FCC Commissioner Nicholas Johnson

Previously pulished in The Cedar Rapids Gazette

Wars have checklists. The U.S. should use them

by Nicholas Johnson

If you mow your lawn with a push mower your checklist is short: Step one, find mower. Step two, push it through the grass.

If you’re planning a vacation, wedding, or Thanksgiving dinner, the checklist becomes longer.

What’s this got to do with our war with Iran? Simply that wars also have checklists, and it’s not clear whether we’re using them.

For starters, you can’t just have a war anywhere.

As maritime administrator in the mid ‘60s, I needed to travel to Vietnam. The White House asked that while there, I gather and share my thoughts about the war. My conclusion: “You can’t play basketball on a football field.”

That’s to say, there are circumstances when war is not an easy option (e.g., you can’t speak the language; don’t know the culture, history or territory; you wear uniforms where the enemy doesn’t; there’s no front line).

My analysis had no impact — except for the White House decision I’d do better as FCC commissioner than maritime administrator. Oh, and the Iowa women’s team later showed it could play basketball on the Kinnick Stadium football field.

This month, as I’ve watched our military efforts spread from Iran to broader chaos for 15 Mideast countries and beyond, it brought to mind a 34-year old checklist proposed by Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger and his senior military assistant, General Colin Powell. It was a list of the considerations and questions they felt should be resolved before a war.

Was this working checklist known to, or used by, those civilians who are dictating to the military a variety of strategies and reasons for our latest war? Or did the White House assume there was no more need for checklists and planning now than when pushing a mower through the grass?

The checklist: Clear Objective: Do we have a precisely defined, attainable goal?

Goal: Is it sufficiently important, clearly defined, and understood?

Vital Interests: Is a key national security interest at stake?

Alternatives: Have all nonviolent means been tried and failed?

Military: Will military air operations contribute or impede our goal?

Requirements: What will our goal require in troops, material and lives?

Success: What will constitute “success”?

Risks and Costs: Is “success” worth the possible impacts, risks and costs?

Knowledge: Do we know the language, history and terrain of the people?

Support: Will Americans, Congress and allies support a war? How long?

Exit: How can we leave without Vietnam or Afghanistan-like scenes?

Future: After we’ve left will the people be better or worse off, or the same?

Consistency: Will that be consistent with our original mission?

In the 1983 movie “War Games,” a computer counting down to a real “Global Thermonuclear War” is switched to tic-tac-toe. We might just conclude, as the computer did, that “The only winning move is not to play.”

Nicholas Johnson can be reached at mailbox@nicholasjohnson.org

 

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Harkin Institute Proposes Policies To “Dramatically Improve Iowa’s Waterways”

by Cami Koons, Iowa Capital Dispatch
March 6, 2026

The Harkin Institute for Public Policy & Citizen Engagement determined regulations on fertilizers, animal feeding operations and agricultural drainage, among other things are policies that would improve water quality and public health in Iowa.

The Harkin Institute released a policy report Friday as a follow-up to the comprehensive Polk County water quality report released this summer.

Adam Shriver, the institute’s director of wellness and nutrition policy, wrote in the report’s forward that it contains “a set of policies that, if followed, would dramatically improve Iowa’s waterways to protect the health of current and future generations.”

The report is authored by John Norris, a Harkin Institute senior fellow and a former Polk County administrator, Norris helped spur the Central Iowa Source Water Research Assessment, or CISWRA, that was released by Polk County over the summer.

The report compiled more than 4,000 hours of research from a team of 16 scientists that looked at the Des Moines and Raccoon river watersheds. These rivers serve as drinking water, recreation and fishing streams for Iowa’s most populous city.

The multiyear assessment analyzed a number of contaminants in the rivers, including nitrate. Researchers concluded nitrate levels in these rivers are high primarily because of agricultural runoff into the watersheds.

The policy report from the Harkin Institute points to the CISWRA results as proof that “Iowa’s water is becoming unsafe.” High nitrate concentrations in the Des Moines and Raccoon rivers this summer also led to a lawn watering ban in central Iowa, which was necessary for Central Iowa Water Works to keep nitrate concentrations in drinking water below the federal guidelines.

Iowa is part of a multistate project to reduce nutrient load entering the Mississippi River, but the Harkin Institute’s report said this voluntary program, the Nutrient Reduction Strategy, is “inadequate” to protect public health and natural resources in the state.

The nutrient reduction strategy calls for, and supports, voluntary adoption of conservation measures like cover crops, edge of field practices and wetland restoration. But the Harkin Institute report said without “enforceable standards,” the strategy has not been effective in improving water quality.

Norris’ report recommends a statewide water management strategy that prioritizes water quality monitoring, enforcement against pollution, reform to agricultural drainage systems and reducing agricultural applications of fertilizer, manure and pesticides.

The report joins several organizations in a call for state funding for the Iowa Water Quality Information System, a network of monitors that provide real-time information on water quality metrics, including nitrate concentrations, across the state.

One pillar of the report involves addressing the “elephant in the room” — agricultural practices that, according to CISWRA, are the primary contributors to stream pollution. Policies recommended by the report include: an elimination of the sales tax exemptions for certain fertilizers, a moratorium on new confined animal feeding operations, or CAFOs, regulations on CAFO spacing and waste management, 50-foot buffer strips along water bodies and expanded cover crop adoption.

Tile lines, or drainage systems that help remove excess water from agricultural fields, are believed to provide a more direct route for agricultural nutrients to enter waterways. The report calls for changes to state drainage districts, to hold them accountable for discharges and to allow the state to test and set limits for nitrates in tile lines.

Other policy recommendations in the report include: more research and education on regenerative farming practices, more support for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources which would be tasked with enforcing policies, and to fund the state’s Natural Resources and Outdoor Recreation Trust.

In addition to state policies, it also outlines a number of changes to the federal Farm Bill — like tying agricultural funding programs to conservation outcomes, or making conservation easements permanent — that would, “prioritize farmers, consumers, soil, and water over agribusiness interests.”

“This report is a call to action to a crisis that will continue to get worse if bold actions commensurate to the scale of the crisis and threat to the public are not taken,” the report said.

The Harkin Institute is set to host its 2026 Harkin on Wellness Symposium March 11, with a focus on the treatment and prevention of cancer.

Iowa Capital Dispatch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com.

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On The Frontlines Fighting Corporate Agriculture

CAFO lot – Photo: iaenvironment.org

Check out this recording of a live March 7 event with Chris Jones at the Iowa City Public Library.

It is tragic how Iowa’s natural environment – native prairie, rivers, lakes and streams – have been so terribly degraded. Chris covers how this happened over the years and decades then takes questions and discusses how to protect yourself from nitrates in your tap water and how we can begin to solve problems that have resulted in poor outcomes for farmers and the rest of us.

This is basic information for everyone to understand as we fight for clean water and a farm system that uses land and resources wisely.

From the Iowa City Public Library YouTube channel:

A discussion on Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) and Water Pollution in Iowa with guest speakers Sonja Trom Eayrs and Chris Jones.

Author, attorney and rural activist Sonja Trom Eayrs grew up on the Trom family farm in Dodge County, Minnesota. Her family has been on the frontlines for decades fighting corporate agriculture and the takeover of the food supply by a few multinational corporations. Sonja’a story is captured in her recent book, Dodge County, Incorporated: Big Ag and the Undoing of Rural America (University of Nebraska Press, Nov. 2024).

Dodge County, Incorporated is a legal drama recounting her elderly parents’ three rounds of litigation against county officials and industry insiders in Dodge County, Minnesota, in efforts to prevent a hog factory farm from going up across the road from their inter-generational family farm. It provides a rare insider’s account, showing how the corporate restructuring of rural areas and profiteering of Big Ag corporations impact the political, economic, and cultural fate of a single rural community.

Chris Jones retired in 2023 from the University of Iowa where he worked as a research engineer studying contaminant hydrology in agricultural landscapes. Prior to that he worked for the Des Moines Water Works and the Iowa Soybean Association. He has a PhD in analytical chemistry from Montana State University and a BA in Chemistry and Biology from Simpson College in Indianola. He is the author of The Swine Republic, Struggles With the Truth About Agriculture and Water Quality.

Chris is currently a candidate for Iowa Secretary of Agriculture. Check out his campaign website chrisjonesforiowa.com

This event is sponsored by 100 Grannies and the Iowa City Public Library.

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Meet Candidate Adam Peters For HD 97

Adam Peters is a Democrat running for Iowa House to represent HD 97 covering parts of Scott County including much of east and central Davenport. 

Check out his campaign website adam4iowa

Follow:  Facebook  TikTok  Instagram

Donate

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