KHOI's Capitol Week

Laura Belin, author of the blog Bleeding Heartland, updates you on developments in Iowa government, hosted by KHOI’s newsman Dennis Hart. An in-depth look at each week’s legislative actions, the governor, public agencies, and important events, as lawmakers act on matters that affect you and your family.

News from Congress and lots of 2026 campaign maneuvers

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with news from Iowa's delegation in Congress: the Epstein files votes, Zach Nunn on health care reform, Mariannette Miller-Meeks on a stock trading ban, a House vote on "socialism," and Chuck Grassley donating his shutdown pay. They also covered lots of 2026 campaign news: Mike Bousselot bowing out of the governor's race, Adam Steen attacking "Satanists," high-profile endorsements for several U.S. House and Senate contenders, and more details on recent polls of the IA-03 and attorney general races. Finally, Laura explained the Iowa connection of the reporter President Trump recently called "Piggy."

11-25
29:50

Iowa angles on funding bill, new candidates, poll shows Nunn in trouble

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with the end of the federal government shutdown: when SNAP benefits resumed in Iowa, whether the Iowans in Congress have been paid lately, Laura's reporting on the Iowa earmarks in the federal funding bill, where things stand on health insurance premium subsidies, and a last-minute provision that could force most consumable hemp products off the market. They discussed news from Iowa's U.S. House races: Mariannette Miller-Meeks' GOP challenger and recent town hall in IA-01, a new independent candidate in IA-02, and a poll showing incumbent Zach Nunn losing to two Democrats in IA-03. Other topics covered: Chris Jones as a possible candidate for Iowa secretary of agriculture, the first week of Randy Feenstra's statewide tour, the future president of Iowa State University, and a third lawsuit filed by an Iowa educator fired over a social media post about Charlie Kirk.

11-18
29:53

Dems against Schumer, local election takeaways, Lahn for governor

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with news related to the imminent end of the federal government shutdown and resumption of SNAP benefit payments. Two Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate are calling for Chuck Schumer to step down as Senate minority leader, and several Democrats running for Congress also criticized the deal. They discussed notable results from Iowa's local and school board elections, including a pro-labor Democrat winning in Council Bluffs and the Des Moines school bond passing by a wide margin. Other topics covered: Miller-Meeks finally holding a town hall, union recertification elections, Zach Lahn's campaign for governor, a big endorsement for Adam Steen, Rob Sand's latest comments on property taxes, the GOP candidate for an upcoming special state legislative race, the two finalists for the Iowa State University presidency, and a First Amendment challenge to Iowa's ban on placing candidate yard signs on corporate property.

11-11
29:52

SNAP and shutdown news, Feenstra for governor, pro-Bird ad and more

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with news related to the federal government shutdown: federal food assistance (SNAP benefits) delayed, responses from Governor Kim Reynolds and leading Democratic politicians, rising costs for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, and potential disruption for five small Iowa airports. They discussed several stories related to trade and Donald Trump's tariffs. Other topics covered: Randy Feenstra's debut as a candidate for governor, labor union endorsements for some Democratic candidates, Trump's endorsement of Mariannette Miller-Meeks, another Republican running for Congress in the fourth district, a dark money group's TV ad praising Attorney General Brenna Bird, and a dispute over campaign signs on corporate property, which may foreshadow a First Amendment lawsuit.

11-04
29:55

News on the Iowa governor's race, and more

Laura Belin and original co-host Dennis Hart were together for the 250th edition of "KHOI's Capitol Week." They began with Iowa's 2026 governor's race: Democrat Rob Sand's 100 town halls, Democrat Julie Stauch's "interview sessions," Republican Randy Feenstra's comments on eminent domain, and recent TV interviews featuring the other three GOP candidates (Eddie Andrews, Brad Sherman, and Adam Steen). Other topics covered: what documents Iowans need to vote in next week's local and school elections, the Democratic nominee for an upcoming Iowa Senate special election, Iowans in Congress against extending health insurance subsidies, Governor Kim Reynolds' comments about the state's main public pension system, a review of the state's education licensing process, a legal challenge to a new law on county elections, an Appeals Court ruling on a state immigration law, Attorney General Brenna Bird on birthright citizenship, and news about teachers disciplined or fired over social media posts about Charlie Kirk. 

10-28
29:52

Norris out, 3Q fundraising, No Kings, state revenues falling

Laura Belin and Dennis Hart (filling in for Spencer Dirks) began with the end of Jackie Norris' campaign for U.S. Senate, and a review of third-quarter fundraising for the remaining Democrats and Republicans running for Senate. They discussed highlights and a few surprises from fundraising reports for candidates in the four U.S. House districts. Also covered: most Iowa Democrats running for Congress dodged a reporter's question about Hakeem Jeffries, Iowa set to stay first on the GOP's 2028 presidential calendar, thoughts on the No Kings protests, and state revenues continuing on a downward trend.

10-21
29:48

E-Verify, 2026 polls, a Libertarian for Senate, Grassley on "Arctic Frost," RIP Claire Celsi

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with more fallout from ICE detaining the superintendent of Iowa's largest school district: Governor Kim Reynolds ordered the use of E-Verify across state government, why past legislation on E-Verify stalled in the Iowa House, reporting on the former superintendent steering contracts to a firm where he had a consulting gig, and internal polls gauging the controversy's impact on a school bond referendum and the 2026 Democratic primary for Senate. Other topics covered: a poll that Randy Feenstra's campaign may have commissioned, a Libertarian's case for his U.S. Senate bid, Mariannette Miller-Meeks' viral comment about town halls, Joni Ernst's claim to identify $2 trillion in potential government savings, the confirmation of three Iowans to federal government positions, the scandal Chuck Grassley portrays as worse than Watergate, and thoughts on the passing of Democratic State Senator Claire Celsi.

10-14
29:45

More Ian Roberts news, state revenue shortfall, access to COVID boosters

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks spent the first half of the show on news related to former Des Moines Public Schools superintendent Ian Roberts: his resignation, deficiencies in the vetting process, new criminal charges, questions surrounding his academic credentials, the school district's lawsuit against the consulting firm that recruited him, more political reaction, a DOJ investigation of the district's hiring practices, the possible impact on an upcoming bond referendum and the school board president's Senate campaign, and overall takeaways. Other topics covered: the Iowans in Congress on the federal government shutdown, a big state revenue shortfall, Laura's reporting on hurdles facing many Iowans who want COVID-19 booster shots, and a GOP candidate for governor throwing shade at Randy Feenstra.

10-07
29:51

Fallout from ICE detention of Des Moines superintendent

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks devoted about half of this show to a local story that has gained national attention: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detained Dr. Ian Roberts, the superintendent of Iowa's largest school district. Laura shared the latest news from a special Des Moines School Board meeting (which wrapped up minutes before air time), and they discussed several legal angles, unanswered questions about the case, and political reaction from both parties. Other topics covered: a new Iowa Senate majority leader, two more Republicans running for Congress in the second district, one Republican dropping out of the fourth Congressional district race, a Libertarian preparing to run for U.S. Senate, Ashley Hinson's efforts to elevate one of her Democratic opponents, and a Democratic victory (by two votes!) in a red county special election.

09-30
29:54

Iowa Senate leadership change, 2026 campaign polls, lawsuit over Charlie Kirk fallout

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks cover news from the week in Iowa politics, starting with the sad news that Democratic State Senator Claire Celsi has entered hospice care. They talked about Republican Jack Whitver's decision to step down as Iowa Senate majority leader, his lasting impact on the Senate, and possible candidates to replace him. Other topics covered: an Iowa House Republican resigns for a Trump administration job, a poll testing messages about Randy Feenstra and Rob Sand, more endorsements for Senate candidate Ashley Hinson, an internal poll showing a dead heat in the third Congressional district, an early look at some battleground state legislative races, the resignation of Iowa's Health and Human Services director, increased voter registrations for Medicaid applicants, and a federal lawsuit filed by a teacher fired over an insensitive post about Charlie Kirk. They ended with news from Congress as a possible federal government shutdown looms.

09-22
29:42

Iowa angles on Kirk assassination; Polk County Steak Fry highlights; DOGE recommendations

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with Iowa news related to Charlie Kirk's assassination: controversy over social media posts by some educators, a Johnson County official's decision not to lower flags to honor Kirk's memory, and calls to name a center at the University of Iowa after the conservative movement leader. They also discussed State Senator Catelin Drey's swearing in and her potential impact on the Iowa Senate, election forecaster ratings for Iowa's 2026 elections, highlights from a Polk County Democratic event, other news from the campaign trail, the final meeting of Iowa's DOGE task force, limits on nonprofit work to help new citizens register to vote, several stories related to water quality, and three Iowa Supreme Court rulings they didn't have time to cover in the spring.

09-16
29:52

Ernst out, Hinson in; new Congressional candidates; Democratic town halls

Laura Belin and George A. Clark (filling in for Spencer Dirks) dug into Iowa's latest political reshuffle: Joni Ernst's exit and Ashley Hinson's Senate campaign launch, Hinson's competition for the GOP nomination, and the Republicans lining up to run for Hinson's seat in Congress. Other topics covered: another Democrat running for Senate, new endorsements for Josh Turek, another Republican running in the fourth Congressional district, town halls held by Rob Sand, Julie Stauch, and Sarah Trone Garriott, a Zach Nunn "community forum" that wasn't, and the state of Iowa's new law enforcement agreement with the Meskwaki Nation.

09-09
29:53

Ernst retirement watch, Sioux City special, Nate Boulton comeback

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with reporting that Senator Joni Ernst won't seek re-election in 2026, other potential GOP candidates for U.S. Senate, and the first "principled conservative" endorsement for Jim Carlin in that race. They dug into a Democrat's convincing victory in an Iowa Senate district that voted for Donald Trump, and a Republican county supervisor's epic Facebook rant blaming his own party leaders for the outcome. Other topics covered: another Democrat running in IA-04, a recap of who's running in all of Iowa's federal and statewide races, a labor union endorsement for Rob Sand, Ashley Hinson's new way of talking about the budget reconciliation bill, Nate Boulton's planned political comeback, Trump still tangling with Chuck Grassley over "blue slips," and Laura's tour of the new federal courthouse in Des Moines.

09-02
29:52

New candidates, Dems weigh caucus future, a high-stakes special election

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with more new candidate announcements: another Republican running for governor and two more Democrats running for Congress. They discussed news from several 2026 races, an internal poll suggesting Senator Joni Ernst is vulnerable, and Chuck Grassley dodging a question about his 2028 plans. Other topics covered: the Iowa Democratic Party's survey about the future of the caucuses, a viral social media post by Mariannette Miller-Meeks, a taxpayer funded TV ad for Zach Nunn, another Iowa visit by Bernie Sanders, the high cost of school vouchers, and a preview of the August 26 special election in an Iowa Senate district covering part of Sioux City.

08-26
29:51

Turek in, Scholten out; lots more 2026 campaign news

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with State Representative Josh Turek, the fifth Iowa Democrat to announce for U.S. Senate; less than a week later, State Representative J.D. Scholten left that race and endorsed Turek. They discussed other news related to the Senate race, then highlights from the Iowa Democratic Wing Ding, including pitches from all of the Senate contenders, both Democrats running for governor, and five candidates for Congress. Other topics covered: reaction to President Donald Trump's attack on voting by mail; Rob Sand's promises on Medicaid and school vouchers; political notes from the Iowa State Fair; legislative leaders ruling out big changes to the state's largest pension program; and Governor Kim Reynolds deploying the Iowa National Guard to assist immigration enforcement.

08-19
29:50

Norris joins Senate field, Iowa DOGE touches third rail, Grassley on Trump

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with news from Iowa's U.S. Senate race: Jackie Norris became the fourth Democrat in the field, and Senator Ruben Gallego of Arizona came to boost Iowa Dems. Other topics covered: a third Democrat running in Iowa's third Congressional district, Rob Sand's latest comments on Iowa's water quality problems, the Iowa DOGE task force's proposals to change the state's main public pension system and establish merit pay for teachers, a separate proposal to privatize health care in Iowa prisons, federal funding cuts for healthy food access and education, new USDA investments in rural development, Senator Chuck Grassley's hold on some Treasury Department nominees, Grassley's silence about President Donald Trump's purge of inspectors general, and his latest comments about the dust-up with Trump over Judiciary Committee "blue slips." 

08-12
29:48

U Iowa targeted over DEI; Trump dings Grassley; Feenstra a no-show

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with the Fox News "undercover" video that sparked an investigation into the University of Iowa's DEI practices, a spat between President Trump and Senator Chuck Grassley, some partisan Senate confirmation votes, and Senator Joni Ernst opposing a ban on individual stock trading by members of Congress. Other topics covered: a forum featuring three Republicans running for governor (but not Randy Feenstra), more candidates likely to run for governor or U.S. Senate, a sporting event disrupted by Iowa's dirty water, a new Iowa House majority leader, early enforcement of Iowa's new hands-free driving law, corporate lobbying for a pesticide immunity bill, a new job for a former GOP legislator, and the one-year anniversary of the state's near-total abortion ban.

08-05
29:51

Iowa campaigns for Congress, Senate, governor; passing an anti-SLAPP law

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with news from Washington, DC: the Trump administration's retreat on freezing K-12 education funds, U.S. House turmoil over the Epstein files, and work that may cut into the Senate's long summer break. They discussed two new Congressional candidates in IA-04 and one in IA-02; Senate campaign news related to Joni Ernst, Zach Wahls, Josh Turek, and Nathan Sage; gubernatorial campaign news related to Randy Feenstra, Brad Sherman, CO2 pipeline politics, Rob Sand, and Julie Stauch. Other topics covered: the first ad for the Iowa Senate district 1 special election, Governor Kim Reynolds' low approval rating, and Laura's deep dive on why Iowa finally enacted an anti-SLAPP law.

07-29
29:45

Iowa public tv/radio cuts, more new candidates, 2Q fundraising

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with news from Congress: the bill cutting $9 billion in spending, the potential impact on Iowa public radio and television, frozen federal education funds, Senator Chuck Grassley's handling of the Emil Bove nomination, Grassley's work to help Grinnell College avoid a tax hike, and House votes on the Jeffrey Epstein files, with comments from Representative Ashley Hinson. Other topics covered: new Congressional candidates Kathy Dolter (D, IA-02) and Kyle Larsen (R, IA-04), Kevin Virgil ruling out a second campaign in IA-04, and second quarter fundraising for all of Iowa's candidates for U.S. Senate and House. Finally, they discussed Iowa AG Brenna Bird dropping a lawsuit against the Winneshiek County sheriff.

07-22
29:52

A whole lot of Iowa campaign news

Laura Belin and Spencer Dirks began with Zach Nunn's bizarre trial balloon, followed by his retreat after speaking to President Donald Trump. They also discussed speculation about Joni Ernst's future plans, Ashley Hinson as a possible Senate candidate, GOP primary challenger Jim Carlin's first digital ad, a slew of endorsements for Randy Feenstra for governor, Mike Bousselot's hint about the governor's race, a prominent Republican's warning about Rob Sand, two Democrats launching campaigns for Congress and two more considering it, and each party's nominee for a special Iowa Senate election coming up in Sioux City.

07-15
29:53

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