Local campaigns can get ugly. Negative ads, outside groups, and social media are often employed to tear down a candidate’s opponent. Very few campaigns sink to the level of Maria Olsen Nate.

A statewide mailer was delivered to residents of Idaho urging voters to look at Lt. Governor candidate Steve Yate’s record. They accused him of having a failing business and included a copy of a private email sent from Steve Yate’s wife to her friend Sheila Olsen, a beloved active member of the Republican Party.

The claims made by the mailer were dubious at best and upon discovery of who paid for the mailer – a group funded by Doyle Beck and Bryan Smith, it was obvious this may have been part of a longstanding grudge match between the leaders of the Bonneville County Republicans and the former Idaho GOP chairman. The most troubling aspect of this was the source of the email; Sheila Olsen’s own daughter, Maria Olsen Nate.

Maria Olsen Nate is running her husband Ron Nate’s campaign and has been his voice in public since he was first elected. There is no separating Maria from Ron’s campaign. This is especially difficult for Ron who may have a hard time disavowing his wife’s actions.

According to Nathan Olsen, Sheila’s son, said his sister, Maria Nate, is the source of the email from their late mother. “My sister Maria forwarded it. … I can confirm that she’s the origination of this,”

Sheila Olsen’s grandson, Adam Olsen said in a comment, “It’s a queasy feeling to see my Grandma’s private email message on a flier which went all over the state, being used to embarrass a candidate. My Grandma campaigned till the last hours of her life with integrity and love even for her opponents. It’s painful to watch my Grandma’s emails being used for the exact opposite of what she believed. I don’t know what my Grandma is doing now but I hope she is resting in peace.”

Nate went on the Neal Larson show this morning and was confronted by her actions. She said: “I disavow it, it’s not appropriate, and we should not campaign like this. If people want to be mad at me I will take 100% of the responsibility for this.” She went on further to say that this should not be a reflection of her husband’s campaign.

There is a problem with this. You see Maria is Ron Nate’s campaign. Every comment, post, like and share is done by her and her group of friends she activates to boost social media engagement. Just about everyone in Madison County knows that Maria is their unelected representative. Saying this is not a reflection of her husband’s campaign is highly disingenuous.

Throughout the interview, she was asked who she forwarded the email to and each time she dodged the question. This raises another important question, who did she actually send the email to? Ron Nate’s campaign finance report shows that one of his largest donors is the same person Neal Larson says is behind the mailer. Is Maria protecting her friends in the Bonneville County Central Republican Committee leadership? Was dishonoring her mother’s legacy worth a $1,000 donation? Her response: “I’m in my own race with my husband and you get so wrapped up in the winning that you forget that these are people.”

Larson did a great job of holding her accountable for her actions; “Maria, I know this is a horrible, horrible day for you, that all of this is happening, but I’m going to be really up front an honest with you… I don’t know if your explanation is adequate.”

Maria responded; “It was wrong, it was immature, it was a lack of judgment, it was a violation of her privacy… I don’t know what else you want me to say, it was wrong.”

For as much dancing as she did around the issue, it may be obvious to most that this was politically motivated, designed to please their donors and hurt her enemies. If she was willing to breach her mother’s trust and share this email, how many other private messages did she find and forward? Will there be other mailers attacking other candidates that do not align with her hard right-wing politics? It’s a fair question.

When you look at Maria and her husband’s record, this appears to fit a pattern of behavior, one where the rules do not apply where winning seems to be all that matters.

Steve Yates summed it up well in his response to Larson: “This is actually not a personal matter between people who feel like feelings have been hurt,” Yates told KID Newsradio. “So, I can appreciate the anguish that Maria and others may feel about the misjudgment of going into private emails and making them into something public. At the same time, there is no remedy for something like this and so when you play with nuclear politics, sometimes this collateral damage is quite significant. Hopefully, it’s a cautionary tale.”

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