Scott Yenor (born 1970) is an American political activist, university professor, and author. He is a member of the men-only Christian nationalist organization Society for American Civic Renewal and works for the Claremont Institute's Center for the American Way of Life. He wrote the 2011 book Family Politics: The Idea of Marriage in Modern Political Thought and the 2020 book The Recovery of Family Life: Exposing the Limits of Modern Ideologies. He anonymously founded the far-right website Action Idaho in 2021.
Yenor has taught political science at Boise State University since 2000 and has been strongly critical of social justice programs at universities. His anti-feminist views, including referring to career-oriented women as "medicated, meddlesome and quarrelsome", led to a Title IX investigation and his being charged with civil rights violations by Boise State. Yenor is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire and Loyola University Chicago.
In January 2025, Governor Ron DeSantis appointed Yenor to the board of trustees for University of West Florida in Pensacola, Florida. [1] [2]
Scott Yenor was born in 1970. He attended the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, receiving a B.A. in 1993. He earned a Ph.D. from Loyola University Chicago in political science and government in 2000. [3]
Yenor was hired as a professor at Boise State University in 2000. He is a tenured professor and teaches political philosophy. [3]
In his academic writings, Yenor has addressed the Scottish Enlightenment, David Hume, the Reconstruction era, presidential power, and "the principles of family regime for the late modern world". He authored the 2011 book Family Politics: The Idea of Marriage in Modern Political Thought. [4]
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Yenor is a member of the Society for American Civic Renewal, a secretive, men-only Christian nationalist organization. He drafted documents in 2021 related to the organization's charter and purpose. [5] He is also a fellow with the Center for the American Way of Life of the Claremont Institute. In 2023, Claremont hired Yenor as its first senior director of state coalitions. [6]
Yenor's anti-feminist rhetoric has been the source of controversy. [3] In a speech at the 2021 National Conservatism Conference, Yenor declared: "If we want a great nation, we should be preparing young women to become mothers ... Every effort must be made not to recruit women into" medicine, law, engineering and "every trade", instead "recruit and demand more of men" in these occupations; Yenor went on: "If every Nobel Prize winner is a man, that’s not a failure. It’s kind of a cause for celebration". [7] Yenor referred to career-oriented women as "medicated, meddlesome and quarrelsome". He said that higher educational institutions were undermining the traditional family, declaring them "citadels of our gynecocracy". A video of his speech went viral, [8] setting off a firestorm calling for his sanction, sacking, and an investigation of his conduct in the classroom. He was charged by the university with six civil rights violations, which led to a Title IX investigation. [6] [9]
Yenor has criticized social justice programs at Idaho universities, including his own Boise State. He has written white papers against the programs in conjunction with the Idaho Freedom Foundation, a conservative think tank. [6] In 2021 he was selected by Idaho's then-Lieutenant Governor Janice McGeachin to serve on a task force aimed at finding evidence of indoctrination in primary, secondary, and higher education. [6] While on sabbatical in January 2023, Yenor was invited by a conservative group to speak at Eagle High School. An article in the Idaho Statesman described how dozens of students jeered at him and walked out during his speech. [6] [10]
Yenor anonymously founded the far-right website Action Idaho in 2021. The platform published commentary critical of Idaho Republicans deemed insufficiently right-wing and hateful disinformation related to LGBTQ+ groups. Yenor received funding for the endeavor from Claremont Institute chairman Thomas Klingenstein. His authorship of the website was uncovered in 2024. [11]
Yenor is married to Amy Yenor, an events coordinator, and has five children. He lives in Meridian, Idaho, [12] and is Lutheran. [13]
Idaho is a landlocked state in the Pacific Northwest and Mountain West subregions of the Western United States. It borders Montana and Wyoming to the east, Nevada and Utah to the south, and Washington and Oregon to the west; the state shares a small portion of the Canada–United States border to the north with the Canadian province of British Columbia. Idaho's state capital and largest city is Boise. With an area of 83,569 square miles (216,440 km2), Idaho is the 14th-largest state by land area. The state has a population of approximately two million people; it ranks as the 13th-least populous and the seventh-least densely populated of the 50 U.S. states.
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Scott Conrad Bedke is an American politician serving as the 44th lieutenant governor of Idaho since 2023. A Republican, he served as a member of the Idaho House of Representatives for the 27A district. In December 2012, Bedke defeated fellow Republican Lawerence Denney to become speaker of the Idaho House of Representatives.
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Stephen J. Yates is an American political advisor and government official who last served as the president of Radio Free Asia. He previously served as the deputy national security adviser to the Vice President to Dick Cheney from 2001 to 2005 and chairman of the Idaho Republican Party from 2014 to 2017. He is the CEO of consulting firm, DC International Advisory and has been in that position since 2006.
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The Society for American Civic Renewal (SACR) is an exclusive, men-only fraternal order which aims to replace the US government with an authoritarian "aligned regime". Some experts in Christian nationalism claim the SACR is rooted in extreme Christian nationalism and religious autocracy.