Democrats file complaint with FEC over TV ad

Window on the West
Opinion column

by Mary Rupert

Today, a complaint was filed with the Federal Election Commission by Kansas 3rd District Democratic Chair Andy Sandler, for the Kansas Democratic Party.

The complaint alleged that there was illegal coordination between the Congressional Leadership Fund, a Republican Super PAC, and the Kansas Republican Party in a television ad that supported Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-3rd Dist., the incumbent.

According to a news release from a Kansas Democratic Party spokesman, the Congressional Leadership PAC (political action committee), a GOP Super PAC, is prohibited from coordinating with candidates or party committees. The Democrats’ complaint says the appearance of an officer of the Kansas Republican Party in a CLF-funded ad shows involvement of the party in key decisions about the ad and constitutes illegal coordination.

The 3rd District campaign this year between Rep. Yoder and Democratic challenger Sharice Davids has been marked by a large number of television ads with an influx of national funding. An officer of the Kansas Republican Party, Alana Zimmer-Roethle, spoke and was identified in a recent ad as a concerned mother, and was not named as a party official in the ad. She is the state party’s secretary, and also was appointed to the Kansas Lottery Commission by former Gov. Sam Brownback.

“CLF thus made an illegal in-kind contribution to the Kansas Republican Party, and the Kansas Republican Party received an illegal, excess contribution,” the Democrats’ complaint to the FEC alleged.

The complaint requested the FEC to investigate the matter, to enjoin them from further violations and to fine them.

Why have the ads gone negative so early in the campaign? It’s because the contest is so close, and it’s perceived at the national level as a possible upset.

Andy Sandler, who filed the complaint, said he is thrilled about the Democrats’ campaign this year.

In the six years he has been working in the 3rd District, he has never seen such enthusiasm as he has out of the Davids’ campaign, Sandler said.

“She has really caught fire very, very quickly,” he said.

According to a recent New York Times – Siena College Poll, Davids was up 51 percent against Yoder’s 43 percent in the district, he said.

“That’s thrilling to me, and not surprising,” Sandler said. “Yoder’s increasingly become out of touch with voters in the district.”

Yoder has increasingly tied himself to Trump, and that’s a losing strategy in the 3rd District, considering that Trump lost the district in 2016, Sandler added. That election was a bellwether to what will happen in 2018, he believes.

The state GOP, however, is currently pointing to the popularity of the national GOP, which it says has increased to 45 percent nationally, a high in recent years, and is riding the crest of economic success.

In Wyandotte County, the Democratic candidate for 3rd District often receives the most votes here, and did in 2016, but there are about five times as many voters in Johnson County.

Super PACs are throwing around $4 million into races statewide, not just the Congressional race in the 3rd District, Sandler said.

While Yoder’s supporters are throwing money around, “I think their return on investment is going to be in the negative numbers,” Sandler said. “I couldn’t be happier.”

One of the campaign issues in the 3rd District that has recently gained attention has been the Affordable Care Act and the ability of those with pre-existing conditions to have affordable insurance. Sandler said Yoder’s plan would allow those with pre-existing conditions to continue to have insurance, but would allow insurance companies to charge whatever they wanted, effectively pricing some of these individuals out of coverage.

“It violates the spirit and the letter of the Affordable Care Act, it’s supposed to be affordable,” he said.

While some people think the election outcome will be based on how many times a candidate’s name is mentioned negatively or positively on television ads, Sandler said he hopes the voters in the 3rd District do a little more homework on their own than just believe what an ad says.

“Dig a little deeper before they go to the polls,” Sandler said.

For more information on the candidates’ positions on the issues, visit:
www.shariceforcongress.com/
www.yoderforcongress.com/
For other election stories, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/category/election-2018/.
For more election information, visit vote411.org, sponsored by the League of Women Voters, at http://www.vote411.org/.

Mary Rupert is the editor of the Wyandotte Daily. Any opinions expressed here are those of the author and not necessarily those of the Wyandotte Daily.

KCKCC 4-0 in own volleyball tourney; top two ranked teams upset

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

With four wins, the 2018 Kansas City Kansas Community College Volleyball Classic proved to be a breath of fresh air for the hosting Lady Blue Devils – but a real bummer for the nation’s best teams.

No. 1 ranked and defending national champion Coffeyville suffered its first loss of the season; No. 2 ranked Cowley College lost twice in the two-day tourney Friday and Saturday.

Northeastern Oklahoma A&M (NEO), which had to rally to nip KCKCC 3-2 in the season’s opener for both teams, ended Coffeyville’s 18-match winning streak 3-1 Saturday while Cowley was losing Friday to Iowa Central and NEO, both by 3-1 counts. Cowley came into the tourney with 14 straight wins.

KCKCC, meanwhile, made quick work of its first two opponents, defeating both Waubonsee and Iowa Lakes in straight sets 3-0. The Blue Devils defeated Waubonsee 25-20, 25-23, 25-19 and Iowa Lakes 25-16, 25-23, 25-16 on Friday.

However, the Blue Devils had to go five sets for 3-2 wins over Ottawa University junior varsity and Longview on Saturday. KCKCC twice went ahead of Ottawa JV 27-25 and 25-14 only to have Ottawa pull even with 25-23 and 25-19 wins before KCKCC claimed the final 15-9.

The Blue Devils had to come from behind against Longview, which took a 2-1 lead by sandwiching identical 25-23 wins around a 25-17 KCKCC win. A 25-23 win in the fourth set got the Blue Devils even before they captured a 15-13 in the final set.

KCKCC (13-7) now returns to Jayhawk Conference play against Cowley in Arkansas City Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. and at Labette a week from Wednesday. The Blue Devils don’t return home until Oct. 10 when they play host to Fort Scott.

NEO was the only other team in the tourney to finish 4-0. Ranked No. 20 in the latest NJCAA poll, the Lady Norse (15-7) knocked off three Jayhawk teams, defeating Cowley 25-22, 19-25, 25-22, 25-20 on Friday and Coffeyville 12-25, 25-20, 26-24, 25-20 and Neosho County 3-0 on Saturday. The win over Coffeyville avenged an earlier 3-1 loss to the Red Ravens.

Motorcyclist dies in crash with school bus

A motorcyclist died in a motorcycle and school bus collision this morning near South 7th and Homer in Kansas City, Kansas. The accident was investigated by Kansas City, Kansas, police, and a cleanup was taking place on South 7th, which was closed to traffic between Central and I-70. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)


by Mary Rupert

A motorcyclist died in a crash with a school bus this morning near South 7th and Homer in Kansas City, Kansas. No children were hurt in the accident, a school district spokeswoman said.

About 8:44 a.m. Sept. 25, police responded to an accident call at South 7th and Homer Avenue, a police spokesman stated.

A white motorcycle had struck the side of a Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools bus, the police spokesman stated.

The driver of the motorcycle, a man in his early 20s, was dead when officers arrived, according to the police spokesman. There were no other injuries reported.

Traffic was blocked off on South 7th Street north of the I-70 ramp, and on 7th Street south of Central Avenue, while the investigation was ongoing.

Nine pre-kindergarten children were on the bus at the time of the accident, and there were no injuries to the children, said Melissa Bedford Fears, spokeswoman for the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools.

“The children were not hurt, and they were able to go on to school,” she said.

The children were transferred to another school district bus and taken to their school after the accident, she said.

Counselors and the district’s crisis team were sent to the school to be available to speak with students today, she said.

The accident is under investigation by the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department’s Traffic Support Unit-Critical Collision Response Team.