Get-out-the-vote event planned Oct. 6

A get-out-the-vote event is planned from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 6, at Juniper Gardens, 1980 N. 2nd St., Kansas City, Kansas.

Voter information will be provided at the event. Also, the event will feature music and food.

Those attending may fill out voter registration forms, sign up for free rides to the polls, and receive information about polling places, early voting and candidates.

There will be no admission charge.

The “No Vote, No Voice” get-out-the-vote event is sponsored by Unity with Purpose, Community Action Network, in collaboration with More Squared, the Community Health Council of Wyandotte County and the Historic Northeast Midtown Association.

Davids scores fundraising win against Yoder

by Sam Zeff, Kansas News Service

Democrat Sharice Davids walloped incumbent Rep. Kevin Yoder in fundraising last quarter.

The Davids’ campaign says the first time candidate raised $2.7 million between July and September. In that same period Yoder, running for a fifth term in the Kansas 3rd District, raised almost $1.3 million.

Yoder’s campaign charged that most of the challenger’s money comes from outside Kansas. It pointed to a story on Axios.com that showed only about 30 percent of Davids’ individual contributions came from within Kansas. However, that is based on last quarter’s Federal Election Commission finance report.

“Sharice has been completely non-existent in the district because she’s raising liberal money around the country,” Yoder spokesman C.J. Grover said in a statement. “She’s skipped important local events for swanky New York fundraisers,” referring to an event at the Stonewall Inn last month.

Davids responded by saying “momentum continues to build” for her campaign. “So many people have made small-dollar investments in this campaign because they know I’ll work for Kansas families, unlike Congressman Kevin Yoder, who looks out for his special interest donors,” Davids said in a statement to KCUR.

Davids has been on a bit of a roll the last two weeks. Over the weekend, the National Republican Congressional Committee reportedly pulled a million dollars in advertising support from Yoder, Inside Elections moved the race to “tilt Democratic” and a New York Times poll has Davids up by eight points.

New FEC reports are due on Oct. 15.

Sam Zeff is KCUR’s metro reporter. You can follow Sam on Twitter @samzeff.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.

See more at http://www.kcur.org/post/democrat-sharice-davids-scores-fundraising-win-against-kansas-incumbent-kevin-yoder

Kansas governor candidates each have a plan to fix the economy, but will one work?

by Brian Grimmett, Kansas News Service

The Kansas economy has been sluggish the past few years, but the candidates running for governor each have a plan to jumpstart things.

Will any of them actually work?

Experts say every plan faces an uphill battle.

With Kansas lacking the power to add some mountains, or beaches, or Stanford/MIT-level research universities, experts say the state will be stuck where market forces have already landed: a little farming, a little aerospace, a little manufacturing, all driven by forces beyond the control of Kansas politicians.

“I don’t think there are a lot of policy levers, especially at a state level, that can make a whole lot of difference,” said Art Hall, director of the Brandmeyer Center of Applied Economics at the University of Kansas.

But all is not lost. Hall says some policies can make a difference, however small.

Republican Kris Kobach

Kobach’s one big idea to grow the economy is to cut regulations, along with income, property, and sales taxes, much like what was done six years ago. He’s credited similar steps taken by the Trump administration for the growing national economy.

“All of these can be done in a responsible way without breaking our budget,” Kobach said. “And if we want to get our businesses going we’ve got to do it.”

The thinking is that if you can remove barriers, existing businesses will grow and new ones will be attracted to the state.

Dan Rickman, a professor of economics at Oklahoma State University, has done extensive research on the impacts of tax policy on state and local economies, including looking specifically at the tax cuts that came when Sam Brownback was governor.

“Most states that dramatically cut their taxes are underperforming what you would have expected they would have,” Rickman said.

If Kansas were to try the tax-cut approach again, he said, it would get the same result.

The evidence, here in Kansas and around the country, just doesn’t support the use of state tax cuts to spur economic growth.

“If you’re going to get gains from tax cuts you have to very carefully understand and figure out where you can get the cuts without hurting programs that are needed,” Rickman said.

Too often, he said, the budget cuts used to offset decreases in revenue go too far. State budgets generally don’t have a lot of fat to begin with and increasing efficiencies only goes so far.

Conservatives have said the Brownback tax cuts faced two significant problems. One, they weren’t accompanied by a sufficient rollback in the size of state government. So the state’s finances fell into crisis.

Secondly, conservatives argued that low commodity prices for Kansas grain and oil offset the economic spark lit by the Brownback plan.

Democrat Laura Kelly

The long-time state senator from Topeka says the key to economic growth starts with getting businesses and employees to come to, and stay in, Kansas. How? Better schools.

“When I look what are the huge economic drivers of this state, number one is education,” Kelly said, “and we have defunded that over the past eight years.”

Kim Rueben is a senior fellow at the Urban Institute in Washington, D.C.

“I feel like doing things like investing in schools and human capital feels like it has pretty big bang for the buck,” she said.

But the details about that investment matter. Just spending more on education won’t cut it.

“It’s figuring out what kinds of jobs you’re looking to attract,” Rueben said, “and what kind of skills you need your labor force to have.”

For Kelly, that means more focus on career and technical programs. But that idea isn’t unique to her; it’s a sentiment shared by both of her opponents.

Money for those kinds of investments could be tough to come by, too. While the governor can set the tone, the Legislature controls the purse strings. Even if Kelly wanted to increase education spending, she’d likely face a tough battle from Republican lawmakers.

Independent Greg Orman

Orman, the leading independent in the race, says Kansas should invest more in transportation infrastructure.

“Kansas is at the geographic center of the United States,” he said. “We should be the intermodal manufacturing and distribution capital of America.”

Experts say that kind of spending could help — maybe.

“Here’s one way to think about it,” economist Art Hall said. “If you didn’t have any road, building one road would probably have a very large economic impact. But, if you have lots of roads, one more road is probably not going to have much of an economic impact.”

Basically, you don’t want infrastructure that’s crumbling. But spending more on the margins isn’t likely to have a huge impact on economic growth.

“Just building roads doesn’t necessarily solve anything,” Rickman said. “But if you need to keep them maintained and developed in places where they’re heavily used, just the same thing as education, these things can all very much help promote growth.”

Ultimately, all three economists agree that stimulating economic growth on a statewide level won’t come from politics. The answer won’t be found by simply raising or lowering taxes.

“There’s really no silver bullet,” Hall said. “I’ve come to the basic conclusion that economies grow because they’re growing.”

Brian Grimmett reports on the environment and energy for KMUW in Wichita and the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KMUW, Kansas Public Radio, KCUR and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow him on Twitter @briangrimmett.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.

See more at http://www.kcur.org/post/kansas-governor-candidates-each-have-plan-fix-economy-will-one-work-0.