Teens, newlyweds and two Ron Esteses will compete in Kansas primaries

A candidate filled out his paperwork to run for office in Kansas. Friday at noon marked the end of the filing period for the August 2018 primaries. (Photo by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service)

by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service

The final flurry of filings ahead of the Kansas primaries in August didn’t disappoint.

“This is one of the busiest days of the year, every two-year cycle,” said Secretary of State Kris Kobach, surveying the last crop of candidates that paraded in just before the noon deadline Friday.

Performance artist Vermin Supreme arrived at the Secretary of State’s office to get his name on the ballot for the attorney general’s race. Supreme will challenge Derek Schmidt in the Republican primary. (Photo by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service)

Performance artist Vermin Supreme made his entrance dressed in tie-dye and with his signature rain boot on his head. He filled out the paperwork to challenge Attorney General Derek Schmidt in the Republican primary, listing a Rockport, Massachusetts, address.

The name of another out-of-stater, Andy Maskin, who had filed to run for governor though he lives in New York City, was struck from the candidate list in May after a Republican party official objected. A state court judge later affirmed that state law presumes candidates for chief executive of Kansas will live in the state.

But the new law putting an end to teen candidacies won’t be in effect for this election, so the names of three teenage duos will be on primary ballots. Gubernatorial wannabe Joseph Tutera Jr. of Mission Hills and his running mate Phillip Clemente added their names with a handshake and a photo in the secretary of state’s office on Wednesday.

Candidate Joseph Tutera Jr. posted a photo of himself with his lieutenant governor candidate, Phillip Clemente, on Twitter.

Everyone and his wife

If it seems like everyone and his wife are running for office in Kansas, it’s actually kind of true.

Rep. Keith Esau of Olathe is leaving the Legislature to make a bid to succeed Kobach as secretary of state, and his wife Charlotte Esau filed to take his place in the House.

Candidate for governor and newlywed Jim Barnett, a physician and former Republican state senator, named his wife, Rosie Hansen, who worked in the Foreign Service, as his running mate Thursday. The two married in September.

The gubernatorial field has whittled down already, but there’s still a dozen candidates, with Gov. Jeff Colyer and Kobach the perceived frontrunners on the Republican side, and state Sen. Laura Kelly and former Kansas Agriculture Secretary Josh Svaty on the other.

University of Kansas political scientist Patrick Miller said the gubernatorial primaries are still tricky to predict — the most recent polls on the Democratic side came out before House Minority Leader Jim Ward withdrew in May.

Polls on the Republican side either have Colyer and Kobach statistically tied or slightly favor Kobach. Miller said it could also be interesting to watch how Insurance Commissioner Ken Selzer spends the substantial amount of money he raised, and whether that will help move the needle on his bid for governor.

Announced independent candidate Greg Orman has not yet filed. With no primary, the filing deadline for independents isn’t until Aug. 6. Miller said Orman is likely to act as a spoiler, pulling mostly Democratic votes in the general election to give Republicans a possible advantage.

State senators aren’t up this year, but there is a plethora of races for the House.

Democrats fielded 99 candidates, nearly as many as they did for House seats two years ago. But Miller, who has studied voting patterns across the state, says don’t count on a repeat of 2016.

Then, Democrats netted 12 seats in the 125-member House, and moderate Republicans took over more than 20 seats previously held by conservatives in the lower chamber. The shift to center allowed the Legislature to repeal Gov. Sam Brownback’s signature tax cuts and very nearly override a veto of Medicaid expansion.

Miller said some of that moderate and Democratic enthusiasm is tapering off this time around. There are fewer contested seats than in 2016 and the number of Republican primaries is down.

“If you’re looking at, are we going to have another 2016, no, I don’t think the math is there for that,” he said.

That sets Kansas apart from many other states, which are seeing a blue wave fueled by Democrats energized against President Donald Trump. If Kansas Democrats were following that nationwide trend, they’d be running more Democrats in heavily Republican, Trump-voting districts, Miller said.

‘M is for Misleading’

There will, however, be primaries in all four of Kansas’s Congressional districts. That includes the 4th District in Wichita where Republican Rep. Ron Estes is being challenged by Ron M. Estes.

The incumbent blasted the newcomer, calling him an, “imposter,” in a fundraising email Friday.

“It’s appalling and an insult to Kansas voters,” Rep. Estes said of his challenger’s candidacy. He said the other Ron Estes’ middle initial, “M”, stands for “misleading.”

Secretary of State Kobach said Kansas law allows candidates with the same name to include a prefix or suffix in order to clarify their identities for voters. In this race, his office will allow the incumbent Estes to add “Representative” in front of his name.

Miller said it’s unlikely the entrance of another Ron Estes will hurt Rep. Estes’ chances.

“I can’t think of a case where an incumbent has been brought down by a same-name candidate,” he said. “The odds should be with the, quote-unquote, real Ron Estes.”

However, Democratic challenger James Thompson came within 7 points of Estes in the 2017 special election, despite, Miller adds, running in one of the 100 most Republican districts in the country.

Thompson is gunning for a rematch, if he can surpass his primary challenger, Laura Lombard on Aug. 7.

The full list of candidates is online at www.kssos.org/.

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox. KMUW’s Deborah Shaar contributed to this report.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.

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Democratic candidates to appear at 3rd District forum today

Democratic candidates for the U.S. House, 3rd District, are scheduled to appear at a forum from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Saturday, June 2, at the Shawnee Mission Unitarian Universalist Church, 9400 Pflumm Road, Lenexa, Kansas.

A meet-and-greet is at 1:15 p.m. Space is limited and those attending are asked to RSVP to http://swingleftks03.x10host.com/events/.

The candidates are Sharice Davids, a lawyer and economic adviser; Mike McCamon, former tech and nonprofit executive; Tom Niermann, a high school history teacher; businessman Jay Sidie; labor lawyer Brent Welder and Sylvia Williams, a retired banker.

Moderators for the forum are Gary Enrique Bradley-Lopez, vice chair of the Wyandotte County Young Democrats, and Helena Buchmann, executive committee member, Johnson County Democratic Party.

The forum is sponsored by SwingLeft KS-03. Partners include the Johnson County Democratic Party; the Kansas Democratic Party – Third Congressional District; MoveOn; True Blue Women and March Forward KC.

Barnett picks wife as running mate in governor’s contest

Jim Barnett, an Emporia physician and former state lawmaker, named his wife, Rosemary Hansen as his choice for lieutenant governor. (Photo by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service)

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Republican candidate for Kansas governor Jim Barnett has chosen what he admits is an unconventional running mate: his wife.

Barnett announced Thursday that he had selected Rosie Hansen as his lieutenant governor pick.

Barnett said he wanted a running mate to help accomplish his goals of improving the way state government functions and bridging the divide between rural and urban Kansas.

“It became clear that the one person who was best qualified in all areas was also the person who had spent the past 22 months traveling 70,000 miles with me, Rosemary Hansen, my wife,” Barnett said in the announcement.

With a laugh, Hansen recounted her initial reaction when Barnett asked her to be his running mate.

“I said, ‘Absolutely not. Are you crazy? I’m not a politician,’” she said. “And he said, ‘That’s why you should be lieutenant governor.’”

Hansen was a foreign service officer in the U.S. State Department, where she helped establish and manage overseas embassies.

She said she was persuaded to run after thinking about ways to use her experience.

“These are things that I could do. These are ways I could contribute,” she said. “He said to me ‘That’s great, but you can only contribute from the inside. You really can’t do that from the outside.’”

The two married in September 2017.

Barnett is an Emporia physician who was the Republican nominee for governor in 2006 while serving in the Kansas Senate. He said he had also considered several other possible choices for his running mate.

Barnett is positioning himself in the race as more of a centrist than other Republican candidates, including Gov. Jeff Colyer, Secretary of State Kris Kobach and Insurance Commissioner Ken Selzer.

Washburn University Political Science Professor Bob Beatty said he’s not aware of any past husband-and-wife candidates for governor and lieutenant governor in Kansas. He also couldn’t think of any examples in other states.

“Unusual is not the correct word. (It’s) unprecedented in Kansas history,” Beatty said. “It’s really stunning in Kansas for a major party candidate.”

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda. 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://kcur.org/post/sickness-health-and-race-kansas-governor-barnett-picks-wife-running-mate.