Area officials offered their congratulations to Joe Biden being declared the winner of the presidency by major news organizations on Saturday, while other officials seem to be waiting.
One local official, Unified Government Commissioner Christian Ramirez, wrote on social media: “A weight has been lifted off of our shoulders and we can finally breathe!!”
Major news organizations declared Joe Biden the winner of the presidency on Saturday, calculating that he had surpassed the number of electoral votes needed to win. His win will be official after the Electoral College meets and votes.
Biden, Kamala Harris and the Democrats put together a strategy during the campaign that won back much of the labor vote, turned out African-American and Hispanic voters, and garnered the support of college-age and suburban women.
Visits to Wyandotte County by presidential candidates have been somewhat rare in recent years, but Biden made an appearance in Wyandotte County on Sept. 22, 2019, to support striking autoworkers. (See https://wyandotteonline.com/biden-visits-uaw-strikers-in-kck/)
Wyandotte County voted almost 2-to-1 for Biden and Harris. The vote here was 35,623 for Biden and Harris to 18,530 for Trump and Pence, according to unofficial results.
Biden gave a victory speech on Saturday evening, saying there was a need to heal the divisions in the nation.
With the projection of Biden as winner, also comes “firsts” for America’s vice president-elect – the first woman, and the first black woman, as well as the first woman with ancestors from India, as Kamala Harris was declared the winner of the vice presidency by several news organizations.
U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., who won re-election last Tuesday, sent out a message on social media about the election: “I know a lot of folks are exhausted by the heated rhetoric in our national conversation right now. We all have our principles. It’s fine if we have honest disagreements sometimes. But we should always remember that we are not Democrats or Republicans first. We’re all Americans first. This has to be a time to heal, find common ground whenever we can, and make government work for the people. Every person and every corner of our community deserves a government that works for them. Not special interests.”
State Rep. Pam Curtis, D-32nd Dist., offered a simple “Congratulations” to Biden and Harris on her social media site. The Wyandotte County Democrats social media site posted a congratulatory photo.
Unified Government Commissioner Christian Ramirez posted on social media: “Congratulations Mr. President-elect!!!! Joe Biden will turn this country around and bring back decency and honor back to the Office of the Presidency! Let’s get to work and bring our country back together!! “Out of all the elections I’ve watched I’ve never cried before! I didn’t even cry with my election. A weight has been lifted off of our shoulders and we can finally breathe!!”
Former Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Mark Holland pointed out in a social media analysis post, “Whites oust Trump, Trump attacks blacks,” that probably more people voted against Trump than for Biden. (See https://www.facebook.com/mark.holland.9237)
An update to the Wyandotte County election results on Wednesday does not show any changes in outcomes of the contests from Tuesday night.
The update can be found on the Kansas secretary of state’s website at https://ent.sos.ks.gov/wyandotte.html#top.
The same persons who were in the lead of the 10 p.m. Tuesday totals also were in the lead of this updated version.
For example, there were a little over 550 additional votes in the contest for President in the updated Wyandotte County totals on the secretary of state’s website, showing 35,566 for Joe Biden, 18,512 for Donald Trump and 1,029 for Jo Jorgensen.
According to the Wyandotte County election commissioner’s statement on Tuesday, there will be updates on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday as mail ballots are received at the Election Office. The mail ballots had to be postmarked by 7 p.m. Tuesday and have to be received in the mail by Friday to count.
The local election results will not be official until the Wyandotte County Board of Canvassers meets Nov. 16. That board also will consider whether to count provisional ballot here.
More than 800,000 Kansans voted early in the 2020 general election.
by Stephan Bisaha, Stephen Koranda, Nadya Faulx and Aviva Okeson-Haberman, Kansas News Service
Democrats and Republicans in Kansas will keep their seats in the U.S. House, as Tuesday’s election favored the incumbents and the Republican candidate in the 2nd Congressional District.
Nationally, the House looks to be staying in Democrats’ hands, with Sharice Davids playing a role in that in the 3rd District.
But young GOP rising star Jake LaTurner defeated Topeka’s mayor to replace embattled Congressman Steve Watkins in the 2nd District that covers a vast stretch of eastern Kansas.
Statewide, more than 813,000 Kansans voted in advance, which the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office said was a record. And more than 100,000 new voters registered for this election compared to 2018, the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office said Tuesday.
The office didn’t have a breakdown of new registrants’ ages or other demographics, but state election director Bryan Caskey called it “a very high number.”
Counties will send their results to the state within two weeks and the state’s Board of Canvassers must meet by Dec. 1.
If you’re curious about Kansas Statehouse races in your area, go to this Kansas Secretary of State webpage.
1st District
Republican Tracey Mann will be the next congressman in Kansas’ 1st District, with The Associated Press calling the race at 9:25 p.m. By midnight, Mann was up 70.7% to Democrat Kali Barnett’s 29.3%.
Mann, who lives in Salina, campaigned on removing coronavirus restrictions to boost the country’s struggling economy. He also said he would vote for a stimulus package that is limited and targets only specific industries.
The former lieutenant governor also wants to change the U.S.’ immigration system to help bring more workers to western Kansas but said that border control must be addressed first.
Mann said Republican congressional leaders have promised him a spot on the House Agriculture Committee.
“I want to roll up my sleeves and go to work to advocate for our farmers and ranchers in Washington,” Mann said. “It’s such a big economic impact for the Big First.”
The former real estate manager said his experience on his family farm and the knowledge he developed of agriculture as the lieutenant governor gave him the edge.
“The voters were trying to find someone who had that experience and background who was willing to go to Washington and stand up for us — and also for our basic, conservative Kansas values as well.”
The Big First came open when current U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall decided to run for Senate. Marshall has represented the 1st District since 2017.
Barnett, a Garden City music teacher, received about 32% of the vote.
2nd District
Republican Jake LaTurner won the 2nd Congressional District in eastern Kansas, dashing Democrats’ hopes that they could win the seat for the first time since 2006.
The Associated Press called the race for LaTurner after 10 p.m. He beat Democrat Michelle De La Isla by nearly 14 percentage points with 55.3% of the vote as of midnight.
LaTurner’s watch party was in his southeast Kansas hometown of Galena, where talked about small government and cutting taxes while also saying we need a safety net.
LaTurner says his family struggled financially and was on welfare when he was young.
“I understand what it’s like to be down on your luck,” he said. “Our government needs to be there as a social safety net, but we also need a government to do what it does well and have the humility to know that it can’t do everything for everybody all the time.
“I think you need to keep more of your hard-earned money. We need common-sense regulations,” he said.
It was a race that hinged on health care, the nation’s response to the coronavirus and widespread protests over policing and race.
De La Isla wanted to go to Congress to protect federal funding that helps states expand Medicaid for low-income residents. LaTurner has opposed the Affordable Care Act but wants to keep protections for preexisting conditions.
The two fought through attack ads. De La Isla objected to ads that edited her past comments to make it sound like she supported defunding law enforcement. De La Isla said she has supported the police and worked with them as Topeka’s mayor.
The race drew national attention after sitting Republican Congressman Steve Watkins was charged with voting-related felonies shortly before the primary election. Watkins has called the charges politically motivated, but he ultimately lost in August; the next court date in his criminal case is Dec. 3.
3rd District
Democrat Rep. Sharice Davids won her reelection bid for the Kansas’ 3rd Congressional District, keeping it blue for another two years after first flipping the district in 2018.
Davids outraised Republican challenger Amanda Adkins, and focused her campaign on health care and the federal government’s coronavirus response.
Unofficial election results from The Associated Press show she beat Adkins by about 10 percentage points in the district that covers all of Johnson and Wyandotte counties and a part of Miami County.
Davids went after Adkins for her ties to former Gov. Sam Brownback; Adkins managed his 2004 U.S. Senate campaign and later was appointed to chair a state advisory group on early childhood programs.
“In this race, Kansans spoke loud and clear,” Davids said Tuesday night. “They rejected the tired politics of the past — of this slash school budgets, of being denied coverage because of having a pre-existing condition. They chose a different vision for who we send to the United States House.”
Davids’ first two years in Congress included a House vote to impeach President Donald Trump, lawmakers approving trillions of dollars to fight the coronavirus and a racial justice reckoning.
She’ll head back to the nation’s capital with her top priority in mind: another large COVID-19 relief package since lawmakers failed to reach an agreement before the election.
During a speech at the Kansas Democratic Party’s virtual event, Davids also alluded to a disappointing loss for Democrats in the U.S. Senate race.
“Our state motto — “Ad Astra per Aspera” — to the stars through difficulties, has never felt more real than it does right now,” Davids said. “… I can tell you this, for as long as I am here, we are going to fight for every single seat across this state.”
Adkins, a former Cerner executive, had touted her experience in health care and supported repealing most of the Affordable Care Act.
Adkins’ team also had volunteers out canvassing while Davids’ outreach efforts were virtual, but the in-person voter contact wasn’t enough to sway voters.
In a statement, Adkins congratulated Davids on her victory.
“Our nation is worth fighting for, and it’s at a turning point today,” Adkins said. “America must continue to be a beacon of freedom and prosperity for the world, and we have to carry our fight forward.”
4th District
Republican U.S. Rep. Ron Estes will stay in Congress after winning re-election in Kansas’ 4th District.
The Associated Press called the race at about 9:25 p.m. As of midnight, Estes had received about 65% of the vote. Democratic challenger Laura Lombard got about 35% of the vote.
This will be Estes’ second full term; he was first elected in a close 2017 special election to replace now-U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and easily won his re-election bid in 2018. Prior to serving in Congress, Estes was Kansas’ state treasurer.
Speaking at a watch party in Wichita on election night, Estes called for bipartisanship.
“Unfortunately the last few months we’ve had a lot of politics, a lot of partisan activity related with the election,” he said, “and once we put today behind us, we need to move forward, we need to get back together and work on things that are better for Kansas and better for the country.”
Lombard is an international trade specialist who ran unsuccessfully for Democratic nominations in 2017 and 2018.
The district has historically been represented by a Republican; only three Democrats have held the seat in the past century, the last being Dan Glickman, who lost his bid for a 10th term in 1994.
Stephan Bisaha reports on education and young adult life for the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @SteveBisaha or email him at bisaha (at) kmuw (dot) org. Stephen Koranda is the Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio and the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda. Aviva Okeson-Haberman is a government and politics reporter at KCUR. She can be reached on Twitter @avivaokeson. Nadya Faulx is a reporter and digital news editor for KMUW. She can be reached on Twitter at @NadyaFaulx. The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org. See more athttps://www.kcur.org/politics-elections-and-government/2020-11-03/kansas-republicans-keep-their-3-congressional-seats-davids-reelected-in-kansas-city-suburbs