Youth helping out with elections this year

A young election worker went through training last weekend at the Wyandotte County Election Office. (Submitted photo)

This year’s elections are getting a boost from young election workers.

With some of the regular election workers unable to be at the polls Aug. 4 because of COVID-19, an effort has been made to recruit high school students and young adults.

Sheyvette Dinkens, a business educator at Wyandotte High School, said she recently brought about 10 students to election worker training.

This past weekend, Dinkens went with students from Wyandotte High School and Sumner Academy to the training session at the Wyandotte County election office. Students who are over 16 may work at the polls. More training sessions are expected to take place.

Students learned about checking voters in, provisional ballots and other topics, she said. Many of the students are bilingual and will be able to help with translations, she added.

The students also learned about the rules for primaries, such as registered Republicans can only vote the Republican ballot, and registered Democrats can only vote the Democratic ballot. In the general election, voters can vote for any candidate.

Some of the students don’t know much about elections, having not voted before, Dinkens added. This is an educational experience for them, she said. They will be under the supervision of an experienced supervising election judge at the polls, she added. The students receive $9.01 per hour for working at the polls.

Dinkens said students at the training were provided with general government education on elections and how they work. She said she believes it’s important for students to support the local community, and the experience will be good for them.

During training, they talked about how many election locations have closed because of COVID-19, and also about how people are using physical spacing at the polling places, she said.

“The election office has taken precautions, they have the spacing and partitions up,” Dinkens said. They also will have markers on the floor showing people where to stand to be safely spaced apart.

Wyandotte County Election Commissioner Bruce Newby said youth have been eligible to work at the elections for some time, and this year the election office has been more aggressively recruiting young election workers.

Since many election workers here are over the age of 72, many of them are dropping out of working at this year’s election because they don’t want to take the risk of getting COVID-19, Newby said. That creates vacancies that the election office has to fill, he added.

The election office here desperately needs election workers and especially younger election workers, he said. It’s not too late to call the election office and ask to be an election worker, he added. If necessary, they will train election workers all the way up to the day before election, he said.

Holding an election this year has been a different experience.

“It’s a challenge,” Newby said. “This year was going to be difficult enough without the COVID-19 thing overlaying everything. We’re doing everything we can.”

They’re trying to keep the election as normal as possible, he said, with the exception that they have pushed voting by mail very hard. All of the voting options will still be available.

There has been some pushback from some people who think others will try to steal the election if it’s a mail-in ballot, but procedures are in place to keep that from happening, Newby said. There are laws in place that make it a felony offense to interfere with elections and change votes, he added.

Mail ballots still available

Wyandotte County, as a lot of other places in Kansas, has been encouraging voters to use mail-in ballots to keep the risk down of people spreading COVID-19. The state has allowed mail ballots for many years.

So far, they’re over 10,000 applications for a mail ballot. This week, the Wyandotte County election office sent out 9,728 ballots, Newby said. They have 600 pending to send out and there will be more when they check the mail on Saturday, he added.

“It’s not too late to apply to vote by mail,” Newby said. The deadline to apply to vote by mail is Tuesday, July 28, one week before Election Day, he said. “Voters still have time if they want to protect themselves,” he said.

He added the best way for voters to protect themselves is to vote by mail.

Newby said as soon as they get an application, they process it and try to get the ballot out the same day or a day or two later. Voters need to plan to get the ballots back to the election office. It might take two to three days in the mail to get there.

If voters return the ballot by mail, it has to be postmarked by Election Day and received by the Friday after Election Day, according to the state law, he said. If the postmark says the day after Election Day, it isn’t counted.

Also, a voter can return the ballot in person to the Election Office or to any polling place on Election Day, during the hours the polls are in operation, he said.

Besides polls being open on Election Day from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., there will be early voting dates as usual at three election centers, one at the Election Office at 850 State, one at the Joe Amayo-Argentine Community Center at 2810 Metropolitan Ave., and one at the Eisenhower Recreation Center, 2901 N. 72nd St.

Those who go to the polls in person may have to wait in line and will social distance, he said. At this time, he doesn’t know how long it will take to wait in line, he added.

To mask or not to mask?

The election workers all will be wearing masks provided by the election office, he said. While there is a mandatory mask order in effect in public places from the Wyandotte County Health Department, and while he hopes everyone wears a mask, Newby said he could not enforce it at the polls, and could not make voters wear a mask.

“The Wyandotte County election office and none of the election workers are in the business of enforcing the mask requirement,” Newby said. “Voter eligibility is determined by whether the person is a resident, registered to vote and 18 or over. That’s it. There’s no requirement in the law that says they have to wear a mask.”

Newby said he hopes all the voters comply with the Health Department policy, and protect everyone. But the only ones he can protect and require to wear a mask are his election workers, he added.

On Friday, a news release from Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab stated that a memo has been sent from his office to county election officials advising them not to turn away any individual who is otherwise qualified to vote, for wearing or not wearing a mask. Schwab’s memo cited the Kansas Constitution’s statement that the only three criteria to vote in Kansas were age, citizenship and residence. If the voter is properly registered, state law says the person shall be allowed to cast a vote, according to Schwab’s memo.

Schwab’s news release stated that voter intimidation or voter suppression based on the fact that a voter is or is not wearing a mask will not be tolerated and is subject to litigation.

If election workers want to wear gloves, gloves will be provided for them, Newby said. Hand sanitizer cannot be used because it might interfere with the paper, and the voting machines may not count the votes, he said. Each polling place will have a restroom where workers and voters may wash their hands, he added.

Newby said there will be supplies provided at the polls for voting machines and surfaces to be wiped down between voters. There are special wipes for the voting machines that will not damage them, he added.

Each voter will receive a two-ended pen, he said. On one end, there will be a stylus, and on the other end, a ballpoint. With the stylus they will sign the pad, and with the ink side, they can sign and fill out the ballot. The voters will get to keep the pen, he said, as the election office doesn’t want people to share pens and potentially spread the coronavirus.

Advance voting at three election centers

Wyandotte County will continue to offer advance voting available in person at three election centers.

  • Election Office, 850 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. July 21-24; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, July 25; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. July 27 to July 31; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1; 8 a.m. to noon Monday, Aug. 3.
  • Joe Amayo-Argentine Community Center, 2810 Metropolitan Ave., Kansas City, Kansas, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, July 25; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 27 to July 31; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1.
  • Eisenhower Recreation Center, 2901 N. 72nd St., Kansas City, Kansas, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, July 25; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 27 to July 31; 10 .a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1.

In-person voting on Election Day

Voters may vote at their assigned polling places on Election Day, Aug. 4, and three of those places have changed.

Newby said they have reduced the number of polling places on Election Day by three by consolidating them with other nearby polling places. The three consolidated were the three smallest in the county, he added, with 200 to 300 voters affected. Those voters, if they vote in person, will go a few blocks down the street to their new polling place.

Polling places open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Aug. 4, Election Day, include:

• Bethel SDA Church, 6910 RIverview Ave., Ward-Precinct 9-5, 9-6, 9-7

• Bible Temple Baptist Church, 2804 Hiawatha St., Ward-Precinct 3-1, 3-2

• Bonner Springs Church of the Nazarene, 742 N. Nettleton Ave., BS4-1

• Bonner Springs Family YMCA, 2251 S. 138th St. BS1-1, BS3-1

• Calvary Bible Church, 518 W. Insley Ave., BS2-1, DE1-1

• CenterPointe Community Church, 401 N. 78th St., 9-8, 9-13, 9-14, 9-15

• Dynasty Volleyball Academy and Community Center, 7120 Gibbs Road, 12-10, 12-11, QC1-1

• Edwardsville Community Center, 696 S. 3rd St., ED1-1, ED2-1

• Eisenhower Recreation Center, 2901 N. 72nd St., 14-1, 14-2, 14-3, 14-4, 14-5

• Haven Baptist Church, 3430 Hutton Road, 9-16, 14-12, 14-13, 14-14

• Heart of America Regional Volleyball, 548 S. Coy St., 5-1, 5-2, 5-3, 5-4, 6-1, 6-2

• Hope Chapel (formerly known as New Life Family Church, 4835 Shawnee Drive, 12-4, 12-5, 12-6

• Joe Amayo – Argentine Community Center, 2810 Metropolitan Ave., 7-1, 7-2, 7-3, 7-5, 7-6

• K-State Research and Extension Office, Wildcat Room, 1200 N. 79th St., 11-8, 11-9, 11-10

• Kane Community Center, 14-15

  • London Heights Baptist, 734 N. 78th, 9-9, 9-10, 9-11, 9-12
  • Mt. Carmel COGIC (East Wing), 2025 N. 12th St., 3-3, 3-4, 10-2
  • Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 417 Richmond Ave., 1-1, 1-2, 1-3, 2-4
  • National Guard Armory (Breidenthal Hall), 100 S. 20th, 4-1, 4-2, 4-3, 4-4, 5-5, 9-1, 9-2
  • New Story Church, 5500 Woodend Ave., 12-7, 12-8, 12-9
  • Oak Ridge Missionary Baptist Church, 9301 Parallel Parkway, 11-11, 11-12, 14-6, 14-7, 14-8, 14-16
  • Olivet Institutional Baptist Church, 2013 N.7th St., 2-1, 2-2, 2-3, 2-5
  • Open Door Baptist Church, 3033 N. 103rd Ter., 14-9, 14-10, 14-11
  • Quindaro Community Center, 2726 Brown Ave., 10-1, 10-3, 11-1, 11-2, 13-1
  • Rainbow Mennonite Church, 1444 Southwest Blvd., 8-1, 8-2, 8-3, 8-4, 12-1, 12-2, 12-3
  • Recreation Annex Building, 2900 State Ave., 9-3, 9-4, 10-4, 10-5
  • Rios de Agua Viva Apostolic Church, 4000 Victory Drive, 11-3, 11-4, 11-5, 11-6, 11-7
  • St. Andrew Missionary Baptist Church, 2200 N. 53rd St., 13-2, 13-3, 13-4, 13-9,
  • Sunset Hills Christian Church, 6347 Leavenworth Road, 13-5, 13-6, 13-7, 13-8
  • Wyandotte Tabernacle, 5301 Metropolitan Ave., 7-4, 7-7, 7-8, 7-9

Voters may request mail ballots through the election office at
https://static1.squarespace.com/static/56606b47e4b0b9403ad6ff96/t/5e822b7a679da75b43a9fd29/1585589114506/AV1+Mail_2020+PRIMARY.pdf

For more information about being a student election worker, call Kyla Shepard at the election office at 913-573-8512 or visit https://wycovotes.org/student-election-workers

For more information on the election, visit https://wycovotes.org/

Five Republicans running for U.S. representative, 3rd District

Five Republicans with backgrounds in health care, nonprofits, politics and engineering are looking to take back the U.S. House seat that represents Johnson, Wyandotte counties and a slice of Miami County.

by Erica Hunzinger and Aviva Okeson-Haberman, Kansas News Service

Overland Park, Kansas — Democratic U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids took her spot in Congress from an incumbent Republican in 2018. This year, Republicans think they can take back the seat that represents Johnson, Wyandotte counties and a slice of Miami County.

She’ll go up against one of five Republican candidates, all of whom come with strong business, leadership or political ties — or all three. The Kansas News Service interviewed them at length to understand where they stand on several topics, as well as their reasons for getting into the race for the 3rd Congressional District seat.

Journalists also wanted to know how they plan to take on Davids in a district she flipped by nine percentage points in 2018. The candidates for the Aug. 4 primary are listed in alphabetical order.

Amanda Adkins (Photo courtesy of Amanda Adkins’ campaign)


Amanda Adkins


Age: 45


Place of residence: Overland Park

Past experience: Vice president of strategic growth at Cerner Corp. (2019-2020), vice president of population health at Cerner (2008-2019), director of government and industry at Cerner (2004-2008); state Republican chairwoman (2009-2013), chairwoman of Kansas Children’s Cabinet (2011-2018)


Major endorsements: Associated General Contractors of America, Susan Pompeo, Missouri U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt and U.S. Rep. Sam Graves


Campaign website: amandaadkins2020.com


Suburban women: Adkins believes this voting bloc is concerned with two things: the economy and “the desire to have hope for the future of their children” (she has two of her own). She said when she talks to women, they “want you to understand their problems related to those areas … (that) you share their values and that you’re a problem solver.”


Health care: Adkins said one of the main weaknesses in the nation’s health care system is “how we finance care,” and she would like to put that into the hands of “the individual and the family directly.” She would do that with account-based plans, like health savings accounts.


The other weakness in health care, Adkins said, is “how we actually manage and deliver care.” During her time at Cerner, she learned that “people seek to have a meaningful direct relationship with providers in their community … there’s something that’s very personal about it.” She pointed to provider-sponsored plans as a way to change delivery of care. Adkins also is interested in a health care system that provides “complete transparency in terms of the overall cost of procedures of medications, visits,” as well as “a holistic experience and excellent care coordination” — adding, “and that’s particularly going to be true for programs like Medicaid that largely are focused on pregnant women, children.”


Coronavirus: She thought it was a good idea for the federal government to provide direct payments to individuals and small businesses as a “very, very near-term bridge,” but cautioned the “need to be thoughtful about overall expense.” Adkins advocated for getting the economy up and running as soon as possible, or at least “as soon as medical professionals say” businesses are able.
Federal debt: Adkins said she understands “what it means to be an entrepreneur” and to “build and sustain and play a contributing role in the economy.” She would like to see an annual discussion in Congress about federal spending overall to see what’s coming in versus where there are deficits. “It would be healthy and good for the American people, which would be a concrete step that is not the case today,” she said.


She also noted that the Congressional Budget Office recently projected the debt-to-gross domestic product ratio will eventually be higher than in World War II (the report was issued before the COVID-19 outbreak). “So what happens to our kids in an environment like that?” she asked. “There is just no way possible that they will have the future that we want them to have.”


Immigration: She wants to see physical barriers in rural and urban areas where it’s easy for someone to cross the Mexico border in the United States, as well as the use of surveillance so that “border control agents have an opportunity to have a much more expansive view of what’s going on.” Adkins also emphasizes looking at what skills the United States needs from its workers and how the country might be able to train immigrants in those skills.


She added that immigration is an area where she’d want to home in on spending, saying: “the amount of money that they’re feeding into the tax system is far, far lower than what our country is spending overall (on them) in terms of health care, education and social services.” (It’s important to note that undocumented immigrants are not able to sign up for federal benefits like food aid, Medicaid and TANF, though there are exceptions.)


Why she should take on Davids: People in the 3rd Congressional District have told Adkins “they don’t hear from (Davids) very much at all.” Adkins added that “for a district that is very entrepreneurial and full of lots of people who are thinkers, I think that they have a higher expectation.” Adkins also emphasized her political experience, which does not involve holding office, but getting people into office. She was the chairwoman of the GOP state party from 2009-2013, a time during which Republicans won “all of the congressional races, all of the statewide races,” and more seats in the Statehouse.


What sets her apart from the other candidates: Aside from her time as the GOP party chair and starting up the Dwight D. Eisenhower Excellence in Public Service Series, which helps women into politics, she has youth volunteers working with her campaign because she was helped along the way in her career. “We need for them to be prepared and they’re going to be more prepared if we actually take the time to have an interest and invest in them,” she said.

Mike Beehler (Photo courtesy of Mike Beehler’s campaign)

Mike Beehler


Age: 60


Place of residence: Leawood


Past experience: Retired; vice president of Burns & McDonnell (1995-2019), project engineer in Hawaii (1993-1995), transmission engineer in Arizona (1981-1991)


Major endorsements: He said he has not sought any, and “probably will not.”


Campaign website: electmikebeehler.com


Suburban women: The strong U.S. economy — at least, what it was before the pandemic — will be the key to the suburban women’s vote, Beehler said. “It’s been good for my family, it’s been good for my loved ones,” he said of women’s likely thought process, “and it’s good for our future.” He also believes that Republicans will be “demonized” by Democrats during the campaign season, “and I think people, I think the suburban housewives, are going to be tired of that.”


Health care: Beehler tied changing health care to a booming economy, saying that will provide people “the choices that we need in hospitals, the choices for doctors, the choices for insurance plans. He said the general election will be “very challenging for whoever the winner of this Republican primary is” because he believes Davids will take up the mantle of socialism.


Coronavirus: Beehler said that at the beginning of the pandemic in the U.S., people he was calling to talk with were more concerned about their safety than the election. But in the long-term, he said, the main question is “how are we going to get people back to work? How are we going to get bars and restaurants and major league sports back where we can go and resume our normal life or whatever that new paradigm might look like.” (His answer: “A big investment in infrastructure.”) Beehler also saw a silver lining: “We may realize, ‘You know what? Relationships with people and my community are important.’”


Federal debt: He said the federal debt is going to “continue to grow and grow and grow. And there does not seem to be much interest in Washington, D.C., frankly, between either political party … in stopping that.” This is where Beehler’s main platform comes in: $1 trillion in infrastructure work, which he believes could be funded by public-private partnerships to keep the federal government from accruing too much more debt.


Immigration: Beehler is in favor of President Donald Trump’s border wall, even with the U.S. seeing its lowest number of undocumented immigrants in 15 years. “Does that mean that that’s not going to happen in the future?” he asked, noting that it hurts low-wage earners who are either U.S. residents or legal immigrants. When it comes to legal immigration, he’s high on people at universities or technical schools, saying: “if they want to stay in this country and they want to become part of this country and assimilate and become a citizen, we want them because we need their creativity. We need their intellect.”


Why he should take on Davids: Beehler’s inspiration for joining the race was the House impeachment of Trump, adding that he said Davids is “a reliable vote for impeachment in the future, even if there’s no high crime or misdemeanor.”

Beehler, like Davids, played up his lack of political experience (he did run unsuccessfully for Senate in Arizona in the 1990s). “It’s a lot of these experienced politicians that have caused a lot of the challenges and a lot of the problems that we have in our country right now,” he said.


What sets him apart from the other candidates: His decades of experience in engineering are coming to bear on two ideas. His infrastructure plan he believes would benefit businesses in the 3rd Congressional District, like Black and Veatch, Garmin and JE Dunn Construction (and ripple outward into other community businesses). Beehler also said Kansas can capitalize on “clean, renewable energy” and that the Green New Deal, while not feasible to put in place by 2030, provides some opportunity for his infrastructure push in the form of buildings that use no more energy than they produce.

Adrienne Vallejo Foster (Photo courtesy of Adrienne Vallejo Foster’s campaign)

Adrienne Vallejo Foster

Age: 47


Place of residence: Roeland Park

Past experience: Region 7 Advocate for U.S. Small Business Administration (appointed by President Donald Trump); executive director of Kansas’ Hispanic and Latino American Affairs Commission (during Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration); mayor of Roeland Park (2009-2013).


Major endorsements: Former Kansas U.S. Rep. Todd Tiahrt, state Rep. Jene Vickrey, National Republicans Congressional Committee Young Guns “On the Radar” list


Campaign website: adrienneforkansas.com


Suburban women:
“The suburban women are definitely a challenge for anyone. But they did like Sharice Davids — the Republican, Anglo soccer mom, suburban mom really liked the fact that Sharice was a woman, that she was American Indian and she wasn’t the regular Republican, and they liked that diversity.” She also said suburban women understand her, because she’s a mother of five who’s driven her sons around to soccer games for years. “They love the fact that I’m qualified, that I’m the only one that’s ever been elected that’s running in this race. And that I can sit down with them and be myself and I can sit in jeans and I can sit in a dress.”


Health care: Foster said changing the health care system starts with “personal responsibility” and that the current structure allows “the employers to be the customers to the health insurance companies.”


She also points to legislation Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz introduced in December to expand health savings accounts, as well as what was implemented in Indiana a few years ago. “If you went out into the market and got your own plan, you’re now not tied to that employer’s plan,” she said. “You have now empowered and taken into your own hands the personal responsibility for your health care needs.”


Coronavirus: Foster criticized Gov. Laura Kelly’s executive order limiting church services to 10 or fewer people as targeting religious freedoms. “(It is) vital that we take social distancing seriously, but with that we face challenges.”

She also emphasizes the effects of unemployment and the closing of small businesses, even doing a Facebook video that walked people through the Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program loan applications.


Federal debt: Foster was running for mayor when the recession began and, “like many of my residents,” had been laid off. “So a month before the election, I was able to walk and talk and say ‘I’m with you. I hear you. I’m in the same boat.’” She said it was “very challenging” to make sure the city of about 6,700 didn’t have to cut services.


“We are in a crisis for each new individual who is born,” she said of the federal financial situation. “There is an incredible amount of debt that they are inheriting. And I want to be part of the change in Congress where we actually pay and live within our means.”


Immigration: She wants immigration that is legal, “fair and humane,” where the “door is defined, and I think the president has been doing that.” Wyandotte County has a significant Latino population. Without providing specific details, Foster said people saw the effects of undocumented immigration during the Obama administration — “seeing that their kids and their grandchildren were going to school with kids who were negotiating phone bills at fourth and fifth grade because their parents couldn’t communicate. And they saw the hardship that was having on those children who were stressed out about bills at fourth and fifth grade and how unfair that was. They didn’t even want to know how or why they were coming over, they just know that there was a problem.”


Why she should take on Davids: Foster comes from a family of, as she puts it, “JFK Democrats” in Wyandotte County, where she said people “don’t like their options” and “know what socialism is.”


What sets her apart from the other candidates: She is the only woman of color in the GOP primary and an “original ‘Dotte” (that is, from Wyandotte County). Her grandparents moved from Mexico to Horton, Kansas, to work on the railroad. She is “the youngest of 12. The first to go to college, grew up at 912 Riverview off 10th Street (in Kansas City, Kansas). And it was a challenge. I didn’t know that I was poor,” she said. “I really didn’t, because my parents gave us wonderful family values.”

Tom Love

Tom Love


Age: 67


Place of residence: Overland Park


Past experience: Former state representative (1991-1992)


Major endorsements: n/a


Suburban women: Love says his focus on education will appeal to this voting bloc. He wants federal student loans to be interest-free and wants literacy labs in public schools.


Health care: Overall, Love doesn’t “like the idea of the government running the show.” However, he said he supports some change, like getting rid of punitive damage awards in medical malpractice cases to keep it “targeted to the actual damages.” He also wants to see the Food and Drug Administration forbid the use of ammonia in making cigarettes.


Coronavirus: Love praised Trump’s executive order in late January that stopped travelers who recently visited China from coming into the U.S. (the order didn’t apply to U.S. residents, spouses or family members). But Love also said the federal government made a “big mistake” in not ramping up testing sooner.


Federal debt: Love said the first priority should be getting people back to work, and then once the federal government has “more people employed and more income coming in,” lawmakers can work on addressing the debt. He also supports a flat tax, which he thinks will help boost the economy.


Immigration: Love supports a “comprehensive plan to stop people just walking across the border” that includes building a wall.


“We don’t want to bring criminals in,” Love said. “We want to bring people who want to live under our laws and our constitution and help strengthen the country.”

Why he should take on Davids: Love says his previous experience as a state representative gives him the upper hand when it comes to crafting bills.


“I’m kind of like Trump in that I’m a rehab guy and I look at something and I go … how can we take that back to what it used to be? Because it’s a lot of potential there and there’s solutions sometimes it just means going back to previous law,” Love said.

What sets him apart from other candidates: Love said he’s focused on legislation that affects people’s day-to-day life, which doesn’t always get the same attention as immigration, abortion or gun rights. For example, Love wants to focus on literacy rates and changing the high-interest rate credit card companies set.


“If we can get them to target their K through second grade … Title I funds to provide world-class literacy labs, I think we can eliminate illiteracy in the lower-income population and really make a dramatic difference in our lives,” Love said.

Sara Hart Weir (Photo courtesy of Sara Hart Weir’s campaign)

Sara Hart Weir

Age: 38

Place of residence: Mission

Past experience: President and CEO of National Down Syndrome Society (2014-2019) and NDSS vice president (2012-2014)

Major endorsements: ViewPAC, Maggie’s List, former Kansas U.S. Reps. Lynn Jenkins and Cathy McMorris Rodgers, National Republicans Congressional Committee Young Guns “On the Radar” list


Campaign website: saraforkansas.com


Suburban women: “The suburban mom, the woman vote that we need to get back to the Republican Party is really a larger metaphor for women who want to see Congress work … together and actually get things done,” Weir said.


The other women candidates talk a lot about their families. Weir is not married, but she is a co-guardian for a family friend with down syndrome. “There’s families in all forms, shapes and sizes. But for me, being a Republican is about leading with heart and having compassion in what we do,” she said. “And I do think the Republican Party is diverse and inclusive, and it’s one of the reasons I’m running. We need more Republican women to step out and lead and lead differently.”


Health care: Weir comes at health care from two sides. She said she had 20-25 employees at the NDSS: “I was really focused on making sure that we provided the best benefits and services, 401ks, IRAs, health care plans for my team because I needed them to be healthy.”


But her work with people with Down syndrome has led her to believe “it’s time to decouple the poor from the disabled and these means-tested programs and actually really solve the problem and create a health care system that helps that end user. … Right now, we try to lump everybody into the same category and we know that’s not working.” Without providing specifics, Weir said Congress should try to make sure the cost of health care delivery and insurance are transparent, because “people don’t know how much things cost.”


Coronavirus: Weir frequently posts about COVID-19 on her social media pages, especially the need for social distancing, state-level information about closures and help for businesses and thank you cards for health care workers. She also criticized Davids and, more generally, House Democrats when Congress was debating $2 trillion in federal aid. “Right now, because of these partisan politics and these silly liberal pet projects, we are watching centuries of family businesses, decades of entrepreneurship just wither away,” she said on March 24.


Federal debt: “We need to get back to a regular routine budget process, through the appropriations process. You know, for the last well over a decade, our appropriators and our leaders keep passing continuing resolution after continuing resolution, which adds to more waste, fraud and abuse in our system,” she said. “There’s no accountability.”


Immigration: Weir tells the story of how her grandparents immigrated from Italy and ended up in Omaha, Nebraska. But when it comes to the more contentious aspects of immigration these days, Weir said she’s been to the border in Brownsville, Texas, to see “how our border’s not secure … I support that every sovereign country has the right and the responsibility to protect its borders.” To do that, she said, the U.S. needs “adequate resources and technology.”


“People don’t want to leave this country. They want to come here. We have a million people backlogged in our immigration system. …. We need to sit down and get parties working together to address the issues related to immigration and we need to prevent people from coming to our borders,” she said.


Why she should take on Davids: “I’m a political outsider. I’m a CEO and I have a track record of getting things done for those that I serve,” she said. “And I’m hoping to continue that path and my track record of getting things done into serving the entire third district here in Kansas.”


What sets her apart from the other candidates: Weir was a leading advocate for the federal ABLE Act, which aimed to create private savings accounts for people with disabilities to use for things like education and health and wellness issues. President Barack Obama signed it into law in December 2014.

Editor’s note: This story was originally written in April and was updated on July 13 with information about the fifth candidate, who entered the race on the last day candidates could file.
Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly identified an endorsement for Sara Hart Weir, who has one from Maggie’s List.
Erica Hunzinger is the news editor of the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @ehunzinger or email her at erica (at) kcur (dot) org. Aviva Okeson-Haberman is a political reporter at KCUR. You can follow her on Twitter @avivaokeson or email her at aviva (at) kcur (dot) org.
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 at https://www.kcur.org/politics-elections-and-government/2020-04-20/meet-the-five-republicans-looking-to-unseat-u-s-rep-sharice-davids-in-november

Groups plan ‘Souls to the Polls’ event on Saturday

Several groups are supporting a Souls to the Polls car caravan on Saturday, July 11, in Kansas City, Kansas.

The event will encourage people to get out and vote in the Aug. 4 primary election, according to Elizabeth Ann Sanders, chairperson of the event.

People who want to participate in the caravan will meet at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the parking lot near the Jewell Building of Kansas City Kansas Community College, 7250 State Ave., she said.

Sanders said this is a nonpartisan event to try to let citizens’ voices be heard.

Participants can make hand-made signs, and bring them to the parking lot, where they can tape them to their cars in the caravan, she said. She said they will have painters’ tape. They have been working with the police regarding traffic concerning this caravan, she added.

The cars will drive through ward 9, precinct 6; ward 11, precinct 5; and ward 11, precinct 8, she said. In these areas, voter turnout has been light in the last election.

Among those groups that are participating in this event are the League of Women Voters, Mainstream Coalition, the Black Ministerial Alliance, Grandparents Against Gun Violence, the NAACP, Dotte Votes, Connect the Dotte and other nonprofits, including sororities and fraternities, she said.

The voter registration deadline for the primary election is Tuesday, July 14, and voters who want mail ballots should request the advance ballots by July 28. For more details, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/over-9000-people-sign-up-for-mail-ballots-for-primary/.