Secretary of state predicts surge in primary voting driven by abortion amendment

Schwab anticipates 36% of 1.9 million registered voters to take part by Tuesday

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The Kansas secretary of state predicted Friday competitive races and the proposed abortion amendment to the Kansas Constitution could drive an extra 200,000 voters to the polls in the primary election.

Secretary of State Scott Schwab, who faces a Republican primary challenge tied to election security issues, said 36% of the state’s 1.9 million registered voters would likely participate in the 2022 primary by the time voting ends at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

If Schwab’s estimate holds up, the turnout in Kansas would surpass the previous two election cycles with 702,000 votes cast. That would compare to 636,000 or 34.2% in 2020 and 487,000 or 27.1% in 2018.

So far, compared to the last off-year primary in 2018, twice as many Kansans have voted by mail and three times as many Kansans have voted in-person.


More than twice as many advance voter ballots were mailed to Kansans in 2022 than in 2018.

“This voter turnout prediction is based on 2018 data because we have similar races on the ballot this year, while also keeping in mind we have a constitutional amendment driving voter interest,” Schwab said.

Schwab, who is being challenged in the primary by former Johnson County Commissioner Mike Brown, said other factors woven into the estimate included historical turnout data, advance voting data, the number of registered voters in Kansas and competitive races driving turnout.

Proponents of the constitutional amendment said it would nullify the Kansas Supreme Court’s decision that declared the Bill of Rights of the state constitution included the right to bodily autonomy, including the right to abortion.

Opponents of the amendment argue the amendment would be used to advance unreasonable restrictions on abortion in Kansas, including an outright ban on the procedure.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/07/29/secretary-of-state-predicts-surge-in-primary-voting-driven-by-abortion-amendment/

Spirited contests seen in 36th Kansas House District

by Murrel Bland

It is rather unusual during a Wyandotte County Primary Election season to see two candidates, each on the Democrat and Republican tickets in the 36th District, for the Kansas House of Representatives. The incumbent Democrat, Kathy Wolfe Moore, is retiring.

And among Republicans, there is controversy.

The Republican candidates are Kevin Braun, a former appointed state senator, and Mark David Snelson, a retired Wyandotte County deputy sheriff.

Snelson’s campaign treasurer and political adviser is John Altevogt, a former chairman of the Wyandotte County Republican Central Committee. Altevogt is not known as one who shies away from controversy. He has accused Braun of denying Snelson of having the “sidekick” software that is used in door-to-door campaigns. However, Snelson did eventually receive the software from the state Republican organization after a media inquiry, according to Altevogt.

Altevogt also has alleged that Braun pushed out the vice chairperson of the Wyandotte County Central Republican Committee, Stephanie Cashion. Cashion made headlines after she filed a battery report with the Bonner Springs Police Department alleging sexual battery against Fabian Shepard on Aug. 20, 2021. Shepard subsequently resigned as chairman of the Johnson County Central Republican Committee.

The Democrat candidates

JoAnne Gilstrap

JoAnne Gilstrap is a pharmacist at the WalMart store in Village West. She is seeking the 36th District House of Representatives seat. Several attempts to reach her for biographical information were unsuccessful. She is a Democrat who has been a Republican. Her husband is Mark Gilstrap, who was a state senator.

Lynn Melton

Also seeking the 36th District seat as a Democrat is Lynn Melton. She recently retired from a job as an assistant to Mayor David Alvey. She said she is running so she can find ways that the state of Kansas can benefit the 36th District. She said she is concerned about adequate funding for public education and tax relief for the elderly.

The Republican candidates

Kevin Braun

Several attempts to reach Kevin Braun, who is seeking the 36th District seat, for comments were unsuccessful. Information about him was gathered from various public sources. He was appointed to serve as a state senator after Steve Fitzgerald resigned. The district covers part of western Wyandotte County and part of southern Leavenworth County. Braun, a Republican, lost in his bid to be elected to the Senate. While in the Senate from 2018 until 2020, Braun served on various committees, including Veterans and Ways and Means.

Mark David Snelson

Mark David Snelson is a Republican seeking the 36th District House seat. He was unsuccessful in a bid for the House in 2018. He is a third generation law enforcement officer, having served as a Wyandotte County deputy sheriff. He was a license tag enforcement officer, a jailer and a road patrol officer. He said his main concern is obtaining adequate state funding for mental health.

The Primary Election is Tuesday, Aug. 2.

Murrel Bland is a former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press.

Schwab’s campaign rebuffs election-integrity criticism from Kansas GOP rival Brown

Questions of security of voting process permeate race for secretary of state

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The campaign of Secretary of State Scott Schwab pushed back Tuesday against Republican primary challenger Mike Brown’s attempt to blame the GOP incumbent for election administration mistakes in Rice and Douglas counties.

“Once again,” said Lydia Meiss, of the Schwab campaign, “Mike Brown is misrepresenting the facts for political gain, and fails to understand the role of the secretary of state’s office in election administration.”

Brown, a former Johnson County Commission member, has waged a campaign for secretary of state anchored to President Donald Trump’s baseless claims of 2020 election fraud and to allegations Schwab fell short in his role as the state’s top elections officer.

In texts to supporters, Brown touted a news story of the recent Kansas Court of Appeals decision declaring Schwab violated the Kansas Open Records Act. The appellate court said Schwab shouldn’t have instructed a company to switch off a computer software feature that made it easier for the public to access provisional ballot data.

Brown, of Overland Park, tried to link Schwab to mistakes by the Rice County clerk regarding inaccurate instructions to voters in a city council election and failure to forward two-dozen ballots to voters in a school ballot initiative. He suggested Schwab was responsible for a problem in Douglas County in which a printing company created duplicate ballots. Cards were sent to about 1,000 voters and local officials said procedures were in place to block double-voting.

Meiss, deputy campaign manager for Schwab, said Brown should be aware administrative mistakes would occur in the election process and often those situations were beyond jurisdiction of a secretary of state in Kansas. That was the case in Douglas and Rice counties, she said.

“The election administrative errors occurred at the local level, for a local election, where the secretary of state has no statutory authority to intervene,” she said. “Secretary Schwab has made it a priority to provide additional and enhanced training, resources and a training certification program to county election officials, beyond what is already required in state law. He will continue to do so in his second term.”

Schwab, who served Olathe in the Kansas House from 2009 to 2019, was elected secretary of state in 2018. He is seeking reelection to a second term and has repeatedly declared Kansas elections safe and secure.

Schwab was endorsed for reelection by former Gov. Sam Brownback and former U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, who praised Schwab for increasing post-election audits, improving security of election equipment and opposing attempts by the federal government to take greater control of Kansas elections.

Brown, who lost a 2020 reelection campaign for Johnson County Commission, has faced criticism for praising an $856,000 grant from the Center for Tech and Civic Life to support Johnson County’s election operation in 2020. The money was part of Facebook executive Mark Zuckerberg’s initiative to offer grants to local governments struggling with challenges of COVID-19, and some conservatives have objected to infusion of that outside cash.

Schwab’s campaign issued a statement that said the secretary of state didn’t accept Zuckerberg funding, but questioned Brown’s decision to support the county’s use of that grant money.

Schwab’s campaign also accused Brown of accepting thousands of dollars in anonymous online donations in excess of amounts allowed by state law.

“Mike talks a lot about integrity. It’s just that — all talk,” the Schwab campaign said. “Time and time again, Mike failed to act with integrity. He didn’t act with integrity when he was county commissioner and he’s already proven that he won’t as secretary of state.”

On Tuesday, Brown turned to Facebook to question Schwab’s skills because the word “integrity” was misspelled on a state website listing of political organizations. The campaign-finance reporting site operated by the secretary of state’s office and the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission listed the Election Integrity organization as “Election Integrety.”

“Our failed Kansas secretary of state, ‘Skippy’ Schwab, knows so little about election integrity he can’t even spell it,” Brown said. “It would be funny if it weren’t so shameful.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/07/26/schwabs-campaign-rebuffs-late-campaign-criticism-from-kansas-gop-rival-brown/