Kansas voting advocates navigating new maps and law as registration deadline approaches

by Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Kansas voting advocacy organizations are grappling with what new congressional and legislative maps mean for registration efforts, while also navigating a new law that interferes with their work.

The Kansas Supreme Court issued separate rulings last month declaring the congressional and legislative maps approved by the Republican-led Legislature complied with the state constitution. The decision reversed a district judge’s opinion that the congressional map moving Lawrence from the 2nd District to the 1st District and splitting the Democratic stronghold of Wyandotte County was unconstitutional.

Connie Brown Collins, of the Voter Rights Network of Wyandotte County, said community members have been reluctant to get involved with politics in the past, but the new maps have exacerbated feelings of ambivalence.

Collins said it was critical that organizations do what they must, even going door to door, to mobilize and ensure voters know what is at stake if they don’t vote.

“Wyandotte County will come back stronger, and I think that is the case for Lawrence and for other counties around the state that feel like they were bruised during the redistricting process,” Collins said. “I hope that others take up the mantle and that we will not forget.”

The Legislature redraws the state’s four congressional districts and boundaries for state House and Senate seats based on results of the U.S. Census every 10 years. The maps reflect population shifts from rural to more urban areas.

Republicans in the Legislature worked to undermine the reelection prospects of U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, a Democrat representing the 3rd District. The new congressional map removes from her district voters north of Interstate 70 in Wyandotte County who supported her in past elections. Several groups filed lawsuits arguing the new maps targeted voters on the basis of race and politics to create an unfair advantage for Republicans.

Collins is among the activists hoping to ensure voters who feel disenfranchised by these changes do not disengage from the political process completely. But some groups say they cannot work effectively to register voters and improve election participation because of provisions in House Bill 2183.

The law prohibits “knowingly” engaging in “conduct that gives the appearance of being an election official” or “would cause another person to believe a person” is an election official.

Davis Hammet, president of Loud Light, said instead of actively being in the streets and engaging with voters, groups like his are being extremely careful not to break the law. Loud Light is among those advocacy groups currently in a legal battle in the Kansas Court of Appeals over the validity of the law after a failed injunction attempt.

“There’s a lot of reasons to be frustrated, like Lawrence being surgically carved out to try to dilute their voting strength,” Hammet said. “But we’re in this weird thing where a lot of the ways that you would counteract that are being criminalized.”

Defendants have argued the law does not criminalize these registration efforts because they would need to “knowingly” be impersonating an official.

Hammet said his organization registered 10,000 Kansans in 2020, but because of the law and because the court has yet to make a ruling, they have registered none this year. The voter registration deadline for the Aug. 2 primary is July 12.

Martha Pint, co-president of the Kansas League of Women Voters, said the redistricting efforts and election policy changes are meant to dissuade voters from heading to the polls.

“When you put all of these things in the mix, I think there’s going to be a lot of very unhappy and disgruntled voters come this election cycle,” Pint said.

Part of the process for groups like the league, Pint said, is clearing up confusion and overcoming the obstacles created by the new election law.

“I’ve got bills to pay, and I’ve got things to do, and my day care shut down, and now you want me to go vote?” Pint said. “We must try and overcome those obstacles on top of the district lines changing. It is piling on.”

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/2022/06/03/kansas-voting-advocates-navigating-new-maps-and-law-as-registration-deadline-approaches/

Filing deadlines extended for some elective offices

The Wyandotte County Election Office will be extending several filing deadlines this month for offices that have been affected by the recent changes in the election maps.

Depending on the office, candidates will want to file with either the Kansas Secretary of State or the Wyandotte County Election Office.

The new deadlines:

Today, June 1, at noon:
U.S. Senate, statewide offices and elected judicial positions. Candidates file with the Kansas secretary of state.

Township clerks: Candidates file with the Wyandotte County Election Office.

Friday, June 10, at noon:
U.S. House, Kansas Legislature and Kansas Board of Education.
Precinct committeepersons.

The deadline to change political affiliation prior to the Aug. 2, 2022, primary election is now Friday, June 10, 2022.

Voters with changes to their precinct and district assignments as a result of redistricting will be notified by mail. For more information about upcoming elections, voter registration, and other topics, visit the wycovotes.org website.

National GOP group’s attack advertisement at center of dispute with Kansas governor’s campaign

Gov. Laura Kelly disputes ‘rough road’ allegation; NGA files ethics complaint

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — A Republican Governors Association political action committee filed an ethics complaint in wake of an attempt to derail their attack ad targeting Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly for allegedly dropping in 2019 a requirement adults work part-time, search for a job or get employment training to qualify for food stamps and other assistance.

Kelly campaign lawyers Courtney Weisman and Jonathan Berkon urged Kansas television stations to reject the RGA’s ad because it incorrectly claimed the governor “stopped” enforcing a rule that able-bodied adults had to earn their food stamps and cash aid.

The governor’s reelection campaign argued the Kelly administration contemplated a policy shift, but amendments to eligibility rules weren’t implemented due to GOP criticism.

The complaint submitted to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission and signed by the NGA’s executive director in Washington, D.C., contended a Kelly administration cabinet secretary shouldn’t have introduced into the debate a letter documenting the agency’s history of compliance with welfare eligibility rules.

The secretary’s letter was relied upon — improperly, NGA said — by the Kelly campaign in an attempt to convince broadcast stations KSNT and KTKA to pull the NGA commercial.

The complaint said Laura Howard, secretary of the Kansas Department for Children and Families, improperly provided the Kelly campaign an agency memo on official DCF letterhead. It’s not clear Howard knew how the governor’s office or her campaign would make use of the one-page letter.

“Unfortunately for Kelly, no matter how much she improperly uses state resources and taxpayer-funded staff to aide her political campaign, we will keep holding her accountable and voters will reject her this November,” said RGA spokesperson Joanna Rodriguez.

The RGA is engaged in the Kansas gubernatorial campaign on behalf of Attorney General Derek Schmidt, who is seeking the Republican nomination to run against Gov. Kelly.

“It’s disappointing, but not surprising, that the RGA is lying about Governor Kelly’s strong track record. It’s this type of campaigning that Kansans despise,” said Lauren Fitzgerald, a Kelly campaign spokeswoman.

Howard’s letter to Will Lawrence, the Democratic governor’s chief of staff, said DCF didn’t relax rules to extend food stamp benefits to unqualified adults in 2019 or 2020.

RGA officials asserted, but didn’t offer evidence, that Gov. Kelly and Lawrence forced Howard to get involved in the political dispute. Under Kansas law, RGA staff said, state employees in Kansas couldn’t be coerced into engaging in political activities. Kansas statute also says state officers or employees couldn’t make use of public funds or time to expressly advocate nomination, election or defeat of a candidate, the RGA said.

The Associated Press published a story in December 2018 that said Kelly wanted to “roll back cash assistance rules.” Kelly wasn’t sworn into office until January 2019.

An article published by the Wichita Eagle in July 2019 said the attorney general gave Gov. Kelly a deadline to “drop (her) welfare plan.” A subsequent Wichita Eagle story said Gov. Kelly abandoned the welfare eligibility reform idea due to concern articulated by Republicans and the potential of an expensive legal fight.

Howard’s memo said a DCF document issued July 11, 2019, stated discretionary exemptions from work mandates wouldn’t be applied to welfare recipients. That document reversed an earlier DCF memo indicating the goal was to use limited exemptions.

“To claim that Governor Kelly ‘stopped’ requiring healthy adults to look for work while receiving welfare benefits is simply false,” Kelly’s campaign attorneys said in a letter to broadcasters. “You have a duty to protect the public from false, misleading or deceptive advertising.”

Jessica Furst Johnson, counsel to the RGA’s political action committee, said in correspondence to TV stations the Kelly campaign shouldn’t be permitted to “infringe on the PAC’s right to speak by distorting claims and inventing alternate reality in an effort to carefully curate what Kansans see on the airwaves.”

The RGA’s commercial, labeled “Rough Road,” was a response to Kelly’s campaign ad outlining how she brought Republicans and Democrats together to produce a record budget surplus, fully fund K-12 public education and implement a program to fix Kansas highways.

“Like most Kansans, I am not too far right or too far left,” Gov. Kelly said while speaking from a roadway in Auburn near Topeka. “Amazing what you can do when you govern from the middle.”

The RGA political action committee’s rebuttal commercial raised objections to Gov. Kelly’s vetoes of tax legislation and bills requiring boys or men to participate in school or college sports according to gender at birth.

“She stopped requiring healthy adults to look for work while receiving welfare checks,” the NGA ad’s voice over said. “Under Laura Kelly, our families are facing a rough road ahead.”

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/2022/05/27/national-gop-groups-attack-advertisement-at-center-of-dispute-with-kansas-governors-campaign