Democrat Holland and Republican Moran make the U.S. Senate race in Kansas a portrait in opposites

by Lynn Horsley, KCUR and Kansas News Service

No Democrat has won a U.S. Senate seat in Kansas since George McGill in 1932. Mark Holland hopes to end that trend, but he’s challenging Jerry Moran, the Republican incumbent seeking a third term after cruising to victory over Democrats in the past.

Anything other than U.S. Senator Jerry Moran winning reelection to a third term would count as a shocker. After all, he’s a Republican incumbent in Kansas, which hasn’t elected a Democrat to the Senate for 90 years.

But Democratic challenger Mark Holland, a Methodist pastor and the former mayor of the Unified Government of Wyandotte County, insists he sees a path to victory. He argues Moran has drifted to the extreme right wing of his party and has fallen out of touch with moderate Republicans, Democrats and independents.

“We don’t need to apologize for being Democrats,” Holland told Steve Kraske in an Oct. 11 interview on KCUR’s Up To Date. “We have a better message on health care, a better message on public education, a better message on wages, a better message on guns, a better message on women’s rights.”

Holland, 53, saw hope for his chances in the Aug. 2 primary vote where Kansans overwhelmingly opposed an anti-abortion amendment that Moran had supported. Holland is trying to campaign in all 105 Kansas counties, saying Democrats for too long have neglected rural voters and that his message can appeal to them too.

Moran, 68, has been a fixture in Kansas politics since 1989. He served in the Kansas Senate for eight years, then in the U.S. House from 1997 to 2011, and now two U.S. Senate terms. While Moran has declined to debate Holland or to be interviewed on KCUR, he says he has conducted countless town halls and has a deep connection to Kansas voters and their conservative values: favoring low taxes, curbing illegal immigration and supporting farmers.

“I work hard to make sure I understand how they are thinking, why they are thinking that way,” Moran said in a Sept. 19 podcast with the Kansas Reflector. “I know and understand and represent the way many Kansans live their lives.”

Moran is known in the Senate for his work on behalf of veterans (although he is not a veteran) and for his staff’s diligent approach to constituent services. He has pushed for the cleanup of the Sunflower Ammunition Plant in Johnson County. Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat, cited his help in luring the $4 billion Panasonic electric vehicle battery plant to that property.

Holland led churches in Wathena and Elwood, in northeast Kansas, and then was pastor of Trinity Community Church in Kansas City, Kansas, from 1999 to 2018. He co-founded Mainstream UMC, which advocates for LGBTQ+ inclusion in the Methodist church.

Holland served six years as a Unified Government commissioner, then one term as mayor, from 2013 to 2017. He touts his leadership in helping to bring $2.8 billion in economic development investment and 12,000 new jobs to Wyandotte County. But he lost reelection after he took on the influential firefighters’ union and challenged the fire department’s spending, including paying firefighters for shifts they didn’t work. Holland said Washington, D.C., can learn from mayors how to actually get things done in government and says he will bring that capability to a broken political system.

David Graham, of Overland Park, is the Libertarian candidate.

The race between Moran and Holland is a true study in contrasting political philosophies and values. Here is where the candidates stand on key issues:

Abortion

Moran’s PAC contributed $50,000 to the Value Them Both anti-abortion amendment that Kansas voters rejected in August. He is staunchly anti-abortion. He says the August vote showed states should decide the abortion issue.

“Clearly, Kansans are speaking,” Moran told the Kansas Reflector. “My view is they ought to be listened to.” Moran also said there’s no chance a national abortion ban can pass the Senate “at this point in time and not in the foreseeable future.”

Holland says he would be a vote in Congress to codify Roe v. Wade and abortion rights nationally.

“We protected women’s rights and reproductive rights in Kansas in August, and on Nov. 8 we’re going to do that for the whole nation,” he told KCUR.

Guns

Holland says the National Rifle Association is “the Big Tobacco of our generation,” more interested in profits than lives. He says that Congress needs to consider an assault weapons ban, but that it should first adopt other sensible gun regulations, including requiring thorough background checks and training, and closing purchasing loopholes.

Moran says he is a strong Second Amendment proponent. He has the NRA’s backing. In June, he voted against the bipartisan gun safety legislation that passed, saying the country needs to address the root causes of violent crime rather than creating new laws that hinder gun owners’ rights.

Inflation

Moran contends inflation is among his constituents’ greatest concerns and says that’s where the Biden administration has failed. He voted against the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022, saying he opposed raising taxes, hiring more IRS agents and other provisions in the law. He advocates cutting federal spending, expanding energy production, and focusing on pro-growth policies to reduce the cost of gas, goods and services.

Holland said he supports the Biden administration’s efforts to deal with inflation. He argued the Inflation Reduction Act will in fact help struggling families by allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices and by keeping Affordable Care Act premiums reasonable. Holland said the Senate should take other proactive steps such as assembling a panel to explore why oil companies are experiencing record profits.

Infrastructure

Holland said he would have supported the bipartisan infrastructure bill that Congress passed in November 2021. He contends it will be a major boon for Kansas, by creating jobs, investing several billion dollars in economic development and transportation projects, and by bringing broadband to rural areas.

Moran was initially part of a bipartisan group of Senators that negotiated on the infrastructure bill, but he voted against it. (U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri voted for the bill but Moran joined U.S. Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Roger Marshall of Kansas in voting against it.) Moran explained in a statement that his top priority for the infrastructure bill was that it had to be paid for, and he couldn’t support the final bill because it added too much to the national debt.

Election integrity/Trump

Holland argues that Moran refused to investigate the Jan. 6 insurgency at the U.S. Capitol and refused to hold Donald Trump accountable for his attempt to overturn the 2020 election of Joe Biden.

“If you don’t have the courage to stand up for democracy after Jan. 6, you’ve abdicated your right to serve in the U.S. Senate,” Holland said on KCUR.

Moran was the only Republican in the Kansas congressional delegation to vote to certify Biden’s election as president. “To vote to reject these state-certified electoral votes would be to act outside the bounds of the Constitution, which I will not do,” Moran said on Jan. 5, 2021.

Moran condemned the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and said Trump was “wrong to continue to spread allegations of widespread fraud and not immediately discourage the reprehensible and unpatriotic behavior.” But Moran voted against impeaching Trump in February 2021, saying the Senate did not have jurisdiction to convict a former president.

Moran received Trump’s endorsement just 12 days after that vote to acquit. Still, according to the Topeka Capital-Journal, Moran voted with Trump only 61% of the time between 2019 and 2021 and is less of a brash Trump ally than his Senate colleague Marshall.

Lynn Horsley is a freelance journalist in Kansas City. Follow her on Twitter @LynnHorsley.

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, https://www.kcur.org/tags/kansas-news-service, may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2022-10-24/democrat-holland-and-republican-moran-make-the-u-s-senate-race-in-kansas-a-portrait-in-opposites

Unsolicited text messages amplify Derek Schmidt’s lies about Kansas drag show

by Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Derek Schmidt’s lies about a nonexistent connection between Gov. Laura Kelly and a Wichita drag show are being amplified through unsolicited text messages to Kansas voters.

Schmidt, the GOP candidate for governor, has used a false story from a U.K. tabloid to attack his Democratic rival as their bitter campaign enters the final two-week stretch. No state funding was used to support or promote the performance.

Schmidt also equated the drag show to the sexualization of children, a nod to bigotry often directed at the LGBTQ community. As evidence, his campaign distributed photos of a drag show performer who was actually a woman.

Text messages delivered Tuesday night touted “BREAKING NEWS” about Kelly being “under fire for her Department of Commerce’s role in taxpayer funded ‘all ages’ drag shows involving children.”

Kelly’s campaign said it reported the text messages to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission for review.

“Schmidt should be embarrassed,” said Lauren Fitzgerald, a spokeswoman for Kelly’s campaign. “First, he’s unable to provide evidence about his own false attack at a press conference. Then he digs in his heels after reporters debunk his lies, and now he’s spreading lies to voters through text messages.”

The Commerce Department provides funding to an arts commission that gave a grant to a Wichita organization to pay for an artist’s residency. That Wichita organization hosted the drag show, which was actually funded by the Knight Foundation and local retailers.

The unsolicited text messages provided a link to a U.K. Daily Mail story, published Monday, that falsely claimed the drag show was taxpayer funded.

“Read more, plus see the shocking pictures and video,” the text read.

The text and story feature images of FaeTality, a Wichita dancer who said in an interview with Kansas Reflector that she just likes to dress up and perform.

Some Republicans incorrectly assumed the dancer was a man. FaeTality said she has been female since birth, was a member of her high school dance team, and was a dance major in college. She described the routine as “tame.”

“This is literally just because I love to dance,” FaeTality said. “I love to put on the costumes and the makeup and everything, and go out there and perform.”

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/2022/10/26/unsolicited-text-messages-amplify-derek-schmidts-lies-about-kansas-drag-show/

See earlier story at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/10/25/kansas-republicans-seize-on-false-report-about-drag-show-to-attack-gov-laura-kelly/

Kansas AG candidates Kris Kobach, Chris Mann make pitch to voters in TV debate

by Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Republican Kris Kobach and Democrat Chris Mann made their end-of-campaign pitch Tuesday night for voters trying to determine who should be the state’s next attorney general.

The candidates offered diverging views on crime, consumer fraud, abortion laws, federal powers, marijuana, judicial selection and guns in a debate presented by the Washburn University political science department and televised on KTWU.

Moderator Nick Haines billed the matchup as “one of the most-watched attorney general races in the country.” Kobach and Mann appear locked in a virtual tie with advanced voting underway and less than two weeks remaining before the Nov. 8 finish line.

The candidates outlined their vision for how they would lead the state’s top law enforcement agency.

Kobach touted his experience in politics and leadership for eight years as the Kansas secretary of state. He said Kansas needs someone to defend state laws against the American Civil Liberties Union and defend constitutional rights from President Joe Biden’s administration.

“For example, if Joe Biden attempts to stop the drilling for oil in Kansas, based on bogus reasons, like prairie chicken populations, I will sue to stop him,” Kobach said. “My opponent, who contributed to Biden, will do nothing.”

Because Mann doesn’t have a record, Kobach said, Kansans don’t know where he really stands on issues or if he will keep his promises.

“I do have a record,” Kobach said. “And one thing that Republicans and Democrats agree about on me is that I do exactly what I say I’m going to do.”

Mann said Kobach won’t hesitate to follow through on a promise to slowly and quietly strip away constitutional protections for reproductive health care.

A former police officer and prosecutor, Mann emphasized his public service record. Mann said while he was busy arresting criminals or putting them away, Kobach was busy running for office.

“My entire life, I’ve done the hard work of keeping Kansans safe,” Mann said. “This is Kris Kobach’s eighth race for his seventh choice of office. This is my first choice for office after a career in public service.”

Mann attacked Kobach for his involvement with We Build the Wall. The organization solicited funds to build a wall along the Mexico border — and became the subject of a federal fraud investigation for how the money was used.

“I held the hands of victims who lost their life savings to scam artists and then prosecuted those scam artists for crimes like fraud and money laundering,” Mann said. “Kris Kobach? He served as lead attorney and board member for an organization indicted for those very same crimes. While I protected Kansans from fraud, he led an organization that was committing it.”

Kobach said he opposes “red flag laws,” which allow courts to grant police permission to confiscate guns from people they believe are dangerous.

Kobach also said he would oppose a ban on assault weapons, such as AR-style rifles.

“I believe that Americans have a right to protect themselves in the home, and to protect themselves when walking across that dark parking lot at night,” Kobach said. “And one of the ways for home defense that is proven effective and is very common … is the AR platform rifle. It is very effective for someone who is smaller stature or a woman to use in defending herself in that life-threatening situation.”

Mann said he is a gun-owning supporter of the Second Amendment. As a former police officer, Mann said, he understands the need to keep communities safe. Violent offenders should not have access to guns, Mann said.

He also said there is a need for more gun safety — and referenced the theft of Kobach’s guns in 2020 from a hotel parking lot in Wichita.

“My opponent could use some of those courses himself,” Mann said. “He left guns unsecured in his car in Wichita. They were stolen and could be in the hands of violent criminals right now.”

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/2022/10/26/kansas-ag-candidates-kris-kobach-chris-mann-make-pitch-to-voters-in-tv-debate/