Analysis: Tuesday’s election hinged on swing Republican voters

Window on the West


by Mary Rupert

Low voter turnout in Wyandotte County played a role in the general election Tuesday, but not as big of a role that it would have made much difference in the election’s outcome for the major races, according to political observers.

Tuesday’s big surprises to political observers were Gov. Sam Brownback’s re-election by 4 percentage points and Sen. Pat Roberts’ win by 10 percentage points, according to Patrick Miller, assistant professor of political science at the University of Kansas, Lawrence. Observers had thought that the governor’s contest would be close, and Gov. Sam Brownback won re-election in a fairly close contest.

Their re-election was more about how Republicans who said they were unhappy with Republican candidates actually voted than it was about the Democratic vote, Miller believes.

About 30 percent of Republicans told pollsters in advance they were not going to vote for Brownback or Roberts. But on Election Day, 15 percent of these voted for Greg Orman, the independent Senate candidate, and 20 percent voted for Paul Davis, the Democratic candidate for governor, Miller said. A third to a half of the Republicans who had said earlier they would defect from the party candidate actually voted for the party candidate, Miller said.

“Something happened to Republican voters at the last minute” to change their minds, he said.

He believes that first, Republicans had a good “get-out-the-vote” program. Davis and Orman did well in the early vote, and Democrats had the enthusiasm to vote early, but Davis and Orman did much worse on Election Day, he said. That points to a good GOP “get-out-the-vote” program.

It’s also possible that a lot were tempted to break away, and in the end came back to their party in an anti-Obama sentiment, he said. Pollsters know that these swing voters did not like Roberts and also did not like Obama, he added.

“Maybe in the end, they couldn’t actually bring themselves to vote against them,” Miller said.

‘The polls weren’t wrong’

Miller maintained that polling was accurate. “They were accurate in everything except in what percentage of Republicans would actually break away from their party. They were accurate on the independent and Democratic vote.”

Everything remained the same in the early and the exit polls – Obama approval, tax cuts, opinions about Roberts – except one thing, the percentage of Republicans breaking away from their party.

It’s easy to say the polls were wrong, he said, “but clearly something happened at the end.” That could be the “get-out-the-vote” effort, he added.

In the exit polls, after voters had cast ballots, they were asked if Roberts spent enough time in Kansas, and 63 percent responded no, the same as they had said all along, he said.

“It looks like a good chunk of voters do not like Brownback or Roberts’ policy, but held their noses and voted for them in the end, either because they were Republican, or they were sending Obama a message,” Miller said.

The downside for the Democrats is obviously that they lost, and the positive for them is that Brownback’s job approval now is about negative 20, he said. His disapproval rate is about 20 points higher than his approval, and he is the most unpopular governor to be re-elected in the United States in decades, according to Miller.

If Brownback continues to be unpopular, that can come back to bite the Republicans in two to four years, he said.

Republican leaders in Kansas have made statements after the election that do not recognize any discontent and have said they will stay the course. Miller views that as a danger for the Republicans, given the level of discontent shown in the polls.

For the Democrats, who lost, their challenge is to turn the loss and the unpopularity of the Republicans and tax cut plan to their advantage, to translate it into a win in two years in the state Legislature, he said.

It cuts both ways for the parties, and neither party should read too much into the election results, he added.

Election was ‘more about Obama’

“Kansas made history this year in the election process,” said Rep. Tom Burroughs, House assistant minority leader from the 33rd District in Wyandotte County. “We had quality candidates at the top of the ticket all the way down through the legislative races, and it motivated everyone’s base to get out and vote.”

“I believe that the Senate race and the governor’s race was really more about Obama than it was about the real issues and challenges facing Kansas,” Rep. Burroughs said. “I think the voters were saying that they’re hoping that gridlock will cease, that Washington will begin to work together, and that Kansas values do matter. I, like many, hope that this has sent a message, and the candidates have received a message that they are looking for solutions, they are looking for policies to provide jobs and opportunity. First, and foremost, we may be D’s and R’s, but we’re all Kansans.”

Rep. Burroughs noted that the governor’s race was very close. “Some will take that as a referendum in support of his policies, others will take it as a dissatisfaction with the administration,” he said. “It sends a signal to many of us that this state is heavily divided, and we shouldn’t be R’s and D’s, we should be Kansans first. We should all be very concerned over the next couple of years. We have a lot of challenges ahead of us. As the assistant leader of our caucus, we stand ready to work on those policies that will assist in moving Kansas forward. We stand ready to help craft policies that are mindful that all Kansans deserve quality education, deserve opportunity, and deserve to be respected.”

Kansas is a red state

“This is Kansas, and we’re considered a red state,” said Wyandotte County GOP chairman Mark Gilstrap.

There were a lot of different polls and comments during the campaign, but at the end of the day, the Republicans have an extremely large amount of voters in Kansas, he said.

“I don’t really pay a lot of attention to the polls,” Gilstrap said. He’s wondering if the polls got an accurate representation of the voters in this election.

While people thought the Republican Party was split, it appears to be a small group of disgruntled Republicans, Gilstrap said. At the end of the day, Johnson County, which is known for its support of public education, supported Brownback.

“If they’re upset with Sam Brownback, I’m sure they would have voted him out, but they endorsed him on election night,” Gilstrap said.

While the statewide offices are basically the same, in the state Legislature, Republicans picked up several seats in the House of Representatives, he said.

There was no change in the state representatives in Wyandotte County, although Republican Sue Adams came within about 150 votes of winning the 33rd District seat, which is represented by Rep. Burroughs, a Democrat. After redistricting, the 33rd District picked up more territory in the Edwardsville and Bonner Springs area, where there are a larger number of Republicans in the district than in the past.

Rep. Burroughs, who will be a candidate for House minority leader when the Democratic caucus meets Dec. 1, said that his opponent was successful in getting out the vote and being part of the base that was turned out by the governor’s race and the Roberts race. Voters re-elected Rep. Burroughs, 59, who was first elected in 1997 and has the reputation of being a consensus builder who can work in a bipartisan manner.

“I am absolutely honored and pleased to represent the 33rd District,” Rep. Burroughs said, ”to continue to do it in the manner I have in the past, respectfully and unselfishly. I want to thank my constituents in the 33rd District for again putting their trust, faith and support in my re-election.”

Wyandotte County’s low voter turnout

In Wyandotte County the big story was the low voter turnout, with everyone expecting a larger number of voters at the polls. Only about 35 percent of the registered voters here cast a ballot, compared to 40 percent in other recent midterm elections.

“It’s something that disappointed the Democrats yesterday [Tuesday] and the Republicans were happy to see,” Miller said. “Wyandotte voters were not as engaged as the rest of Kansas with the election.”

However, Miller said he does not think a large Wyandotte County turnout would have changed the outcome of the election at all, including the governor’s race, although it would have made it a lot closer.

With a lower income level than the rest of the state, a larger working class, more minority voters, and lower college education levels, he said, Wyandotte County fits into the profile of areas that have lower turnout.

Strong predictors of high voter turnout are white, wealthy and high levels of education – like Johnson County, which usually votes at a higher rate than the rest of the state, Miller said.

In Wyandotte County, there were enough Republican voters who turned out to make some of the contests interesting this year.

“The national races encouraged the base to get out in a manner that we haven’t seen in a while in Wyandotte County, and I compliment them on that,” Rep. Burroughs said.

“These were important elections all the way down the ticket,” Rep. Burroughs said. “Those that didn’t participate in this process shied away from their responsibilities. And those responsibilities are to ensure that your values, your comments and concerns, are validated through your vote or by being part of the process.”

Gilstrap said that although the election commissioner anticipated a 40 percent turnout in Wyandotte County, the same as the last midterm election, Gilstrap personally had predicted voter turnout here would be 38 percent. It was closer to 35 percent.

He said one of the reasons for a low turnout here was that it was a midterm election without a highly charismatic candidate such as Barack Obama on the ballot. Second, there was not a Democrat running for the U.S. Senate. Gilstrap said many Wyandotte County voters will go to the polls and vote Democratic, but with Orman running as an independent, it did not motivate them.

Even though the Democrats worked hard, no one in Wyandotte County really knew who Paul Davis was, Gilstrap said. Davis, the House minority leader, represented Lawrence, Kan., in the state House. Davis did visit Wyandotte County during the campaign, appearing, among other places, at a parade in the Quindaro area and at a local restaurant.

“I saw Sam Brownback in Wyandotte County much more than I saw Paul Davis in Wyandotte County,” Gilstrap said.

Looking at voter turnout, there were Republican candidates opposing Democratic state representatives on the west side of Wyandotte County, but not on the east side of Wyandotte County. Did the presence of opposition cause the local campaigners to work harder on the west side, where there was opposition, and also where there is a larger number of Republican and nonaffiliated voters, while they didn’t campaign as hard on the east side of the county?

While it is correct that candidates tend to work harder when they have an opponent, Gilstrap said that there was no plan or intention to file candidates on one side of town or the other. It just happened that way. At the local county level, they’re so small they’re just thankful if anybody at all wants to run for office, he said.

U.S. representative, 3rd District contest

Miller said the contest for U.S. representative, 3rd District, between incumbent Rep. Kevin Yoder, a Republican, and Kelly Kultala, a Democrat, was the closest House race in the state at 60 percent to 40 percent.

“Clearly Yoder succeeded in getting a lot of Davis and Orman supporters to support him. He did better than Brownback and Roberts in the district,” Miller said.

He pointed out that in House races nowadays, the base amount of money needed to be competitive is $1 million, and Kultala had only about $300,000 to spend. She did have some name recognition and had served in office before, which helped.

The two candidates did not debate or appear together at a forum, an indication that the incumbent may have felt fairly confident in his lead. At the end of the campaign, some negative mailers about Kultala were sent out, indicating someone may have been a little worried about Orman and Davis doing well in the 3rd District, he added.

Not particularly a high-profile Congressman, Yoder has put together an image that fits the district well, he said. Given the right circumstances, he could be vulnerable. His biggest challenge is the primary where some Republicans may not perceive him as conservative enough, he said.

It was a status quo election, where mostly incumbents won, some of whom are unpopular and have unpopular policies. If the winners don’t work on that, it could come back in a few years to haunt them, Miller said.

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].

Opinion: Eight tips to get through the negative campaign season

Window on the West

by Mary Rupert

More than a decade ago, a resident walked into a Kansas City, Kan., newsroom and complained, “Why is all the news so negative?”

The editor at the time disagreed with the statement. The news is not all negative, he told him. He took the latest copy of the newspaper and a ruler, and measured the news columns in the paper. As it turned out, there was more positive than negative news on the front page, as shown by the number of column inches allotted to each story. The same was true for the rest of the paper, as well.

The reader had only been looking at the negative headlines, not the positive stories about another resident who won an award, or about some new program being launched that would help the community. Clearly, the news was not all negative. But the reader was drawn to the negative news, leading him to think it was all negative.

Currently, we are in the last seven days before the Nov. 4 election, and it has been, in my opinion, a very negative campaign especially with negative direct mail and television ads. The negative campaigning has been commented upon widely by many persons in both public and private conversations. Just like the reader’s complaint about negative news, negative advertising is also one of perception, with a lot of positive messages not getting too much of our attention. People say they hate the negative ads, but those ads get their attention.

Let’s take a look at these issues covered by the negative ads. The negative ads make it seem like it’s terrible, but is it? They haven’t unearthed very much new information, nor very much valuable information. They’re all pretty lame. Some of them are from outside groups that often are not even in Kansas. They point out:

• According to negative ads, the incumbent Republican governor’s economic policies have failed, and his campaign finance has ties to very conservative donors. Tell us something we didn’t already know.

• One negative ad pounding the airwaves says that the Democratic candidate for governor as a young single man once went to a strip club, at his employer’s request while working as an attorney for the club, where there was a topless dancer. So what?

• Another attack ad on the Democratic candidate for governor tries to link him to decisions of the Kansas Supreme Court, when he was not part of the decisions for those cases. While it calls their decisions liberal, in my opinion, in looking at many, many case summary opinions involving Wyandotte County cases for the past few years, the Supreme Court most of the time has upheld the convictions from here and has been pretty tough. The ad is misleading.

• The incumbent U.S. representative, 3rd District, a Republican, went skinny-dipping in 2011 in the Sea of Galilee, a negative ad points out. Big deal.

• A campaign postcard shows a lot of bad photos of the Democratic candidate for the U.S. representative, 3rd District position, along with saying she voted for tax increases, included in the state budget, while she was in the state Legislature. That ad tells me they couldn’t find anything negative about her.

• One negative ad points out that the incumbent U.S. senator is old and is mostly in Washington, D.C. Besides being age discrimination, gee, what did you expect?

• The independent U.S. Senate candidate, according to a negative ad, is really like a Democrat and is not as conservative as the Republican candidate. It tries to link him to Obama. Like most people in Wyandotte County, I would ask, what’s wrong with that? Obama may have received only 38 percent of the vote in Kansas in 2012, but he received 67 percent of the vote in Wyandotte County. Hmmm, only time will tell what the independent candidate will do, but that Democrat label will appeal to a lot of people in Wyandotte County.

I would advise voters not to consider any of the negative ads. Instead, find the candidates’ positions on issues that are important to you. Then try to match your views on your important issues with those of the candidate’s. Forget any of the personal ad hominem attacks – they don’t matter at all. None of this stuff in the attack ads is enough reason to vote against someone.

What the negative ads really say to me is that the candidate is behind in some of the polls and has been advised to go negative to try to catch up to the other candidate.

The bombardment of negative campaign ads these last few weeks also has inspired me to think of some ways for you to deal with it.

Here are some tips for getting through the negative campaign season:

1. Boots and raincoats went on sale at some stores this past week. Gear up for the mudslinging.

2. The television set has an off switch. Use it. Look into starting your own online webcasts on your own website where you don’t allow negative ads.

3. Temporarily tape or DVR your favorite program, then watch it later, fast-forwarding through the ads.

4. Watch only Channel 19 or old movie channels that have no ads until after the election.

5. File the campaign mailers away immediately in your wastebasket.

6. Go out and meet the candidates in person when they come to Wyandotte County.

7. Check candidates’ websites or social media sites for a response to negative ads. Don’t accept the negative ads at face value. Don’t let them sell you the candidates like they sell a bar of soap.

8. Some candidates may be hoping that you get so tired of the negativity that you will stay home and not vote. Don’t let that happen. Remember, this election needs the votes of everyone, not just a few fanatics, to determine the future of the state and nation.


To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].

Analysis: Top Republicans in trouble in Kansas this election

Window on the West
by Mary Rupert

Voters may be tired of the barrage of negative campaign ads in Kansas, but it’s not likely that they will stop before the election, according to one knowledgeable observer.

As polls showed two key Republicans in the state were trailing in several polls, negative ads have been filling the Kansas airwaves.

Patrick Miller, assistant professor of political science at the University of Kansas, said other than two Republicans at the top of the ticket in Kansas being in trouble in the polls, there’s not a lot of unifying themes in the elections this year.

Looking at the averages of the polls, Miller said for the most part they are showing Democratic challenger Paul Davis leading Republican Gov. Sam Brownback by four to five points, while independent candidate Greg Orman is leading Republican Sen. Pat Roberts six to seven points. While there are some polls that show different results, Miller said he had some questions about some of those polls’ methodology. Recently, a CNN poll and a Fox news poll showed different results — closer races for the candidates.

The reasons for the two incumbents trailing are different, Miller said.

Governor’s race

Miller noted that there had been fairly regular polling on Brownback’s approval rating over time, and the first time he went into the negative job approval territory was November of 2011. “He’s been in negative territory ever since,” Miller said.

“He’s the fourth most unpopular governor in the country right now,” Miller said. “For Brownback to be polling this low is remarkable.”

Miller said he thinks what has been reflected in these polls is a public reaction to Brownback’s policies, particularly the tax issue and what happened to state revenues as a result of it. Also important were education spending and the debate about it. There was uncertainty in Kansas about job prospects and the quality of life, as well, he said.

The education issue has been interesting, with both candidates making contradictory claims. They are both accurate and telling the truth, Miller said, it’s just how they cut the numbers.

Davis has been focusing on looking at the cuts of state aid to classrooms. He said Brownback’s administration had the largest cut in state aid to classrooms in the state history. That is true, Miller said.

Brownback has come back and said he’s spending more on education than ever. That’s also true, Miller said. Brownback’s numbers include everything from new furniture for schools to interest paid for capital construction of schools. Including everything, education spending has gone up, he said.

“That’s something that may be confusing to voters,” he added. “Voters have heard a lot about education cuts.”

Voters already associate education cuts with Brownback, he said. This is an area where mainstream and centrist Republicans do not agree with more conservative elements of the Republican Party. “Good public schools are something they want to be associated with,” he said.

In the past few decades, the two parties have become more polarized, and those elected have tended to become more ideological as time goes on, he added.

“A year ago this had a potential to be a competitive race,” Miller said. “So it’s not surprising that he’s in a tough re-election. I think the story here is he’s overreached in terms of his policies, and I think that resonates if you look in election polling. About Kansas, we’re more a Republican than we are a conservative state. Kansas Republicans are more ideologically diverse than Republicans nationally.”

A negative ad about a strip club incident from 1998 came out about Davis this past month, but it has not dented Davis’s numbers, Miller believes. He added he could not see where that story and ad had hurt Davis. While some independent voters liked Davis less, it had not changed their vote intentions, as only about a 1 percent change could be seen in the polls, he added.

“This election isn’t about Paul Davis, this election is about Brownback,” Miller said. Polls are showing the public doesn’t like Brownback and the job he’s doing, he said. The polls show Kansans disapprove of the job Obama is doing more than Brownback, but they like Obama more than Brownback, he added.

“He’s a known quality that the public has passed a judgment on, and there are enough in the middle who are looking for an alternative and have made up their minds they don’t want to send him back to the governor’s mansion,” he said.

If re-elected, Brownback will most likely continue with his policies on taxation and education, Miller said. If Davis is elected, the big question will be the Legislature, Miller said, as Republicans hold super majorities in the Legislature. Individual legislators, for example, in Johnson County would face the question of what message were the voters sending? If enough Republicans backtrack on Brownback’s policies, Davis may be able to make policy changes. If not, they may just stonewall Davis for four years. Individual legislators would have to determine whether they would be at risk of being on the chopping block next.

The independent and centrist voters whose votes may sway, don’t like the incumbents, such as Obama and Brownback, and they don’t like politics this year, Miller noted. They’re looking for something new.

“Brownback has the hard-core conservative base, and ironically so does Roberts, even though he had the Tea Party challenge,” Miller said. “The middle has abandoned Brownback and Roberts and are looking for alternatives.”

While Brownback’s problem is ideological, and has to do with his conservative governing, Roberts’ problems are probably not ideological, Miller said.

U.S. Senate seat

“Roberts’ problem is his personal brand, there’s a sentiment that he’s out of touch,” Miller said.

In a governor’s race poll in October 2013, when everyone knew that Brownback was in trouble, 41 percent of Kansans had no opinion on Roberts’ job approval, Miller said.

“For a freshman senator new to D.C. that would be remarkable,” Miller said. “For Roberts, in office since 1996, that is just remarkable.”

Current polls show that the number who don’t have an opinion about Roberts is down to 20 percent, and job approval ratings have gone from net positive to net negative, he said. The disapproval rate is 17 points higher than the approval rate.

“If Roberts wins this election, he will be the most unpopular senator in the last three cycles to actually win a race,” Miller said, adding that was a reference to the entire Senate.

“Roberts’ issue is his personal brand,” Miller said. Whatever he has done for Kansas, voters are not seeing it. There’s an issue with voters’ perception that he doesn’t live in Kansas, an issue that came up in the primary election concerning his primary address, a rental property in Dodge City.

Miller also believes that when the Roberts campaign rested for about a month after the primary, it gave an opening to the Orman campaign to move forward. It’s Miller’s opinion that Democrat Chad Taylor, who dropped out of the race, didn’t have much money, and was hoping that primary challenger Milton Wolf would win against Roberts.

Orman was doing better in the polls, and also had more campaign funding available. Orman has exploited the weaknesses in the incumbent’s campaign, Miller believes.

“His image resonated with dissatisfied voters in Kansas, who are also dissatisfied with Brownback,” Miller said. “They don’t like incumbents, and don’t like Roberts.”

Over a half-million dollars in negative ads attacking Orman and portraying him as a liberal Democrat haven’t moved the polls, Miller said.

“For me, the bottom line is undecideds don’t like either of the incumbents and they are in demographic groups leaning to Davis and Orman right now,” Miller said.

At this point, Miller said he doesn’t know of any issues for either candidate that could change this. He believes the strongest negative issues have already been brought forth in advertising, the strip club attack ad and the closet Democrat attack ad.

Usually, 90 percent of a party’s members vote for their party’s candidate. In this election, according to current polls, both Davis and Orman are getting 30 percent of the Republican vote, he said.

Campaign finance reports in the Roberts-Orman race indicate that a half-million has been spent by outside Republican groups to attack Orman since the primary ended, and about $1 million to support Roberts. Orman probably will not get much outside funding, so the question is whether Orman will start self-funding, Miller said.

“If voters have made up their minds, a lot of outside spending is not going to get them to change their minds,” Miller believes. He does expect negative advertising to continue until the election.

U.S. House, 3rd District
Voter dissatisfaction with two top Republicans may not have spread to the 3rd District race.

Miller said the contest for the U.S. House, 3rd District, between incumbent Republican Rep. Kevin Yoder and Democrat Kelly Kultala is more difficult to get a clear picture of since there has not been that much independent polling. Most of the polls are from the candidates themselves.

“Kelly Kultala had a series of polls showing her getting closer to Yoder, who had an 8-point lead in July in one of her polls,” Miller said. He added he always wants to see candidate polls supplemented with outside polling, and he has not seen any outside polling for the 3rd District.

Kultala has made some waves with her attack ad on Yoder, he said. The negative ad pictured a swimming pool and made a reference to a skinny-dipping incident in Yoder’s past, while discussing how funds have been stripped from certain programs.

Miller said this 3rd District contest is a question mark for him. He hasn’t seen a lot coming from Yoder in ads, which may mean the incumbent thinks he’s secure and might not take risks.