Democrats want to face Kobach in Senate race, but a GOP group is spending millions to stop him

Republican candidate for U.S. Senate Kris Kobach spoke at a debate earlier this year with rival Bob Hamilton looking on. (Photo by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service)

Competing super PACS are spending millions on ads for and against Kris Kobach and Roger Marshall ahead of the Aug. 4 Republican U.S. Senate primary.

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Topeka, Kansas — Kris Kobach, a lightning rod throughout his political career, finds himself at the center of a Republican primary battle for the U.S. Senate. That includes independent groups spending millions on ads for and against him.

One of those efforts comes from Democrats, who think a primary win for Kobach gives their party the best chance to take over the seat for the first time since the Great Depression. They’re boosting the former Kansas secretary of state as the race’s one true conservative while attacking his chief competitor, U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall, as a “phony” and a “fake.”

The gambit has Marshall, a retired doctor and two-term congressman from western Kansas, crying foul.

“Democrats think Kansas Republicans are stupid,” Marshall said in a guest editorial in Sunday’s Topeka Capital-Journal. “It’s a bunch of smug Washington elites thinking they can sneak one past you.”

It worked in 2012 when Democrats intervened in Missouri’s Republican U.S. Senate primary to help Todd Aiken. Running from the party’s right wing, Aiken won the nomination. But controversial statements about abortion cost him in the general election, which he lost to incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill.

“All the signs are there, it’s almost the same ad they ran for Todd Aiken in 2012,” said Eric Pahls, Marshall’s campaign manager.

The Sunflower State PAC, a recently formed group with ties to a Democratic media firm in Virginia, is orchestrating the anti-Marshall campaign. Its treasurer is the same Lawrence attorney who once served as treasurer of former Kansas Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius’ PAC, the Bluestem Fund.

Meanwhile, another new group with ties to U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is spearheading an ad offensive against Kobach. The Plains PAC is spending $3 million to convince Republican primary voters that Kobach’s loss to Democrat Laura Kelly in the 2018 governor’s race and “ties to toxic white nationalists” would make him a risky nominee.

The charge connecting Kobach to white nationalists stems from a 2019 story by the Kansas City Star, which reported that his gubernatorial campaign had paid $500 to Joe Suber, an Olathe man who had regularly posted on a white nationalist website.


A spokesman for Kobach said the campaign “immediately severed ties” with the independent contractor when the posts were discovered.

Both of the recently formed groups are super PACS that can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money. Federal election rules require them to disclose their donors, but that information often isn’t made public until after the elections in which the money is spent.

Still up for grabs

Kobach led the race early, but recent polls have Marshall ahead.

The proxy battles being waged by the competing PACS suggest that Kobach is still within striking distance of Marshall, said David Kensinger, a longtime Republican strategist who ran campaigns for former Kansas governor and U.S. senator Sam Brownback.

“With a fractured primary field, it’s mathematically possible for him (Kobach) to eke out the narrowest of pluralities as he did in 2018,” Kensinger said.

Kobach’s win over Gov. Jeff Colyer in 2018 was the narrowest in Republican gubernatorial primary history.

Eleven candidates are running for the GOP Senate nomination. But only four appear to have the money or visibility to be competitive.

Dave Lindstrom and Bob Hamilton are potential wild cards.

Lindstrom is a former player for the Kansas City Chiefs who served on the Johnson County Commission from 2003 to 2013.

Hamilton is the founder of a prosperous Kansas City area plumbing company who’s spending millions to bankroll his self-described “outsider” campaign.

In a television ad that’s airing frequently in the closing weeks of the campaign, Hamilton aligns himself with President Trump and says career politicians like Kobach and Marshall can’t help shake-up the establishment because “they are the establishment.”

Part of a bigger battle

More candidates are competing for the Republican nomination this year because incumbent U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts is retiring after nearly 40 years in Congress.

Roberts’ retirement, Trump’s sinking poll numbers and other factors are threatening the Republican majority in the U.S. Senate.

Democrats are hoping to take control by flipping GOP held seats in swing states like Colorado, Maine and Arizona.

If in addition to those races Republicans “start blowing states like Kansas, Alabama or South Carolina,” Kensinger said, “the math becomes almost impossible.”

Establishment Republicans have been lining up behind Marshall for months. Several groups with outsized influence in GOP circles are also backing him. They include the Kansas Farm Bureau, Kansans for Life and the U.S Chamber of Commerce.

The New York Times has reported that President Trump, who endorsed Kobach in 2018 bid for governor, is also now working behind the scenes to help Marshall.

Kensigner is among those who believe Marshall would give Republicans their best chance of holding the seat. He said Kobach’s loss in the governor’s race and his failed bid to upset Democratic then-U.S. Rep. Dennis Moore in 2004 provide “real-world evidence” that Kobach “could be the first Republican to lose a Senate race in Kansas in over 80 years.”

Kobach rejects that analysis, pointing to the two statewide races he won for secretary of state.

“There’s no doubt that I’ll be able to win in the general election,” he said. “But that’s the only argument they’ve got, so they keep saying it over and over again.”

The winner of the GOP primary will face presumptive Democratic nominee Barbara Bollier in the November general election.

Bollier is a state senator from Johnson County who left the Republican Party in 2018. Without a primary fight, she’s been busy raising money, raking in $3.7 million in contributions in the most recent reporting period. That’s the largest amount ever raised in a single quarter by a Kansas candidate for any office.

Jim McLean is the senior correspondent for 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. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks or email jim (at) kcur (dot) org.

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/news/2020-07-20/democrats-want-to-face-kobach-in-senate-race-but-a-gop-group-is-spending-millions-to-stop-him

Candidates for district attorney tell qualifications

Candidates for Wyandotte County District Attorney recently responded to a Wyandotte Daily election questionnaire.

The two Democratic candidates are incumbent District Attorney Mark A. Dupree Sr. and challenger Kristiane Bryant. No Republicans filed for the office.

The primary election is Tuesday, Aug. 4. Early in-person voting started today, Tuesday, July 21, at the Wyandotte County Election Office, 850 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Also, voting by mail is starting this week. For more details about voting dates, places and times, see https://wyandotteonline.com/youth-helping-out-with-elections-this-year/.

Previous stories about this year’s election are listed under the category “Election 2020” at https://wyandotteonline.com/category/election-2020/.

Wyandotte County District Attorney

Mark A. Dupree Sr. (Submitted photo)

Mark A. Dupree Sr.

Age: 38

Occupation and experience
• District Attorney of Wyandotte County

• Former Law Clerk, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Assistant Public Defender, Private Criminal Defense Attorney, GAL (Children’s Attorney)

Education
• Graduate of Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools
• KCKCC Alumni
• KU Alumni
• Washburn University School of Law Alumni

Organizations, clubs, groups to which you belong

• Appointed as a member of the Kansas Sentencing Commission
• Appointed as a member on the Kansas Commission on Racial Equity and Justice
• Board member of Sunflower House
• Member of the U.S. Department of Justice President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice: Re-Entry
• Member of The National Black Prosecutor’s Association
• Board Member of the National District Attorney’s Association
• Member of the Association of Prosecuting Attorneys
• Lifetime Member of NAACP
• Member of the Earl E. O’Conner Inn of Courts

Reasons for running


I am running for re-election as the Wyandotte County District Attorney because I was born and raised in Wyandotte County and I love this community. It matters to me that justice is administered fairly to everyone in Wyandotte regardless of zip code, last name, and/or political status. I am also a man of faith and purpose and have answered the call to serve my community as a public servant.

What are the three most important issues facing this elected office and how would you handle them?

Community Trust: Continue to build upon what we have done by being a part of the community. In most cases, the solution comes from those closest to the problem. We have to be engaged with the community. We have the Community Liaison Board, InterFaith Community Board, and our youth mentorship program called Brilliant Outstanding Leaders Determined to be the Difference.

Transparency and Accountability: Making sure the community is aware of how criminal justice works. It is supposed to serve and protect everyone. This is why we engage with the public through the media, social media, and various community events. The community should understand what is happening in the D.A.’s office. Accountability is making sure everyone is held responsible for their actions and we all live and abide by the same rules- this includes every single person in our beloved county.

Public Safety: Keeping the community safe is the major priority. The two previously mentioned issues of community trust, transparency, and accountability are all connected to public safety. We have increased our felony trial conviction rate by over 20%- we are filing the right charges and winning the cases. However, we are also providing opportunities for individuals to receive help through Drug Court, Behavioral Health Court, and the Mental Health Diversion Program. However, we cannot do it alone. We need the community to report crimes, testify to eye witness statements, and to serve as fair and impartial jurors. This is why community trust is the community trust is so important. If any of these needs are not met- pursuing justice and increasing public safety becomes even more difficult for our community.

If you are an incumbent, list your top accomplishments in office. If you are not an incumbent, what would you change if elected?


• Creation of the first-ever Conviction Integrity Unit in the state of Kansas. The only person who benefits from a wrongful conviction is the person who committed the crime. We want to ensure that our system does not victimize innocent individuals by taking their freedom away, as was done in the McIntyre case.

• Not only are we being proactive and engaging with our youth we are also winning cases and sending the knuckleheads away. We have increased the felony trial conviction rate by over 20% – when I took office it was at 60% now it is above 80% and this means we are correctly charging cases and working collaboratively with local law enforcement agencies.

• The youth mentorship program which gets our Assistant District Attorneys in the classroom connecting with students and bringing them to the office to shadow Assistant District Attorneys. This encourages them to become involved in the criminal justice system in the right way.


Have you run for elected office previously? When, results?

• Yes, 2016 I ran for Wyandotte County District Attorney and won.

Kristiane Bryant (Submitted photo)

Kristiane Bryant

Age: 42

Occupation and experience

I have been a prosecuting attorney for 15 years. I served for over seven years in the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office. As an Assistant District Attorney, I prosecuted sexual assault, child abuse, robbery, battery and other felony cases as well as child in need of care and truancy cases. Prior to my departure from the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office in 2016, I served as a Deputy District Attorney specializing in homicide cases.


I spent over three years with the Criminal Litigation Unit of the Office of the Attorney General in Kansas where I practiced throughout the state of Kansas handling homicide, child sexual abuse and public corruption cases. During my time with the Attorney General’s Office, I also served as the Section Leader of the Sexually Violent Predator Prosecution Unit, where I coordinated a team of prosecutors from various jurisdictions across the state.


I currently serve as the Trial Team Leader for the Violent Crimes Unit of the Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office where I manage attorneys and staff and prosecute homicide, robbery and assault cases.


I have served as an instructor for the Intensive Trial Advocacy Program at Washburn University School of Law for eight years. I have provided training to prosecutors, law enforcement and firefighters across the State of Kansas during the course of my career. I also previously served as the Chairperson of the Kansas State Child Death Review Board and as an instructor for the Kansas Academy of Victim Assistance.

Education

  • Bachelor of Science Business Administration – University of Kansas
  • Juris Doctor – University of Kansas

Organizations, clubs, groups to which you belong

  • Board Member – Kiwanis Club of Kansas City, Kansas – West
  • Board Member – Grinter House Friends, Inc.
  • President-Elect – Lancaster-Melton Peacekeepers Civitan Club

Reasons for running

I am running for Wyandotte County District Attorney because the safety of our community is my highest priority. The prosecution of criminal cases is an incredibly important and complex piece of the justice system which requires experience and competence to ensure that the rights of Wyandotte County citizens are not compromised by the way cases are handled.


My husband and I are raising our three daughters here in Wyandotte County and I firmly believe that every member of our community deserves to be safe. Safety means we should be free from violence when we carry on day to day activities. Safety also means that residents should not live in fear of falling victim to the legal system. We need to move forward as a county to drive down violent crime and make procedural and policy changes to make the justice system in Wyandotte County more fair and consistent for everyone. The experience level of the District Attorney and professionalism in how cases are handled directly impacts everyone who comes into contact with the criminal justice system.

What are the three most important issues facing this elected office and how would you handle them?

Reducing violent crime
We are experiencing a dramatic increase in violent crime with the homicides up over 180% since last year. Meanwhile, the number of jury trials handled by the District Attorney’s Office is down over 50%. More repeat violent criminals are being given low plea offers to resolve the case and get a statistic. There is also mistrust in our community regarding how violent crimes handled.
I will advocate for a community led crime reduction strategy focused on targeting violent crime and building community relationships. True crime reduction starts with community engagement by bringing community members together with community leaders, prosecutors, law enforcement, service providers, educators, businesses and other stakeholders focus on reducing violent crime while building community wealth and partnerships in order to move forward together.
I would also ensure that prosecutors receive training in trial skills and appropriate case management to ensure that the complex litigation required to successfully prosecute violent crimes is handled appropriately.

Reforming current practices to ensure fairness and consistency
The outcome of a case should be fair and should not depend on the prosecutor assigned or how much money someone has to retain an attorney. I will set policies that require consistent treatment of similarly situated individuals to ensure that everyone who comes in contact with the criminal justice system in Wyandotte County is treated fairly. Ensuring the integrity of a conviction starts with fair and consistent charging decisions. Consistency in plea offers and consistency in case resolutions for individuals charged with crimes ensures fairness result in equitable outcomes. The current practice of charging cases that cannot be proven at trial and then offering absurdly low plea offers to make the case a statistic needs to end.
I will ensure that crime victims are treated with respect and compassion. Fair treatment of victims is essential to build and maintain trust within the community. Crime victims have a right to be informed from the beginning, what to expect of the criminal justice system and they should be notified of hearings of outcomes before they happen. No one deserves to find out a case has been charged or resolved through the media.

Efficiency and transparency in case review and outcomes
All cases should be handled efficiently and the results of charging decisions and case outcomes should be available to the public. I will ensure that victims of crime do not have to wait for months for charging decisions and that they are notified of decisions and case outcomes. I will ensure that allegations of misconduct by individuals in positions of trust will be reviewed in a timely manner and that the community will be made aware of the results.

If you are an incumbent, list your top accomplishments in office. If you are not an incumbent, what would you change if elected?

I will change office policy to work toward fair and consistent outcomes for similarly situated individuals.
I will ensure that victims of crime and their families receive an appropriate, respectful and timely response when they contact the District Attorney’s Office and make sure their rights are protected through the court process.
I will work to make sure that violent crimes cases are prosecuted diligently to reduce violent crime.

Have you run for elected office previously? When, results?
I have not run for office previously.

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/