Attorney general to appeal redistricting decision

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt will appeal the decision earlier today that the Kansas congressional redistricting map that splits Wyandotte County in two is unconstitutional.

Schmidt will appeal the decision to the Kansas Supreme Court, according to a news release from the attorney general.

“Today’s Wyandotte County District Court decision may be the first redistricting case ever to make use of folk-song lyrics, the Buddha, and personal memories from the judge’s childhood. The state is promptly appealing,” Schmidt said in a statement.

In his decision, Judge Bill Klapper wrote that, “Perhaps it is first important to discover why the Kansas Courts are asked to enter this arena. We live in a time where advancing one point of view is more important than creating a functioning government that serves all its citizens. Truth has become amorphous to be shaped according to the speaker’s perspective. Science has become more dependent upon who is supporting the research than on scientific method.”

The judge also wrote, “How strong are Kansans? Strong enough to expect nothing more than a level playing field devoid of partisan advantage for one group of Kansans. Strong enough for the merits of the issue to be the deciding factor. Strong enough to make their political decisions based upon the content of a candidate’s character rather than the color of their political party.

“This court suggests most Kansans would be appalled to know how the contest has been artificially engineered to give one segment of the political apparatus an unfair and unearned advantage,” Judge Klapper wrote.

The judge’s decision is online at https://www.wycodistrictcourt.org/_files/ugd/f80b58_4e421c97418a48a5bc2a9fccf6ef2be1.pdf.

Kansas attorney general files bill banning sanctuary cities, issuance of IDs

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Attorney General Derek Schmidt introduced legislation in the Kansas House to create a state law blocking local municipal governments from adopting rules against cooperation with federal law enforcement investigating illegal immigrants.

Schmidt’s legislative push followed action in early February by the Unified Government of Kansas City-Wyandotte County to authorize issuance of photograph identification cards to undocumented people to improve access to public services. The Safe and Welcoming City Act was structured so the ID information wouldn’t be shared with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The attorney general, who is a Republican candidate for governor, said the House bill would prevent cities, counties and other taxing subdivisions from giving rise to formation of a “sanctuary” jurisdiction.

“Citizens throughout our state deserve to know that wherever they may travel in Kansas, law enforcement officials are cooperating with federal and state agencies to fairly enforce applicable law and are not obliged to turn a blind eye to some unlawful conduct merely because of local politics,” Schmidt said.

Schmidt said a statewide response was necessary due to failure by the administration of President Joe Biden to “secure our nation’s southwest border.”

“This is an important law-and-order issue throughout our state, not merely a matter for local preference,” the attorney general said.

Under House Bill 2717, local units of government couldn’t adopt an “ordinance, resolution, rule or policy” that would interfere with law enforcement cooperation in immigration enforcement actions. In Wyandotte County, law enforcement officials said they hadn’t joined ICE agents on immigration raids for years.

The measure endorsed by Schmidt also would forbid municipal governments from issuing ID cards to people not lawfully residing in the United States that were designed to satisfy identification requirements set in state law. Any cards of this type would have to bear the words “Not valid for state ID.” Violation of the proposed statute would be considered ID fraud under state criminal law.

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