Daily Kos

Tag: Kansas

Kansas City reporter discovers McCain's double-talk, temper

Sun Aug 17, 2008 at 10:18:02 AM PDT

In the five years I lived in Kansas City, I never thought much of Steve Kraske, the chief political columnist for the Kansas City Star.  He definitely appears to me to have Republican/conservative leanings, and he rarely writes anything that is terribly insightful or original.  But Kraske has his moments, and one such moment occurred today.  In his Sunday column, entitled  "McCain meanders on Social Security," Kraske describes his recent first-hand experience with McCain's double-talk, confusion, evasion of tough questions and, yes, his temper.  Let's just say that Kraske was left less than impressed with McSame.

KS-Sen: Would you like a monument named for yourself?

Wed Aug 13, 2008 at 03:12:34 PM PDT

There has been a lot of chatter in Washington over how earmarks have muddied the process.  Legislators put in requests for millions of dollars and there is no debate, accountability or transparency.  Well it is time to expose those legislators like Pat Roberts and Ted Stevens for all the money - - that would be all of your money they have wasted on pet projects.

Here is a diary that is cross-posted over at the Slattery blog, a Blog for Kansas.  The campaign has come up with a creative way to address the out of control earmark system in Washington and the members of Congress slip them into bills only to later have landmarks named for themselves.  

Do you have a camera?  You will want to get the batteries charged if you do.

Here is the post that went out as an email today from Slattery's campaign manager, Julie Merz.

Next Obama ad - What's Wrong in KANSAS - job loss!!!

Mon Aug 11, 2008 at 01:58:48 PM PDT

The last three local Obama ads - DHL in Ohio, "Backyard" in Nevada, and his "Harleys" ad in Wisconsin have been outstanding.  They have focused on important local issues in swing states and have used McCain's actions and words to highlight his flip flopping, lobbyist controlled actions.

For the next ad, I hope Team Obama will take a close look at McCain's role in sending the largest government contract in US history overseas.

KS-Sen: Al Gore's Letter for Slattery

Fri Aug 08, 2008 at 10:28:35 AM PDT

Earlier this week, fmr. Vice President and chapion of fighting climate change Al Gore sent a letter out in support of Jim Slattery.  I wanted to share that with you here:

Dear Friend,
This year's election is one of the most important in our country's history, and I am proud to support my great friend Jim Slattery's campaign in Kansas.
There is no more important agenda than electing men and women to the Senate who will help solve the climate crisis. I believe Jim Slattery is such a candidate. He has taken a strong position on the urgency to limit carbon emissions, and on advancing renewable energy like wind, where Kansas can make an enormous contribution toward the goal of replacing dwindling supplies of fossil fuels.

Jim’s credentials for the job are impressive:

Gov. Kathleen Sebelius for VP.: She'd put Obama over the top.

Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 04:06:41 PM PDT

Gov. Sebelius was in serious consideration in 2004 and I think she is in serious consideration now; but there has developed this meme that if Hillary Clinton is not the VP nominee then women in the party will revolt if any woman is named.

This is ridiculous and the new polling by Lifetime and TIME illustrate the fallacies.

Women want women to shatter the glass ceiling: there has yet to be a successful VP nominee who is a female. That can change this year. That would mean if Obama wins and God willing wins again in 2012 the front runner to be the nominee in 2016 would be a woman.

The opportunities are tremendous and the excitement and heat it would generate for the democratic party astounding: which is why I think Kathleen Sebellius should be this party's VP nominee.

Pro-Choice GOP Win, Kline Defeat Signal End of Social Conservatism

Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 06:50:00 AM PDT

Kansans resoundingly reject social conservative Phill Kline, again, and give a narrow victory to Pro-Choice Republican Lynn Jenkins over former far-right Congressman Jim Ryun. These two elections in formerly Red and still conservative Kansas may signal end times for social conservative dominance of the GOP.

By Scott Swenson, RH Reality Check

Primary Day Results: Georgia, Missouri, Kansas, Michigan

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 09:05:10 PM PDT

The Senate race in Georgia, once left for dead, just got a lot more interesting, as former state Rep. Jim Martin has won the Democratic primary runoff against DeKalb County CEO Vernon Jones.

DSCC Chairman Chuck Schumer on Martin's victory:

“Georgians chose an impressive candidate today who has the experience and vision to change the direction of our nation. As a public servant under both a Democratic and a Republican Governor, Jim has a proven record of working across party lines, and he will be an effective and independent voice for Georgia families. This is a winnable race.”

With 97% of districts reporting, Martin leads 60% to 40%. That's a commanding victory which should inspire confidence in Martin's candidacy for the general election, in which he faces a tough but viable battle against incumbent Senator Saxby Chambliss. Martin is a candidate we can be proud of as progressives and Democrats, and he will be a serious and legitimate challenger to the senior Senator.

In Missouri:  The Republican nomination for Governor of Missouri has gone to U.S. Rep. Kenny Hulshof, who will face off against the favorite, Missouri's Democratic Attorney General Jay Nixon, in the general election.

Meanwhile, in Hulshof's old district, Blaine Luetkemeyer haswon the Republican nomination for MO-09, edging out state Rep. Bob Onder.

If you're curious, Brock Olivo finished a distant fourth, with 10% of the vote.

On the Democratic side, the AP has not called the race, but with 90% of the vote in, state Rep. Judy Baker has a 9-point lead over former Missouri House Speaker Steve Gaw, 42% to 33%. It will be extremely difficult for Gaw to win this race. If Baker is the candidate, it should prove to be an exciting and high-profile race between herself and Luetkemeyer.

In Kansas, the big news is that Phill Kline has lost his race:

Steve Howe defeated incumbent Phill Kline Tuesday night for the Republican nomination for district attorney in Johnson County, Kansas.

Howe collected 60 percent of the vote to Kline's 40 percent, according to complete but unofficial returns. He'll face Democrat Rick Guinn in November.

About 22.5 percent of registered voters turned out in Johnson County, the election office reported.

Kline made his reputation seeking to prosecute abortion providers in Kansas as the state's attorney general. He lost his bid for re-election in 2006 after the Kansas Supreme Court overturned his subpoenas for abortion records.

In the U.S. House race in the Second District, where former Rep Jim Ryun faces off against State Treasurer Lynn Jenkins for the right to do battle with Democratic Rep. Nancy Boyda, the race is too close to call. Jenkins leads by 2% with 93% of precincts reporting, but the AP has yet to call the race.

Finally, in Michigan, more of the same in Michigan's 13th District. Rep Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick faced the toughest challenge of her life, and leads state Rep. Mary Waters by just over a hundred votes at this juncture. It should remain too close to call until the morning.

Ding Dong the Witch is Dead - Phill Kline Loses Primary

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 08:27:34 PM PDT

Wonderful news from the Heartland tonight.  Our long nightmare is over.  Phill Kline, who was defeated in his bid for reelection as the Kansas Attorney General in 2006 and then appointed as Johnson County District Attorney (the position held by his opponent who switched from R to D to run against him, and who subsequently resigned as AG following a sex scandal), has lost his primary bid for reelection as DA.  Kline has spent six years on a witch hunt digging through abortion clinic medical records looking for some grounds to prosecute doctors.  Grand juries and judges have foiled his plan at every turn, and now the people have returned their verdict!  

Missouri and Kansas Primary Day

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 12:35:26 PM PDT

These aren't the highest-profile races on the national radar, but as Scout Finch wrote yesterday, there are some critical primary races in Missouri and Kansas which will be decided this evening.

We'll have the results once the races are decided tonight.

The biggest of the races is the Republican primary for Governor of Missouri, a two-person race between U.S. Rep Kenny Hulshof and State Treasurer Sarah Steelman.

The presumptive Democratic nominee is Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon, who has consistently led both Hulshof and Steelman in independent polling.

Hulshof has had the edge over Steelman so far in the primary race, despite Steelman's statewide profile. The last SurveyUSA poll showed him leading Steelman, 45% to 33%.

The other key races in Missouri are the primary battles for the open seats left by Hulshof, Steelman and Nixon.

For Hulshof's House seat, there is a celebrated Republican battle between frontrunners Bob Onder and Blaine Luetkemeyer, and fellow Republicans Danie Moore and my main man Brock Olivo.

Onder is backed by the Club for Growth; he and Luetkemeyer have had an ugly primary so far, and it's the fervent hope of some Democrats that they could split the vote to the extent that Olivo or Moore could sneak in and win the nomination. This is highly unlikely, but would make for high comedy.

On the Democratic side, there are four serious candidates, as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch noted (as opposed to no quality candidatess on the GOP side). The frontrunners are Rep. Judy Baker and former State House Speaker Steve Gaw.

Jay Nixon's job as Attorney General, meanwhile, is contested by three Democrats; state Reps. Margaret Donnelly and Jeff Harris, and State Senator (and former Republican) Chris Koster.  From the Post-Dispatch:

Harris and Donnelly have spent much of their campaign questioning the Democratic credentials of Koster, a state senator from Raymore, who switched parties about this time last year.

Koster, meanwhile, has raised more money than the other two and produced slick television ads pushing his experience as a prosecutor.

Meanwhile, four Democrats square off in the State Treasurer's race, for the right to do battle with the awesomely named GOP state Rep. Brad Lager.

Finally, over in Kansas, there's a high-profile Republican race today for Johnson County District Attorney, where Steve Howe faces off against the one and only Phill Kline.

Of Kline, no one puts it better than Scout Finch:

Phill Kline.  Intolerant, wingnut, asshat extraordinaire in Johnson County, Kansas. The same Phill Kline that had been harassing women's clinics in Kansas and was defeated in the 2006 election for Kansas Attorney General. After his crushing defeat, the Kansas GOP stubbornly appointed him to the recently vacated Johnson County District Attorney position.  At the time, he promised that he would not seek re-election. Being the honorable man that he is, he recently filed for......re-election. He now faces Steve Howe in a Republican primary. Incidentally, Steve Howe and the rest of the experienced attorneys in the DA's office were unceremoniously fired, without cause, on Phill Kline's first day in office.

SurveyUSA's polling indicates that Steve Howe rates a slight edge in the race, leading Kline 52% to 44%. Here's hoping they've nailed this one. For anyone, even another Republican, has got to be better than Phill Kline, as Scout wrote:

On the way to breakfast Sunday morning, I passed a hand made yard sign that read "Please God --- Anybody but Kline."  Amen, neighbor....Amen.

It's not necessarily customary for us to watch Republican primaries in local races, but for Kline, we will make a special exception.

We'll post the results from all these races, once they are in.

I declared myself a Republican today! (with poll)

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 11:36:36 AM PDT

It was like a knife in my heart!  For the first time in my adult life, I had to declare myself a Republican to vote in the Kansas primary.  For the next 24 hours I will have to live with myself.  

I apologize for the short diary, but a shower is in order to wash off the stink.  Let me explain after the jump.

Poll

Am I doomed forever?

19%58 votes
28%87 votes
9%28 votes
42%130 votes

| 303 votes | Vote | Results

Impressing netroots activities (John Pattersson Kansas)

Sat Jul 26, 2008 at 07:48:58 AM PDT

What you can do with small assets, a creative mind and a stubborn will to win.

Yes I was a bit impressed by Obama's speech in Berlin but the expectations were also high. When everage Joe do something creative without tons of money just a stubborn will and a creative mind that might impress me even more. For example this guy, John Pattersson that is fighting the odds for Obama in Kansas:

click the link to see the video

http://link.brightcove.com/...

Poll

Is Obama's campaign more creative then Dean's?

62%5 votes
12%1 votes
25%2 votes

| 8 votes | Vote | Results

KS-Sen: "Young" spot for Slattery

Thu Jul 24, 2008 at 10:23:00 AM PDT

The Slattery for Senate campaign is up with another spot on T.V.  "Young" began airing this week as well across Kansas and its a lot of fun with the flipping cube.

KS-Sen: Slattery Up with "Apollo"

Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 05:02:28 PM PDT

I am a little late to the game with posting this, but I wanted to make sure everyone caught Jim Slattery's new ad that he went up with today called "Apollo."

Bitter

Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 11:00:12 AM PDT

Thomas Frank in What's the Matter with Kansas:

Not long ago, Kansas would have responded to the current situation by making the bastards pay. This would have been a political certainty, as predictable as what happens when you touch a match to a puddle of gasoline. When business screwed the farmers and the workers - when it implemented monopoly strategies invasive beyond the Populists' furthest imaginings -- when it ripped off shareholders and casually tossed thousands out of work -- you could be damned sure about what would follow.

Not these days. Out here the gravity of discontent pulls in only one direction: to the right, to the right, further to the right. Strip today's Kansans of their job security, and they head out to become registered Republicans. Push them off their land, and next thing you know they're protesting in front of abortion clinics. Squander their life savings on manicures for the CEO, and there's a good chance they'll join the John Birch Society. But ask them about the remedies their ancestors proposed (unions, antitrust, public ownership), and you might as well be referring to the days when knighthood was in flower.

Why? Because Republicans have convinced people that government can't make a difference in their lives, can't solve their intractable problems, hence the only thing that matters are divisive social issues. The demands that government be ineffective has been a planned hallmark of the Bush administration. You don't put a horse lawyer in charge of FEMA if you expect the agency to actually be effective in its mission. So as far as conservative ideology was concerned, Katrina was a resounding success.

This ineffectiveness is centerpiece in conservative self-preservation. If government becomes more effective and works for people, then it could prove devastating to conservatives. William Kristol wrote a now-famous memo as conservatives geared up to fight Hillary Clinton's universal healthcare efforts in 1993:

Leading conservative operative William Kristol privately circulates a strategy document to Republicans in Congress. Kristol writes that congressional Republicans should work to "kill" — not amend — the Clinton plan because it presents a real danger to the Republican future: Its passage will give the Democrats a lock on the crucial middle-class vote and revive the reputation of the party.

And just last year, National Review writers Ramesh Ponnuru and Richard Lowry echoed those sentiments:

[2008 Republican defeats] would probably also mean a national health-insurance program that would irrevocably expand government involvement in the economy and American life, and itself make voters less likely to turn toward conservatism in the future.

Down in Austin I did a short segment on MSNBC's Road to the White House where I was asked such tripe as "what would Obama die for" and "can Obama win without the left?" I did the interview from a remote studio -- just a room with a camera, several backdrops depending on the kind of interview, and a satellite uplink to the network. The networks pay these studios for the time guests are on.

There was one middle-aged woman working the operation that day, roughly 50 years old. The TV was on the background and I heard "Obama" and "Afghanistan" in the same sentence. I asked, "Oh, is Obama already in Afghanistan?" She shrugged. "I don't know. I haven't followed the news."

I stayed quiet, because ill and desperate for sleep, I thought I might squeeze a quick catnap before my segment came on. But the woman continued on her own. "I'm really disenchanted with McCain." Oh, I responded, was she an Obama person? "No, I don't like him either. I don't trust him. And my daughter, she hates him."

I inquired further, why? "Because he's not patriotic, with the flag pin and the pledge of allegiance and his wife!" So we determined that she wasn't going to vote, which was disappointing to American democracy, but good for us because she had been a reliable Republican voter. My interest piqued, I dug a little further: given how the economy was going, people losing their homes, the cost of gas through the roof, none of that was as important as a flag pin?

"Well, they can't do nothing about those things." Aha. The Frank theory, of course. Well, I responded, what about health care, are you happy with your health care? She lit up, "I know no one who is happy with their health care!" and then segued into a rant about the disgraceful state of the health care system.  Well, I responded, Democrats are working for universal healthcare, but Republicans have gotten in the way. But we'll be able to do it next year.

"Ain't no one who can fix that stuff," she sighed, slumping. That brief expression of fire and brimstone snuffed out in an instant. She was adamant that it was all hopeless. Fair enough. She didn't look like someone who'd had an easy life. Health care had touched a nerve, so who knows what sad story or stories she had to tell on that front. But Republicans had convinced her that government was powerless to do anything about it, so ... flag pins!

I had one last argument up my sleeve. Look, I get it, I told her, government hasn't given us many reasons to be confident of late. I can certainly empathize. But can we make a deal? If Democrats push through universal health care in the next four years, will you vote for Barack Obama in 2012?

She looked initially uncomfortable at the thought, but after a pause and a brief internal struggle, she softened and said, "Yeah, I will."

That, in a nutshell, is what Kristol and Ponnuru and Lowry and every conservative in this country fears the most.

Buy A Piece Of Democracy In Kansas, Only $8.34

Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 06:59:03 AM PDT

Earlier this morning I came across the most original campaign ad/drive ever. I simply had to share it with everyone and give any who want to join the revolution a chance. I've already budgeted a contribution for a week from Friday.

Information below the fold

Running for Office: It's Like A Flamewar with a Forum Troll ... $8.34

Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 02:04:58 PM PDT

Running for Office: It's Like A Flamewar with a Forum Troll, but with an Eventual Winner

That's not my phrase; its from Sean Tevis and he is running for State Representative in Kansas.

KS-Sen: Roberts admits guilt over faulty ads

Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 10:31:17 AM PDT

It appears as though Senator Roberts and his campaign have a hard time admitting when they are wrong, but then have no problem leaving the rest of us confused when they correct themselves but make it seem like it was no big deal.  Take for example the fact that Roberts has now made changes to their ad but at first, tried to blame the Kansas Democratic Party for merely pointing out their sloppy operation.

Running for Office: Like A Flamewar with a Forum Troll

Wed Jul 16, 2008 at 09:10:51 PM PDT

Cross-posted at MyDD, Digg, and Reddit

Progressive Dem Sean Tevis is an Information Architect in Kansas running for the state legislature. He's decided to retire Arlen Siegfreid, his current anti-science, pro-domestic-spying Republican state representative.  Sean started with door-knocking and signatures to get on the ballot, and now he's appealing to the netroots for support.  He's chronicled his political journey in webcomic format as a fundraising pitch, which drew attention from BoingBoing, Reddit, and Digg.


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