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Trump and GOP target ballots arriving after Election Day that delay counts and feed conspiracy fears
President Donald Trump and other Republicans have long criticized states that take weeks to count their ballots after Election Day. This year has seen
Republicans still support changing the process even after watching the most recent Supreme Court nominating process. Democrats say the process is working.
Democratic election lawyer Marc Elias has lost his bid to thwart a Kansas law banning foreign actors from funneling money into state-level ballot initiatives. In May, the Elias Law Group, the eponymous law firm of the election attorney,
KSHB 41's Rachel Henderson spoke with Gwendolyn Thomas, the fourth candidate she's interviewed about running for mayor of the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas.
Petitioners might soon get a shocker when their handiwork doesn't garner a lot of respect . . . This report attempt to calm fears but really don't know much about what's happening inside the courthouse. In fact, Exec Frank White has vetoed quite a few resolutions . . .
U.S. Army Col. (Ret.) Pat Proctor is a Kansas representative and chairman of the Kansas House Committee on Elections. He is also a member of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission Board of Advisors and an assistant professor of Homeland Security at Wichita State University.
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Only once - in 1897 - have Republicans not held at least one branch of state government. When they regained power in 1900, they outlawed fusion voting. | Opinion
For the second time since 2023, a federal judge has found that a Kansas law barring the mailing of advanced ballot applications with personalized voter information violates the constitutional right to free speech.
Supporters of an effort to recall Jackson County Executive Frank White turned in enough valid signatures to force a recall vote.
The majority of the 129 laws passed by the Kansas Legislature officially went on the books at the beginning of July. Tax cuts were a major battleground. TOPEKA – The 1st of July is the start of the fiscal year for the state of Kansas.
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