More

Conservative Republicans Battle Moderate Republicans For Control Of Kansas Senate

Kansas Senate

First Posted: 10/12/11 04:01 PM ET Updated: 12/12/11 05:12 AM ET

Republicans will likely retain control of the Kansas Senate after the 2012 election, but an ideological battle playing out in the August primary will decide which faction of the party will run the chamber. With the Senate in hand, conservative Republicans would have firm control of the state's agenda.

Primaries are shaping up in several of the state Senate districts that pit conservative Republican challengers against moderate longtime Republican incumbents. Conservative Republicans have been on the rise in Kansas since the 2010 election ushered in Gov. Sam Brownback (R) and a conservative-led GOP caucus in the state House of Representatives.

"What you have in Kansas is for 40 years moderate conservatives ran this state," said Burdett Loomis, a political science professor at the University of Kansas. "You had a coalition who ran the state that wasn't highly ideological. Brownback's election as governor is the most conservative of the modern era."

While the GOP already controls the Senate by an overwhelming 32-8 majority, Loomis noted that moderate Republicans have teamed with the Democratic caucus to block more conservative legislation, supported by Brownback and the House, by a series of one- and two-vote majorities. A move of four seats would give the conservative block the majority.

Many of the primary challenges are directed at the Senate's top Republican leaders, including Senate President Stephen Morris, Senate Vice President John Vratil, Assistant Majority Leader Vicki Schmidt and key committee chairs, including Tim Owens, who runs the judiciary panel.

"They dislike them very, very much," Loomis said of the conservatives' opinion of the moderates. "They take this notion of RINO [Republican in name only] seriously. They feel the moderates have voted with the Democrats and denied real Republicans the chance to govern."

Senate Republicans, for example, blocked Brownback's proposal to cut the state arts commission, putting money back in the budget, until the governor used a line-item veto to eliminate the funding. The Senate has also blocked Brownback's proposal to change the state's selection process for appeals court judges, from the governor choosing off a selection committee's list to the governor making his own picks, who would then face Senate confirmation.

Among the other issues likely to be debated in the primary campaign are the state's school funding formula, which Brownback is seeking to alter on the ground that Kansas cannot afford the current formula, and reduction of the state's income tax rates. Brownback is scheduled to unveil his tax plan at the start of next year's legislative session, and Senate Republicans announced this week that they are forming a committee to seek citizen input on any tax changes.

While much of the debate centers on Brownback's agenda, that doesn't mean the first-term governor is guiding the primary challenges. State Rep. Greg Smith (R) said Brownback didn't ask him to take on Owens in the primary. And Loomis said he has not seen the governor being involved, adding that the challenges are largely movement-driven.

"He doesn't have to," Loomis said of Brownback. "There is enough energy and money in the GOP."

Loomis predicted that outside conservative groups will likely get involved in the primaries, which he said is unprecedented in Kansas legislative fights. He also said he expects the moderate Republicans working with Democrats to raise the funds to compete.

Although the moderate Republicans aren't likely to shrink from the fight, the conservatives plan to launch upwards of seven challenges.

"All that stands between them and total control is the Senate," Vratil said.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
Republicans will likely retain control of the Kansas Senate after the 2012 election, but an ideological battle playing out in the August primary will decide which faction of the party will run the cha...
Republicans will likely retain control of the Kansas Senate after the 2012 election, but an ideological battle playing out in the August primary will decide which faction of the party will run the cha...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 17
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:52 PM on 10/12/2011
Has it ever crossed your mind that we just have too darned many states in this country?

Perhaps it is time we started throwing some of 'em out...like all the Red States, for instance. Let them catch on with Mexico, Canada, or join together in one ginormous land mass with a GNP less than Bangladesh; I don't really care, so long as they're out of my country. They contribute next to nothing to our culture or economy, they grab $1.27 of every $1 they contribute to the federal government, they've always got some huge man-made or natural disaster, and they force the rest of us to suffer from their idiotic, offensive and hypocritical morality.

It is time they got voted out of the Union.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mdmccormick
I am tired of this BS
06:12 PM on 10/12/2011
Hemorrhoids or colitis what is the choice to be……….. Vote democratic and use Prep H to rid yourself of one and radical surgery for the latter.
06:08 PM on 10/12/2011
Time to throw this crap state out of the union. They get 1.11 back from feds for every dollar they send in, as a "donor" state (NY) it's past time to cut Kansas off from the tit.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
Cindy Tregan
Proud D.F.H. Lib'rul
05:02 PM on 10/12/2011
Maybe they'll elect Fred Phelps. *snark*
04:25 PM on 10/12/2011
There's a reason Kansas has no tourism and the only people willing to migrate to such a dull state are the illegals. Anybody with half a brain would abandon that craphole as soon as the possibly could.
photo
Handyman2
I liked Ike.
04:24 PM on 10/12/2011
Rick Perry and Ron Paul are from Texas. not all Texans approve of them or their agenda. As a Kansan, I can unequivocally state that not all Kansans support Brownback or the Right Wing conservatives who have taken over our state government. As a lifelong Democrat, I've run for office and campaigned for numerous other Democrats. For those who are fortunate to live in states where Republicans don't overwhelming outnumber Democrats, it's difficult to understand what an up-hill battle we wage when we try to get Democrats elected.

Just moving someplace else isn't an option for someone sixty-five years of age and not yet able to retire.
05:36 PM on 10/12/2011
You are a great example of why I'm trying not to denigrate or write off the entire population of some states. Good luck and keep up the good fight.
photo
Handyman2
I liked Ike.
06:03 PM on 10/12/2011
Thanks to you for your objectivity and logical grasp of reality, something so rare in today's poltical environment.
06:09 PM on 10/12/2011
Baseball bats are the answer.
04:23 PM on 10/12/2011
Kansas, LOL, thats a southern state that happens to be in the north. A state full of poor uneducated bumpkins and idiots who support their own demise.
photo
SantaMonican
Visit the carousel, in the Hippodrome, on the pier
04:19 PM on 10/12/2011
Add State to list of States To Avoid due to Republican'ts Gone Wild:

Arizona
Alabama
Utah
Kansas
Florida


Who's next?
OHteach
She who laughs, lasts
04:22 PM on 10/12/2011
I see a Bill Maher sketch in this. I can just see the trailer for the film version of "Republicans Gone Wild".
OHteach
She who laughs, lasts
04:17 PM on 10/12/2011
Kansas will become unlivable and maybe that will be the outlook for the future if the republicans get their way. The freedoms we have enjoyed in this country will be lost as a national guarantee and people will have to move to the individual states that reflect their values and honor their freedoms. Just something to think about.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
emmanuel kalu
commonsense
04:03 PM on 10/12/2011
well i never liked that state, and don't have any plans of ever going near there. for one, if you beat up on a woman, you can walk away free. it is a full fledge attack on women in that state. the state is going to become a south state in the midwest. good luck people of kansas, when you are tired of being walked over, then you vote for people with common sense.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derni
03:52 PM on 10/12/2011
Is Kansas a State?? I thought it was the intellectual outback of the USA?? LOL keep away from Kansas especially if you have an abusive partner..they changed the law
mavpay
I am WE THE PEOPLE
03:41 PM on 10/12/2011
Looks like the Bigoted Bully Billionaire Brothers are at it again! Charles and David Koch won't be happy until the vast majority of Americans sink into the depths of despair. Read: "What's the Matter With Kansas? : How Conservatives Won the Heart of Kansas" by Thomas Frank

"The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it comes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is fascism - ownership of governement by an individual, by a group," Franklin D. Roosevelt


"Power isn't everything... it is the only thing" Mario Puzo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gray Mouser
Former Republican
03:36 PM on 10/12/2011
Kansas will be history if the so-called conservatives win. These folks are dangerous fools.