Together We Can Move Kansas Forward
Where do we have Common Ground?
Can we agree that:
- Voting is a Right.
- Representative Democracy is the best form of government.
- Maximizing voter participation is essential to maintaining our democracy.
- The 2020 election was not stolen.
- Kansas elections are secure.
Unsubstantiated Voter Fraud Led to an Insurrection at the Capitol
Find the Facts
There have been misconceptions about voter fraud in the recent past, including deceptive marketing that led to an insurrection in 2020. The reality is that voter fraud is extremely rare, and when instances have been found they have been isolated, largely due to voter error not intent, and not even remotely frequent enough to swing an election.
After the 2020 presidential election over 60 lawsuits were filed, many of which were reviewed by Republican-appointed judges, and not one found any significant evidence of fraud. In fact, a joint statement from the Elections Infrastructure Government Coordinating Council & the Election Infrastructure Sector Coordinating Executive Committees declared the 2020 election the “most secure in election history.” And the current KS Secretary of State says that elections are secure.
This continued misinformation allows governing bodies to pass laws which restrict voter participation, hurting poor, older, and voters of color disproportionately.
Denying the right to vote is in essence the same as stealing a vote, but alternatives exist that can both safeguard the electoral process and ensure the right to vote of all citizens. This continued narrative has also allowed our locally elected County Clerks, our very neighbors and dedicated public servants, to be threatened and harassed – rather than applauded for carrying out a secure election during an unprecedented pandemic.
We can make positive change in election laws in Kansas but only if we elect representation that will support it.
Facts about Voting in Kansas
Kansas: Our History As a Leader in Voting Rights
- In 1861, the first Kansas Constitution gave white women the right to vote in school board elections, making Kansas only the second state in the Union to do so.
- Kansas granted women the right to vote on November 5, 1912, nearly 8 years before the Nineteenth Amendment was passed at the federal level.
- On April 7, 1971 the voting age was lowered from 21 to 18.
Voter Fraud Claims and Voter Restrictions
- In the 2010 General Election candidate Kris Kobach ran on the message ‘Stop Voter Fraud’.
- In 2011 the Kansas Legislature passed the SAFE Act, which Gov. Brownback signed:
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- Cut back on advance voting
- Required voters to show an ID based on a finite list of proper documents
- Required anyone registering to vote to supply documentary proof of citizenship.
- Kobach claimed that requiring the photo IDs and documentary of citizenship would combat widespread voter impersonation fraud and illegal voter registration by non-citizens; however, between 2004 and 2009 there were only 7 cases of alleged election fraud in Kansas.
- Registering to vote at that time was completed primarily at the same time as Kansans obtained a driver’s license, but those offices had no way to transfer the proper documents to the Secretary of State’s office. The result was a voter suspension list that grew 40 times, to 20,000 people, after the provision took effect.
- The 2021 Kansas Legislature placed further restrictions on voting with the passage of HB2183 and HB2332, despite a veto by Governor Laura Kelly.
- The 2022 Kansas Legislature passed election requirements that increased the oversight of the Secretary of State and also placed new mandates on counties without providing the needed funding.
Changing the Narrative to expanding Voter Participation
- Same Day Registration has been shown to increase voter turnout by 5%. It would also keep voter rolls current and negate the need for purging and put an end to Kansas Legislative Committees discussing election integrity based on unique data comparisons.
- Voting on the weekend or making election day a holiday results in very high voter turnout in other countries.
- Dodge City, with a population of 27,000 residents convened a single polling place in 2018. Laws that ensure convenient polling places with moderate lines would ensure equity in voting. These have not been discussed in Kansas.
Free and Fair Elections Need Your Vote
Vote for Candidates who will move Kansas Forward
With 50 Democrats, 115 Republicans, and virtually no moderates in the current Kansas legislature, compromise rarely occurs. Bills often originate from national political groups rather than Kansas citizens, which is why the same legislation is often passed in Texas, Florida, Oklahoma, Nebraska, etc. To have legislation that empowers the right to vote in Kansas we need to election candidates who will vote for laws that enable rather than restrict voting in our state.
Several voter restriction laws have been passed in Kansas since Kris Kobach started spreading the unproven rumor of insecure elections. These have restricted the voices of poor, elderly, and persons of color.
Recent Voter Restriction Bills
HB2183 – made it a crime to return 10 or more ballots on behalf of voters who may need assistance, such as voters with disabilities or the elderly; made it a crime to be mistaken as an ‘election official’ while conducting voter education events; removed the authority of the Secretary of State to extend the deadline for receiving advance mail ballots
HB2138 – created the requirement of a watermark on ballots, the cost of which counties will cover; establishes a biannual election audit; expands election-related crimes; creates a path to purge voters from registration lists if they skip elections