Los Angeles Times

Primary tests Trump’s sway with Kansas voters

Night ends with no clear GOP victor between incumbent governor and rival.

- By Kurtis Lee kurtis.lee@latimes.com Twitter: @kurtisalee

TOPEKA, Kan. — The race for the Republican nomination for Kansas governor — a contest in which President Trump endorsed his close political ally Kris Kobach — was too close to call late Tuesday.

With 86% of precincts reporting results and more than 266,000 votes tallied, Kobach held a lead of 859 votes over incumbent Jeff Colyer, a moderate seeking his first full term after replacing Sam Brownback, who resigned as governor in January to serve in the Trump administra­tion as ambassador-at-large for internatio­nal religious freedom.

Few candidates across the country have been as closely allied with Trump as Kobach.

Shortly after the 2016 election, Trump appointed Kobach to his immigratio­n policy team. Months later, in May 2017, Trump tapped him to team up with Vice President Mike Pence to head a now-defunct commission on voter fraud.

Throughout the primary campaign, Kobach focused heavily on curbing illegal immigratio­n and frequently dropped Trump’s name in interviews, praising the administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy that has separated immigrant families who entered the country illegally.

Trump, in an endorsemen­t on Monday, called Kobach, who is Kansas secretary of state, a “fantastic guy” who will be strong on immigratio­n and crime.

Not all Republican­s thought the endorsemen­t was a good idea. Some in Washington had urged Trump to stay out of the race, fearing that a Kobach win could lower turnout this fall by moderates and hurt the party in a pair of competitiv­e congressio­nal races.

Colyer shares Kobach’s views on immigratio­n but focused his campaign on issues surroundin­g the state’s budget woes, which began in 2012 when Brownback ushered in massive tax cuts. (Colyer was Brownback’s lieutenant governor at the time.)

In November, the winner will face state Sen. Laura Kelly, who won the Democratic primary.

Kansas leans Republican and hasn’t elected a Democratic governor since 2006. Democrats would prefer to face Kobach in the general election, hoping his candidacy would energize their base and turn off moderates.

If Colyer wins, the Democratic strategy will be to tie him to the unpopular Brownback with the aim of boosting turnout in a handful of moderate and leftleanin­g pockets in college towns like Lawrence and Manhattan.

Kobach has been at the forefront of national efforts to reduce illegal immigratio­n.

In 2010, he helped craft Arizona’s controvers­ial immigratio­n-enforcemen­t legislatio­n — Senate Bill 1070, the so-called “show your papers” law. Critics said the law hinged on racial profiling, and the Supreme Court eventually stuck down many of the provisions.

He also helped local officials in Hazleton, Pa., draft a 2006 ordinance that banned landlords from renting to people in the country illegally. The ordinance faced several legal challenges and was never implemente­d.

In June, a federal judge struck down a 2011 Kansas law that Kobach said was aimed at ending voter fraud by requiring people to show proof of citizenshi­p to register to vote. Opponents argued the law aimed to reduce registrati­on of blacks and Latinos, who tend to vote Democratic.

Recently, the same judge ordered Kobach to pay more than $26,000 in legal fees to the American Civil Liberties Union and a related legal team stemming from the fight over Kansas’ proof-ofcitizens­hip voting law.

 ?? Chris Neal Topeka Capital-Journal ?? TRUMP FAVORITE Kris Kobach speaks with the media at his primary election watch party in Topeka.
Chris Neal Topeka Capital-Journal TRUMP FAVORITE Kris Kobach speaks with the media at his primary election watch party in Topeka.

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