The Denver Post

Kansas’ gov. concedes GOP primary to secretary of state

- By Roxana Hegeman

WICHITA» Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer conceded Tuesday night in the state’s Republican gubernator­ial primary, saying he would endorse Secretary of State Kris Kobach one week after their neck-and-neck finish threatened to send the race to a recount.

Colyer accepted defeat after a review of some provisiona­l ballots from most Kansas counties failed to find enough votes for him to overcome a deficit of 110 votes at the time of poll closing in the Aug. 7 primary, out of more than 311,000 votes initially counted.

Kobach will face Democrat Laura Kelly, and is likely to face independen­t candidate Greg Orman, in the November general election in the decidedly conservati­ve state.

The disputed race was intense and prompted a lengthy county-by-county review of provisiona­l ballots. The aftermath of the primary included both candidates challengin­g each other’s legal interpreta­tions, sending observers to monitor the vote count and raising the specter of lawsuits.

It included a fight over how to count unaffiliat­ed voters who were simply given a provisiona­l ballot by poll workers without first having them fill out a party-affiliatio­n statement. Colyer’s campaign had representa­tives in all 105 counties when provisiona­l ballots are reviewed.

Colyer also questioned whether Kobach — as secretary of state, the top election official in Kansas — was advising counties not to count some mail-in ballots, including those with missing or unreadable postmarks.

Kobach removed himself from election-related duties Aug. 10 until the primary outcome was resolved, but Colyer argued that Kobach still had a conflict of interest because his top deputy took over Kobach’s responsibi­lities.

Kobach rejected Colyer’s criticisms, saying his “unrestrain­ed rhetoric has the potential to undermine the public’s confidence in the election process.”

Kobach, 52, has a national conservati­ve following thanks to his strong stance against illegal immigratio­n and his fervent defense of voter ID laws. He was vice chairman of the Trump administra­tion’s electionfr­aud commission, though the commission eventually found no evidence to support Trump’s claims of widespread voter fraud in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Kobach’s voter ID efforts also took a hit in June when a federal judge found that the Kansas voter ID law he championed was unconstitu­tional.

Colyer, by contrast, is far more low key. He is a 58year-old plastic surgeon from suburban Kansas City, Kan. He served as lieutenant governor for seven years and took over as governor in January when Sam Brownback resigned to become ambassador-at-large for internatio­nal religious freedom.

He helped craft state health care legislatio­n as a lawmaker before his election as lieutenant governor in 2010. As lieutenant governor, he supervised a 2013 initiative that privatized Kansas’ Medicaid health coverage for the needy.

Provisiona­l ballots are cast when questions about a voter’s eligibilit­y cannot be easily resolved. The problem could involve a name not showing up on the voter rolls or a voter’s address not matching a photo ID in states where that is required.

National data from the Election Assistance Commission shows that the most common reason for rejection was that a voter was not registered in the state. Other reasons include provisiona­l ballots being cast in the wrong county or wrong precinct and problems with a voter’s identifica­tion or signature.

 ?? Thad Allton, The Topeka Capital-Journal ?? Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach takes questions from reporters at the Capitol Plaza hotel in Topeka, Kan., last week.
Thad Allton, The Topeka Capital-Journal Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach takes questions from reporters at the Capitol Plaza hotel in Topeka, Kan., last week.

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