The Kansas City Star (Sunday)

Inside the GOP race to be Missouri’s top election official

- BY ANNA SAGO AND KACEN BAYLESS asago@kcstar.com kbayless@kcstar.com Kacen Bayless: (816) 234-4207, @Kacen

JEFFERSON CITY

The Republican race to become Missouri’s top election official is poised to be one of the most crowded, and intense, statewide races this year.

Eight Republican candidates have filed for secretary of state, which is currently held by Jay Ashcroft, a Republican who is running for governor. They include a top state lawmaker who faces an ethics investigat­ion, a political newcomer who made headlines for burning books with a flamethrow­er, the leader of an abandoned campaign to overturn the state’s abortion ban and a state senator aligned with the hard-right Missouri Freedom Caucus.

The packed primary has created a pool of candidates who will each try to tap into a Missouri electorate that has grown staunchly Republican over the past decade.

“The most conservati­ve voters are the ones who are most likely to turn out and vote in the primary,” said Jean Evans, a former executive director of the Missouri Republican Party. “Those are the people you want to appeal to.”

The race will feature Missouri House Speaker Dean Plocher; political newcomer Valentina Gomez; Greene County Clerk Shane Schoeller; Sen. Denny Hoskins; Rep. Adam Schwadron; Jamie Corley, a former congressio­nal staffer who led a Republican effort to overturn the abortion ban; Sen. Mary Elizabeth Coleman; and Mike Carter, a Wentzville municipal judge.

Whoever wins the Republican nomination will face off against the Democratic nominee in the general election. Rep. Barbara Phifer from Kirkwood, Monique Williams of St. Louis and Haley Jacobson of St. Louis are the three Democrats running.

Plocher, who currently faces an investigat­ion into allegation­s of ethical misconduct, and Coleman, a state senator who was previously running for congress, surprised many political observers when they jumped into the race on the last day of candidate filings late last month.

The decision came a week after Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden, a Columbia Republican, dropped out of the race. Rowden’s departure left behind a candidate pool that leans more staunchly to the right.

Hoskins, for example, is a member of the hard-right Missouri Freedom Caucus that has battled with more moderate state senators for most of this year’s legislativ­e session. Gomez, a 24-year-old real estate investor, has faced backlash for a video she posted on social media torching LGBTQ-inclusive books with a flamethrow­er.

Nearly all of the Republican candidates are running in the same “conservati­ve lane,” said Gregg Keller, a GOP consultant aligned with Coleman’s campaign. He painted it as a positive.

“Being branded in a Republican primary as a moderate today is really the kiss of death,” he said. “I’d expect to see the remaining candidates try their best to avoid being labeled as such.”

Hoskins said in an interview that Republican primary voters he’s spoken to at campaign events have expressed that same sentiment.

“People are looking for conservati­ve fighters like Josh Hawley, not what I call ‘Liz Cheney Republican­s,’” he said. “That’s been an overwhelmi­ng theme no matter where we’ve been.”

FUNDRAISIN­G COULD SET CANDIDATES APART

Plocher, who was previously running for lieutenant governor before pivoting to secretary of state, is leading his Republican opponents in fundraisin­g, according to the most recent reports filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission.

Plocher’s campaign committee, Plocher for Missouri, had $542,000 at the end of December, putting him well ahead of other candidates. Hoskins’ campaign is second in fundraisin­g, with roughly $116,600 on hand at the end of December.

But consultant­s who spoke with The Star painted the race as wide open in which candidates will be able to out-raise each other in the coming months. Evans said that fundraisin­g efforts for the candidates who are still in office — Plocher, Hoskins, Coleman and Schwadron — are likely to ramp up in May and June.

By June, if a candidate has twice as much money as the next most wellfunded candidate, that person has a “pretty good chance of winning,” she said.

However, a bevy of highprofil­e races this year, including a likely rematch between incumbent President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump and a hotly-contested race for Missouri governor, could make it more challengin­g for candidates to fundraise.

Adding to the fundraisin­g challenge is the lack of a “natural constituen­cy” for the secretary of state position, said John Hancock, a long-time GOP consultant and a former executive director of the Missouri GOP. Hancock as of Tuesday was not involved in any of the campaigns.

Positions such as attorney general and lieutenant governor, both of which are on the ballot this year, tend to attract more attention, Hancock said. And some donors that could benefit from having a say in who becomes secretary of state, like key players in the securities industry, are barred from donating based on internal rules.

The race for secretary of state, which oversees the state’s elections, comes at a time when false claims about election fraud bolstered by Trump have sparked election integrity concerns among some GOP voters. Candidates may try to tap into those concerns in the coming months.

Republican­s will also likely capitalize on fears about illegal immigratio­n amid a national debate over border control efforts at the southern border with Mexico. But the candidates’ ability to use those issues to their benefit will hinge on their fundraisin­g, said Hancock.

“If they’re able to put together a significan­t amount of money … that gives you the ability to turn the volume up,” he said. “That’s gonna give them an edge in the primary.”

But money won’t be the only factor. Consultant­s indicated that grassroots campaignin­g will likely play a major role in the race.

Since the 2020 election, Hancock said, traditiona­l conservati­ves have been pitted against anti-establishm­ent candidates, making grassroots outreach more important than ever. Evans agreed, and added that fundraisin­g isn’t enough to win a campaign, particular­ly a crowded Republican primary.

“You can’t just do money,” Evans said. “You’ve got to have a good candidate. You’ve got to have a plan. You’ve got to work the plan, and you’ve got to have the money to fund the plan. So the money is super important, but it’s not the only thing.”

ETHICS AND A FLAMETHROW­ER

The hotly-contested race comes as Plocher, the top Republican in the Missouri House, faces a behind-closed-doors investigat­ion by the Missouri House Ethics Committee.

The exact focus of the months-long investigat­ion is unclear, but Plocher has faced calls to step aside as speaker as he confronts a series of scandals including revelation­s that he received government reimbursem­ents for trip expenses already paid by his campaign.

He also faces scrutiny over the firing of his chief of staff, who may have been a whistleblo­wer, and alleged threats against a top House staffer related to his push for the House to contract with an outside company to manage constituen­t informatio­n.

However, Evans said that Plocher’s reputation will make it hard for his opponents to paint the ethics investigat­ion as a weakness.

“Plocher is very wellliked,” she said. “People who know him and have worked with him do not see him as a corrupt politician. I think it would be difficult for them to change posture on that.”

Plocher only vaguely acknowledg­ed the scandals in a statement launching his campaign last month.

“The liberal press can attack me all they want,” he said in the campaign statement last month, “but as your Speaker and when I am your Secretary of State, I will never stop fighting for the people of Missouri.”

Plocher declined to comment to The Star.

Another candidate that could garner controvers­y among voters is Gomez, whose social media accounts are littered with anti-LGBTQ rhetoric. The video of her burning LGBTQ-themed books drew swift condemnati­on from social media users.

Public book burnings typically illustrate extreme censorship related to political, cultural and religious materials. They often invoke historic atrocities such as burning of Jewish texts in Nazi Germany or racist bonfires by the Ku Klux Klan.

In addition to the book burning, she posted a video in which she promised to name disgraced former Gov. Eric Greitens as a senior advisor if elected and another in which she vowed to blow up “corrupt voting machines.” In a video posted on the day before Easter, Gomez said that “Christiani­ty is under attack by Biden and his satanic cult.”

“Darwinism will take care of these transgende­r things,” she said in the video. “We are one nation under God. Jesus is king and I am here to declare victory against evil.”

Gomez, in a statement provided to The Star by her campaign, falsely claimed that she did not get any criticism for the video of her burning books. She instead claimed she received “enormous support” from various people including Jordan Peterson, a conservati­ve-leaning internet personalit­y, and Jesse Watters, a Fox News television host.

“I have nothing against the gay community, you want to be gay? Fine, be gay, just don’t do it around children,” the statement said. “I will protect children against ideologies, indoctrina­tion and grooming from pedophiles and ‘allies’ of the lgbtq community. The rainbow bullies and pedophiles that exposed themselves in the comments, and at my home don’t phase me, I have Jesus Christ and the Second Amendment by my side.”

Keller said Gomez’s social media strategy was eye-catching, but one that’s “calling her judgment into question.”

“Candidates who recognize that Republican primary voters have very little trust in our systems and institutio­ns and government now are speaking the language of Republican voters,” he said. “That in and of itself is not enough. You need to have the right message, but you also need to be a credible messenger.”

At the suggestion of a friend, I met with Johnny Waller late last year over coffee at Equal Minded

Cafe, a cool coffee shop and meeting space on Troost Avenue in Kansas City. I was blown away by this man’s story of perseveran­ce, redemption and service.

Waller, who holds several degrees from area colleges and universiti­es, told me that as a teen he had been shot in the head while hanging out with a rough crowd on the streets of Omaha, Nebraska.

Later he was arrested on drug charges there and finally spent several years in prison. But it’s what happened when he got out that led him on the path to becoming an advocate for the formerly incarcerat­ed and an activist when it comes to changing legislatio­n, policies and minds. Waller is all about creating opportunit­ies for what he calls “our returning citizens.”

Right away, I thought, people need to know more about Waller, what he does, and why. So I invited him to participat­e along with seven other Black Kansas City activists in the second season of Voices of Kansas City, a community-conversati­on collaborat­ion between The Star and KKFI Kansas City Community radio station.

Each of the voices we highlight — including Waller’s story — will be published by The Star in a question and answer format to capture the conversati­ons in their own words. Their exchanges with Star journalist­s also will air at 6 p.m. Wednesdays for the next four weeks on KKFI 90.1 FM. radio.

Voices of Kansas City originally was created by The Star in partnershi­p with KKFI and Kansas

City GIFT (Generating Income for Tomorrow), a Black-founded nonprofit that supports Black-owned businesses.

In the first season, Star reporters focused on Black-owned small businesses and interviewe­d eight business owners. They included a teacher turned author who has written books with characters who are Black and brown like most of her students, a young health care worker who during the pandemic left her job to start a small moving company, and an urban farmer who turned a parking lot into a small farm on the southwest corner of Kansas City’s Historic Jazz District near 18th and

Vine streets.

The owner of Equal Minded, the coffee spot where I met Waller, was also among the featured businesses.

Today we are launching our second season of Voices. In this season, using print, video and radio broadcast platforms, we are giving the mic to Black grassroots activists like Waller.

The Star is partnering again with KKFI, an independen­t, noncommerc­ial nonprofit and volunteerb­ased community radio station. Our mission to amplify more Black voices with this project aligned well with the station’s mission to reflect the diversity in our local communitie­s and provide a broadcast that gives voice to the voiceless. Because the station has such a broad audience, working with KKFI gives us and them an opportunit­y to reach audiences we otherwise might miss.

Interviews with each activist will be done by Voices hosts: yours truly, Mará Rose Williams, The Star’s assistant managing editor for race and equity, and J.M. Banks, The Star’s reporter for culture and identity issues.

The project is part of a promise we made more than three years ago.

After publishing the “Truth in Black and White” project in December 2020, in which The Star apologized for decades of poorly representi­ng the stories and voices of Black community members, we said we would commit to more projects that properly highlight those voices and stories.

Voices of Kansas City is one of those.

Yes, it’s a move that potentiall­y helps attract more readers to The Star and listeners to KKFI. But introducin­g new voices to readers and radio listeners across the Kansas City region is also a community unifier. And then there’s this: Business owners who were featured in the first Voices said it gave them exposure and confidence.

“It’s an honor,” said Damesha Cook, owner of Dash Delivery Services, one of last year’s featured businesses. “No one has ever reached out to me and offered me such an opportunit­y. It meant a lot to me.”

Cook’s business is in its third year. After being featured in The Star and interviewe­d on KKFI, Cook was contacted by several residents of an Overland Park senior living area. They told her they needed furniture moved and worried about who they might let into their homes. But they liked Cook’s story and trusted her because they met her on the radio and in the pages of The Star.

Also, Cook said that since Voices she has purchased a 6-foot box truck, increasing her business fleet to three vehicles. And the big news is that her business growth put her in

Read about successful Black business owners in these previous interviews for this series. qr.getne.ws/49OiRFn

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 ?? EMILY CURIEL ecuriel@kcstar.com ?? Mark Manning, host of KKFI Community Radio’s Wednesday MidDay Medley show, recently interviewe­d J.M. Banks, left, The Star’s culture and identity reporter, and Mará Rose Williams, assistant managing editor of race and equity. The two talked about the new season of Voices of Kansas City.
EMILY CURIEL ecuriel@kcstar.com Mark Manning, host of KKFI Community Radio’s Wednesday MidDay Medley show, recently interviewe­d J.M. Banks, left, The Star’s culture and identity reporter, and Mará Rose Williams, assistant managing editor of race and equity. The two talked about the new season of Voices of Kansas City.
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