From Ballotpedia - Reading time: 10 min
The Kansas Secretary of State election of 2010 was held on November 2, 2010. The incumbent, former Kansas Securities Commissioner Chris Biggs (Democrat), was appointed to office by Democratic Governor Mark Parkinson on March 17, 2010 - less than five months before the primary elections. Biggs' appointment was prompted by the resignation of Republican Ron Thornburgh, who had served in the office for nearly sixteen years.[1][2]
On August 3, Biggs faced Chris Steineger in the primary election and won the Democratic Party nomination with 60.2% of the vote. At the same time, three Republican candidates vied for their party's seat on the ballot. Kris Kobach won 50.6% of the vote, dashing the election hopes of Shawnee County Election Commissioner Elizabeth Ensley and J.R. Claeys, former President and CEO of the National Association of Government Contractors.
In the general election in November, Kobach and Biggs were met by Libertarian Phillip Horatio Lucas and Reform Party candidate Derek Langseth. With 59% of the vote, Kobach unseated Biggs, who received 37.2% of the vote, while Lucas and Langseth claimed 2.0% and 1.6%, respectively.
| Kansas Secretary of State, General Election, 2010 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Vote % | Votes | |
| Republican | 59% | 489,640 | ||
| Democratic | Chris Biggs | 37.2% | 308,641 | |
| Libertarian | Phillip Horatio Lucas | 2.1% | 17,336 | |
| Reform Party | Derek Langseth | 1.7% | 13,896 | |
| Total Votes | 829,513 | |||
| Election results via Kansas Secretary of State | ||||
Part 4. Biggs-Kobach Forum. Initiatives; Caucus; Internet |
Biggs faced his opponent, Kris Kobach, in a candidate forum on October 12, 2010. The moderator picked many questions from the audience, such as:
Kansas Watchdog captured video from the forum, including this video about their initiatives, caucus and the Internet.[3]
According to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission, as of October 27, 2010, the following was the breakdown of campaign finances for each of the candidates:
| Chris Biggs Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| July 23 - October 21, 2010[14] | October 25, 2010 | $34,173.32 | $218,142.00 | $412.50 | $31,000.00 | $241,199.48 | $10,714.16 | |
| Kris Kobach Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| July 23 - October 22, 2010[15] | October 25, 2010 | $89,342.63 | $136,810.39 | $550.00 | $0.00 | $95,490.49 | $130,662.53 | |
Survey USA, under contract with a local news station in Kansas, surveyed 882 registered voters about all the statewide races on the ballot in November; of these, 588 were deemed to be likely voters. Survey USA did not use live call center employees, but rather an automated system in which taped questions were asked via a professional announcer; the respondent was then invited to press a button on their phone or record a message indicating their selections.
| Survey USA Poll - August 12 – 15, 2010[16] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidates | Percentage | |||
| 62% | ||||
| Chris Biggs (D) | 30% | |||
| Phillip Horatio Lucas (Libertarian) | 2% | |||
| Derek Langseth (Reform) | 2% | |||
| Undecided | 4% | |||
| Total voters | 588 | |||
Survey USA, under contract with a local news station in Kansas, surveyed 602 likely voters about all the statewide races on the ballot in November. Survey USA did not use live call center employees, but rather an automated system in which taped questions were asked via a professional announcer; the respondent was then invited to press a button on their phone or record a message indicating their selections.
| Survey USA Poll - September 12 – 15, 2010[17] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidates | Percentage | |||
| 53% | ||||
| Chris Biggs (D) | 36% | |||
| Phillip Horatio Lucas (Libertarian) | 3% | |||
| Derek Langseth (Reform) | 3% | |||
| Undecided | 4% | |||
| Total voters | 602 | |||
| 2010 Race for Secretary of State - Democratic Primary[20] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Vote Percentage | |
| Democratic Party | 60.3% | ||
| Democratic Party | Chris Steineger | 39.7% | |
| Total Votes | 80,872 | ||
According to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission, as of July 28, 2010, the following was the breakdown of campaign finances for each of the candidates:
| Chris Biggs Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| January 1 - July 22, 2010[24] | July 29, 2010 | $922.01 | $76,636.00 | $1,899.23 | $6,000.00 | $43,384.69 | $34,173.32 | |
| January 1 - December 31, 2009[25] | January 10, 2010 | $0.00 | $1,454.00 | $155.88 | $1,000.00 | $531.99 | $922.01 | |
| Chris Steineger Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| January 1 - July 22, 2010[26] | July 26, 2010 | $0.00 | $107,835.00 | $2,763.90 | $50,000.00 | $81,575.15 | $26,259.85 | |
| 2010 Race for Secretary of State - Republican Primary[20] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Vote Percentage | |
| Republican Party | 50.7% | ||
| Republican Party | Elizabeth Ensley | 27.0% | |
| Republican Party | J.R. Claeys | 22.3% | |
| Total Votes | 308,776 | ||
According to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission, as of July 28, 2010, the following was the breakdown of campaign finances for each of the candidates:
| J.R. Claeys Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| January 1 - July 22, 2010[40] | July 26, 2010 | $287,644.28 | $300.00 | $0.00 | $30,000.00 | $282,003.30 | $5,940.98 | |
| January 1 - December 31, 2009[41] | July 22, 2010 | $213,642.19 | $110,166.70 | $50.00 | $30,000.00 | $36,164.61 | $287,644.28 | |
| Elizabeth Ensley Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| January 1 - July 22, 2010[42] | July 26, 2010 | $0.00 | $74,360.69 | $2,462.79 | $0.00 | $61,263.52 | $13,097.17 | |
| Kris Kobach Campaign Finance Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Report | Date Filed | Beginning Balance | Contributions | In-Kind [13] | Other Sources | Expenditures | Cash on Hand | |
| January 1 - July 22, 2010[43] | July 25, 2010 | $127,854.80 | $10,192.50 | $902.66 | $0.00 | $99,933.26 | $38,114.04 | |
| January 1 - December 31, 2009[44] | January 13, 2010 | $60,000.00 | $92,607.00 | $3,024.57 | $0.00 | $24,752.20 | $127,854.80 | |
Several days after Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) signed into law Senate Bill 1070 – The Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act, commonly known as Arizona SB 1070, the Lawrence Journal-World & News reported that law professor and Kansas Secretary of State candidate Kris Kobach had contributed to drafting the legislation.[45][46] The Act made it a state misdemeanor for an individual to be in Arizona without carrying the citizenship or immigration documents required by federal law, authorized state and local enforcement of federal immigration laws, and imposed penalties on those who shelter, hire, or transport unauthorized immigrants. Kobach stated that he assisted Arizona State Senator Russell Pearce voluntarily and did not believe it would affect his campaign for secretary of state. He also said he would be willing to draft a similar measure in Kansas if requested by a state legislator.
Civil rights groups that opposed the immigration law petitioned the University of Missouri at Kansas City (UMKC) to take action against Kobach, who had been teaching there since 1996. His most vocal critic, J.D. Rios, an assistant superintendent for Kansas City, Kansas schools, stated that Kobach "violated the general UMKC policy to promote diversity."[47]
Despite criticism from some alumni who said they would discourage Hispanic students from enrolling, UMKC supported Kobach, stating that the university upholds academic freedom for all faculty members.[48]
On July 14, 2010, supporters of Kobach held an “Illegal is Illegal” rally at the Ritz Charles convention center after permission to use MidAmerica Nazarene University was withdrawn. Sheriff Joe Arpaio from Maricopa County, Arizona, attended the standing-room-only rally in support of Kobach. Several hundred people participated in a mostly silent “Love Conquers Hate” protest along the sidewalk surrounding the convention center. More than 50 attendees from the NAACP Convention in Kansas City joined, expressing concerns about racial profiling and chanting “hope, not hate” as they arrived in a small parade.[49]
At a Leavenworth County Republican Party BBQ in Tonganoxie shortly after the Fourth of July in 2009, Kobach made a joke about President Barack Obama, saying that the only thing the former Illinois senator and God had in common was that neither of them had a birth certificate.[50] The State Democratic Party criticized Kobach over his remarks, stating that "his latest attempt at humor has gone too far."[51] Kobach replied that it was just a joke and that Democratic critics should lighten up.
At the same time that he faced accusations of violating state campaign finance laws, the liberal-leaning news website Forward Kansas published a story questioning whether Mike Sager, Campaign Finance Director for the Steineger secretary of state campaign, was the same individual who had previously been "indicted for a felony count of stealing from his campaign funds and, also, a misdemeanor count of filing false campaign finance reports in order to subsequently cover up the theft."[52][53]
Steineger told the Kansas City Star that he was not aware of Sager’s past when he initially hired him. After learning about it, he removed Sager from his position as campaign treasurer.[54][55]
Prior to the 2008 state primary election, Ensley’s office placed forty-three federal service ballots in the wrong column, preventing the optical scanning voting machines from recording the results correctly. Ensley attributed the issue to human error, which led to approximately 4,000 ballots not being counted.[56]
Three months later, during the general election, an election board worker from Ensley’s office accidentally left fourteen provisional ballots in the trunk of her car.[57] Ensley acknowledged the error and stated that it should not have occurred.[58]
Shortly after launching his campaign for secretary of state, State Senator Chris Steineger was accused by the Kansas State Ethics Commission of allegedly violating the state’s campaign finance laws on at least two occasions.[59] In addition to allegations that he used funds from his state senate campaign to pay for a poll conducted for his secretary of state committee, he faced potential charges for violating a state law that "prohibits [state] politicians from seeking contributions from lobbyists, corporations, unions and political action committees while the Legislature is convened from January to May."[60] Several days after the allegations were reported, Steineger acknowledged that "a preliminary review of emails sent on behalf of his campaign for secretary of state indicated requests for donations went to several registered lobbyists" and stated that he would take full responsibility for his campaign’s actions.[61]
On Tuesday, May 18, 2010, the Kansas State Ethics Commission ruled that Steineger "improperly used his Senate campaign fund to pay for polls testing his name recognition ahead of a possible run for statewide office."[62] At the same time, the commission concluded that there was insufficient evidence to determine that Steineger knowingly violated state campaign finance laws by requesting contributions from lobbyists while the State Legislature was in session. He was subsequently ordered to pay a $5,000 fine.[63]