Politics & Government
This Kansas Democrat Likes Ike — And Wonders How Many Republicans Still Would
Boog Highberger, a Democrat, represents the liberal bubble of Lawrence.

May 7, 2021
Boog Highberger knew it was almost lunchtime. So when he stepped to the podium in front of the Kansas House of Representatives, he said he’d try to be brief.
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It would be a week of some very long speeches in the Kansas Legislature, and this was only Tuesday. That morning, the House had been considering a Senate bill involving tax preparers that included tax credits for the Eisenhower Foundation in Abilene and the Friends of Cedar Crest Association, among other things.
Highberger, a Democrat, represents the liberal bubble of Lawrence. He’d made a dramatic point back in the opening days of this year’s legislative session when, on Jan. 21, he’d stepped to the same podium in a shirt and tie but no jacket, violating House decorum to make the point that pandemic decorum in the chamber should also include face masks.
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Tuesday’s speech was less immediately jarring. Highberger just wanted to read some short excerpts from a long document.
“It may not seem relevant at first, but I’ll explain when I finish,” he said. “These are some words from an important document in American history.”
It’s worth quoting the entirety of what Highberger said:
“Well, by now you’re asking, what sort of socialist nonsense was that and where did it come from?” Highberger said.
He’d been reading from the Republican Party platform in 1956, the year Dwight D. Eisenhower was nominated for a second term as president.
“I just want to say that I like Ike,” Highberger concluded, a quiet smile in his voice. “I’m happy to support the tax credit for the Eisenhower Foundation and I hope you like Ike too.”
Later, Highberger told me he’d been waiting all session for an opportunity to present this reminder of what Republicans once stood for.
“There are a lot of people around here who say, ‘I like Ike,’ but I’m not sure they’d like his policies that much — not all of them, anyway,” he said.
“I just really look around and I see how much the Republican Party in Kansas has changed in my lifetime,” Highberger said. “It’s not my grandfather’s Republican Party.”
Highberger’s politics have changed over the years, too.
“When I was in my 20s, I called myself an anarchist,” he said. “I could have just as easily said I was into radical democracy.”
These days he said he’d call himself a progressive. He sent me a chart of a “two-dimensional political spectrum,” where he’d colored in where he thought most Democrats and Republicans stood, acknowledging others would likely disagree about where to draw the lines.
It seemed to be a pretty good representation of Kansas. Notably absent were the communists and fascists some of us have been calling each other lately. I felt calmer just looking at it.
I asked if he feels especially lonely in the Legislature.
“It’s been the most challenging year for me so far,” said Highberger, who’s been in office since 2015.
“There are great people on both sides of the aisle and a lot of people I’m in solidarity with on my side of the aisle,” he said. “The reason I’m here is to try to make life better for working people. It’s not to lower taxes.”
That definitely sounds radical in Kansas.
“It’s sort of a mantra for some people here, but if you believe lower taxes by themselves created prosperity, people in places like Mississippi and Afghanistan would be economic powerhouses and Sweden and Massachusetts would be depressed,” he said.
“Having good infrastructure, education and a safety net — I think Eisenhower understood that,” he said. “The Republican Party of the ‘50s understood that. They were certainly more conservative than I am, but we weren’t as far apart as I and some of my colleagues are now.”
Most of them, but maybe not all.
After his speech on Tuesday, Highberger said, “a couple of moderate members of the Republican caucus said they enjoyed it.”
This story was originally published by Kansas Reflector. For more stories from the Kansas Reflector visit Kansas Reflector.