Politics & Government
Kansas Electors Stay Faithful To President Donald Trump
Trump carried Kansans with 771,406 votes, or 56.2% of a record total turnout.

By Sherman Smith, the Kansas Reflector
December 14, 2020

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TOPEKA β Kansasβ six GOP-appointed members of the Electoral College remained faithful Monday to President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, supporting the majority will of voters in the stateβs general election.
Unlike the drama involved with Electoral College proceedings in other states, the Kansas ceremony was held without incident in the House chamber at the Statehouse.
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βItβs really an honor,β said elector Emily Wellman. βIt feels a lot more important than I thought it would. Itβs a big deal.β
Trump carried Kansans with 771,406 votes, or 56.2% of a record total turnout. His Democratic challenger, President-elect Joe Biden, received 570,323 votes, or 41.5%.
Secretary of State Scott Schwab presided over the official vote, with his elections director, Bryan Caskey, handing out ballots.
βItβs a great honor to be able to convene the Electoral College,β Schwab said. βIβve never been an elector, and now to get to call them together is kind of neat.β
Under Kansas law, each of the electors is entitled to $3 for the service. Schwab advised they not spent it all in one place.
Kansas Republican Party chairman Mike Kuckelman, one of the electors, declined to acknowledge Bidenβs victory in the presidential race. Trump and his allies have filed dozens of lawsuits alleging fraud, all of which have been tossed out of courts.
βItβs not over until itβs over. Iβm not the arbitrator of that issue,β Kuckelman said. βIβm a strong believer as a lawyer that everyone has the right to litigate any dispute that they have until theyβve had every opportunity. With that, I think we have to keep an open mind and see what steps are next taken.β
Last week, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt joined other Republican attorneys general in supporting a last-ditch effort by Texas to overturn the results of the election. The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday declined to consider the case.
Schmidt said his office received more than 15,000 calls and emails urging him to get involved in the case.
βThe Supreme Court decided not to become involved in the 2020 election, and the courtβs decision means it is time to put this election behind us,β he said.
The Kansas Reflector seeks to increase people's awareness of how decisions made by elected representatives and other public servants affect our day-to-day lives. We hope to empower and inspire greater participation in democracy throughout Kansas.