Politics & Government
Republican Marshall, Democrat Bollier Close Out Kansas Barn Burner For U.S. Senate
Out-of-state donations fuel record Kansas campaign with GOP control of Senate at stake.

By
Tim Carpenter - November 3, 2020

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They unexpectedly became featured players in the most expensive political contest in Kansas history. Campaign finance reports say they combined to raise at least $30.5 million. That would form a strip of $100 dollar bills laid end-to-end from Salina to Abilene, with several million dollars to spare. And the total excludes all the dark money pouring into the Kansas showdown, which became a second-tier thriller in the larger national struggle for operational control of the U.S. Senate.
All that cash bought the Kansas Republican and Democratic nominees a tidal waive of advertising and mailers. Some of the messaging was self-congratulatory, but the bulk was designed to attack and conquer. Bollier was effectively labeled an βabortion fanatic.β The idea was planted in votersβ minds Marshall was βdeceptiveβ and βgot caught lying.β Bollier was βextremeβ on gun control, while Marshall engaged in βshadyβ hospital investments. Bollier would be a puppet of socialists in Washington, D.C., and Marshall a hack for interests willing to harm Kansans by repealing the Affordable Care Act signed by President Barack Obama.
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The solid work and advocacy of the Mission Hills Democrat in the Kansas Legislature and of the Great Bend Republican in the U.S. House was lost amid all that shouting.
The toxic cloud got so thick folks rarely noticed a third person in the race, Libertarian Party nominee Jason Buckley. Heβs a U.S. Navy veteran who lives in Overland Park and works as an IT contractor in the banking industry. Heβll get a slice of the vote, perhaps several percentage points.
βI am running for Senate because I believe no other U.S. senator or Senate candidate has ever understood that the government belongs to people. And, we are not government property,β Buckley said. βThe purpose of government is to protect our rights. All people should be able to live their life however they choose as long as those choices donβt hurt others and donβt steal their property.β
Casting of votes in the Senate contest began in mid-October and comes to a close at 7 p.m. Tuesday. There will be an unofficial tally on election night, but final results wonβt be affirmed for days. Polling indicated a close race for the seat being vacated by retiring U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts. The Bollier and Marshall campaigns have weighed contingency plans if the margin was narrow. A Kansas recount is a possibility, especially if the balance of power in the U.S. Senate was still in play.
Such a competitive race for U.S. Senate in Kansas was inconceivable in 2016 after President Donald Trump dismantled Democrat Hillary Clinton by more than 20 percentage points. In the past 25 years, no Democratic Senate candidate in Kansas has surpassed 44% in the general election.
Bollierβs closing
Bollier, 62, anchored her campaign with a pledge to fight for better access to affordable health care and to continue her commitment to quality public education. She promised to be an independent voice in the U.S. Senate and work on a bipartisan basis with her colleagues. A Republican for four decades, Bollier changed her party affiliation to Democrat in 2018.
During the campaign, Bollier accused Marshall of running a private, for-profit hospital in Great Bend that contributed to closure of the communityβs nonprofit hospital. She accused Marshall of pushing legislation beneficial to his familyβs investment interests in health care rather than seeking bipartisan reforms to support rural hospitals. She said he sided with business and political interests keen to discriminate against the 400,000 Kansans with a pre-existing medical condition.

βKansas hasnβt elected a Democart to the Senate in 88 years,β said Bollier, who sought to be the first woman doctor elected to the U.S. Senate. βThis election, weβre not just making history. Weβre fighting for affordable health care, working toward unity and bringing along integrity.β
She didnβt complain relentlessly about Marshallβs affinity for Trump, given the GOP presidentβs standing in Kansas.
Former Republican U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum and former Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius endorsed Bollierβs campaign for the Senate.
βBarbara has the character, know how and compassion to represent all communities in our state,β Kassebaum said. βAbove all, Barbara shares my belief in working with members of both parties to solve problems and get things done. I believe achieving bipartisanship and cooperation in the U.S. Senate is still possible.β
Sebelius, who served as secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the Obama administration, said the U.S. Senate required people who understood and respected the science of public health.
βNot just to get through this pandemic, but to deal with climate change,β Sebelius said. βThere has never been a better time to have a candidate like Barbara Bollier.β
Bollier, who was elected to the Kansas House in 2010 and the Kansas Senate in 2016, had token opposition in the August primary. She raised an astonishing $13.5 million in the third quarter of 2020, and $24.4 million during her campaign for the Senate. In contrast, Marshallβs finance reports show he attracted $5.9 million in contributions for his Senate bid.
Marshallβs pitch
Marshall, 60, said Kansans would be mistaken to swallow the fiction of Bollier as a political moderate. He said the Democratic nominee would oppose conservative appointees to the U.S. Supreme Court, gave every indication she supported late-term abortions, would side with Democrats intent on raising taxes and would fall in line behind Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York.
Marshall, who has represented the largely rural 1st District in Congress since 2017, said Bollier was out of touch with common-sense Kansans. He pointed to her praise of strict Australian laws that forced owners of 700,000 guns to sell them to the government in the 1990s. He said she wasnβt capable of understanding needs of the dominant industry of agriculture.
βBarbara Bollier pretends to be a moderate, an independent,β Marshall said. βShe calls confiscating weapons an βamazing thing.β She believes and supports late-term abortion. She wants to give Supreme Court justices a religious test. Sheβs too extreme for Kansas.β

Marshall is intrinsically tied to Trump in terms of COVID-19 β mirroring the presidentβs views on wearing a mask during the pandemic, taking hydroxychloroquine to ward off the virus and urging businesses to stay open despite risk of a virus that has killed more than 1,000 Kansans. The presidentβs popularity has waned since 2016, but his coattails remain long. Thereβs little doubt Kansas will support Trumpβs re-election.
U.S. Sens. Jerry Moran and Roberts, both Repubicans, and former U.S. Sen. Robert Dole endorsed Marshallβs candidacy. Marshall survived a crowded GOP primary in August, with assistance from the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which openly sought to derail the campaign for Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. Marshall earned 40% of the primary vote while losing only one county west of Emporia and racking up a double-digit advantage in populous Sedgwick County.
βIt is more important than ever that Republicans maintain the majority in the U.S. Senate,β said Moran, a reflection of apprehension Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden could beat Trump. βA Republican Senate stands as a firewall to stop damaging liberal and socialist policies from becoming law.β
Dole, the 97-year-old native of Russell, began representing Kansans in Washington 60 years ago and was the GOPβs presidential nominee in 1996.
βI know Dr. Roger Marshall,β Dole said. βAnd I trust him. He will continue our stateβs proud tradition of common sense leadership and results. This race presents as clear a contrast as any Iβve seen.β
Roberts, who declined to seek re-election in 2020, offered this closing advice: βTake it from Bob, and vote for Roger.β
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