Kansas' 4th Congressional District special election, 2017

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2018
2016

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Kansas' 4th Congressional District

General Election Date
April 11, 2017

Election Winner:
Ron Estes Republican Party
Incumbent prior to the election:
Mike Pompeo Republican Party
Mike Pompeo.jpg

Race Ratings[1]
Ballopedia: Lean R
Cook Political Report: Lean R[2]
Sabato's Crystal Ball: Likely R[3]
Rothenberg & Gonzales: R Favored[4]

2017-2018 Special Elections

Flag of Kansas.png

The 4th Congressional District of Kansas held a special election for the U.S. House of Representatives on April 11, 2017.[5][6]

This election was widely regarded in the initial stages as a "safe Republican" seat. With a week to go, however, it was downgraded by some election analysts such as Inside Elections/Roll Call from "solid Republican" to "likely Republican".[7] Ballotpedia changed its ranking in the days leading up to the election to a "Lean R" seat. Ron Estes (R) defeated James Thompson (D), and Chris Rockhold (L) in the general election on April 11, 2017. No primary elections were held in the race; the candidates were chosen at their respective party nominating conventions in February. The election replaced Mike Pompeo (R), who was selected as director of the CIA.[8][9][10] According to Kansas' voter affiliation records, Thompson was a registered Republican until March 2016.[11]

The election was the first congressional election to take place since Donald Trump's election to the presidency in November 2016. Trump's initial popularity in the District was evident. The President won the 4th District in 2016 by 27 percentage points. Pompeo pulled a margin of victory of 31.1 points in his final re-election bid. However, Governor Sam Brownback's (R) unpopularity across the state and an internal Republican poll in the final few days showing Estes ahead by one point signaled to Democrats and Republicans across the country that this race was closer than expected. Ultimately the race was closer than initially expected, with Estes winning by a margin of roughly seven percent.[12] The last time a Democrat was elected from Kansas' 4th Congressional District was in 1992.

Candidate Filing Deadline Primary Election General Election
N/A
N/A
April 11, 2017

Kansas' 4th Congressional District is located in southern Kansas and includes Barber, Butler, Chautauqua, Comanche, Cowley, Edwards, Elk, Greenwood, Harper, Harvey, Kingman, Kiowa, Pratt, Sedgwick, Stafford, and Sumner counties as well as a portion of Pawnee County. The largest city in the district is Wichita.[13]

Election results

U.S. House, Kansas District 4 Special Election, 2017
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngRon Estes 52.2% 64,044
     Democratic James Thompson 46% 56,435
     Libertarian Chris Rockhold 1.7% 2,115
Total Votes 122,594
Source: Kansas Secretary of State

Candidates

General election candidates:

Republican Party Ron Estes Approveda
Democratic Party James Thompson
Libertarian Party Chris Rockhold

Declared candidates:[14]

Democratic

Dennis McKinney - Former state rep.[15]
Charlie Walker[15]
Robert Tillman[15]
Jim Thompson[15][16] Approveda
Laura Lombard[15]

Republican

George Bruce - Attorney[17]
Pete Meitzner - Wichita City Council member[18]
Alan Cobb[19]
Todd Tiahrt - Former U.S. rep.[15]
Ron Estes - State treasurer[15][20] Approveda
Joseph Ashby - Conservative radio host[15]


Interest group involvement

As the race tightened in the final week before the election, outside groups became interested in contributing to the election:

  • April 8, 2017: The Daily Kos donated $143,000 to Thompson. [22]

Endorsements

Republican Party Ron Estes

  • President Donald Trump - Trump recorded a robocall on the day before the election, urging voters to support Estes.[24]
  • Sen. Ted Cruz - Cruz spoke at a rally supporting Estes on the same day.[24]
  • Vice-President Mike Pence - Pence also recorded robocalls in support of Estes.[24]
  • The Wichita Eagle[26]

Democratic Party James Thompson

  • Democracy for America[27]

Campaign contributions

Pre-Special

Heading into the election, Ron Estes (R) led James Thompson (D) in total fundraising. Estes raised $312,232 and had $110,099 cash on hand. Thompson trailed with contributions totaling $253,637 and $107,346 cash on hand.[28]

Full data for all candidates who filed with the FEC is displayed below.

Pre-Special FEC Report
Candidate Contributions Expenditures Cash on Hand
Republican Party Ron Estes $312,232 $202,133 $110,099
Democratic Party James Thompson $253,637 $146,290 $107,346

Campaign themes

Republican Party Ron Estes

The following issues were listed on Estes' campaign website. For a full list of campaign themes, click here.

  • Economic Growth: The 4th district has felt the pain inflicted by the Obama administration on our economy. Manufacturing jobs have disappeared and millions of Americans and many Kansans have left the labor force. As an engineer in the private sector, working in the aerospace industry and as former Sedgwick County Treasurer, I have seen firsthand what it takes to create jobs and the problems that occur when government gets in the way. I am committed to fighting to roll back the burdensome regulations and out of control spending that keep the economy from reaching its full potential. I will work for common-sense solutions that prioritize the American people over government red tape.
  • National Security: ISIS and Iran have been emboldened by the disastrous foreign policies of President Obama. Those who wish to do us harm have grown stronger as the Middle East continues to unravel. For the past eight years, the Obama administration has turned its back on our strongest ally in the region, Israel. The United States must play a leadership role in taking the fight to ISIS and exit the disastrous Iran deal. In addition, we must have better safeguards in place to prevent radical Islamic terrorists from gaining entry to our nation.
  • Health Care: Obamacare has failed our nation. Promise after promise has been broken. Democratic leaders promised us we could keep our health insurance plans. This was not true. We were told that Obamacare would lower premiums. Instead premiums and deductibles have skyrocketed. Skyrocketing premiums force families to choose between necessities or health care. That is wrong. Obamacare must be repealed. Families and individuals in the 4th district should be the primary voice in making their healthcare decisions, not unelected Washington bureaucrats. I support replacing Obamacare with a state based free market solution that gives each of us greater authority over our health care decisions.
  • ​​Defend Constitutional Rights and Religious Liberties: I will never support the Federal Government​ taking power further away from We the People. From our second amendment rights, to the education of our children, to our right to worship as we choose, our liberties must be protected from those who would use power to tell us what to believe and how we educate our children.
  • Taxes: Individuals in the private sector grow the economy, not the government. A simplified, fairer, flatter tax code free of ad-hoc deductions and tax breaks will relieve the burden placed on American families and reign in the power of the IRS bureaucracy. Rolling back this authority and reforming our tax code will transfer power from the IRS bureaucrats back to the taxpayers.[29]
Ron Estes' campaign website

Democratic Party James Thompson

The following issues were listed on Thompson's campaign website. For a full list of campaign themes, click here.

  • Fighting For Jobs And Education: James knows that he could only escape the difficult circumstances of his childhood through a good education and a job that pays a livable wage. That's why a core focus of his campaign is to provide opportunity to all citizens of the Fourth District, especially struggling working class Kansans. So often the debate centers around growing the middle class or catering to the upper class, while those as the bottom of the income scale are nearly forgotten. No more: James believes in helping to improve the lives of folks up and down the socioeconomic ladder. That includes increasing the minimum wage and removing barriers to economic mobility for the working and middle class. As James' life demonstrates, access to affordable quality education can change a person's life. Education is a pathway to the middle class.
  • Fighting For Our Veterans: There's a saying about our veterans: they signed a blank check to the United States of America, with payment up to and including their lives. Our men and women in uniform put it all on the line for our nation, and it's our duty to protect them and honor their sacrifices when they get home.
  • Fighting For Our Constitution: James believes in the Constitution. As a civil rights attorney, James fights every day for the Constitutional rights of his clients, be they infringed from profiling or excessive force, or enforced inequalities. James is a staunch defender of the Bill of Rights, and that includes the right to bear arms as defined in the Second Amendment.
  • Fighting For Our Rural Way Of Life: James knows our rural communities are the backbone of the Kansas economy, and our rural way of life is under attack. We need to invest in our rural communities, making sure our family farmers can get products to market. We need targeted trade agreements that benefit Kansas’ agricultural role in the global market. Too many Kansas farmers can't move their product because of bad trade deals and lack of access to quality infrastructure. This is a problem that is hurting rural Kansas, and it can be fixed, but it takes leadership to fix it.
  • Fighting For Firm, Fair Immigration Policies: Immigrants want what we all want: to work hard, play by the rules, and achieve the American Dream. We need to build a firm, fair, inclusive system that encourages the best and brightest to live, work, and raise families in Kansas. We need to discourage illegal activity while protecting the Constitutional rights of those who live among us. We must reward those families who have served our nation through military service with special consideration for citizenship. And we must continue to be a a safe harbor for refugees whose lives are threatened by evil in our world.[29]
James Thompson's campaign website

Libertarian Party Chris Rockhold

The following issues were listed on Rockhold's campaign website. For a full list of campaign themes, click here.

  • Better Government: It’s imperative that our government is completely and totally transparent. That includes the Federal reserve. It will by my mission to ensure the Fed is audited and its daily operations are no longer behind closed doors. The government also has a mountain of regulations and far too many redundant agencies. It’s time we reduce the size of government spending and balance the federal budget. Lastly, we lock way too many people up for victimless crimes. I believe in the presumption of innocence. It is the burden of the state to prove harm was caused by your actions, or inaction.
  • Budget Reform: Privatizing or abolishing a majority of the federal agencies will allow us to easily balance the budget, reduce federal overreach and ensure a prosperous future for Kansans. We must also begin to reduce the out of control and completely unstable national debt, but balancing the budget is only the first step. We must act now to ensure we have a prosperous future.
  • Tax Simplification: To put it into perspective, the IRS has such a complicated tax code that H&R Block felt it was necessary to use IBM’s Watson, the supercomputer, to help its clients complete their taxes. It will be my mission to not just simplify the tax code, but also abolish the IRS. Kansans shouldn’t feel like they are forced to pay for things they don’t believe in. The most powerful tool our citizens have against a corrupt government is taking away its funding.[29]
Chris Rockhold's campaign website

Media

Republican Party Ron Estes

"Your Vote Counts" - Estes' first campaign ad, released March 23, 2017

Democratic Party James Thompson

"Fighter" - Thompson's first campaign ad, released March 28, 2017

Special elections to the 115th U.S. Congress

See also: Special elections to the 115th United States Congress (2017-2018)

In the 17 special elections called to fill vacancies in the 115th Congress in 2017 and 2018, nine Republicans and eight Democrats won. Four elections resulted in a partisan flip:


Results of special elections to the 115th Congress
Race Election date Incumbent Winner Election MOV Previous election MOV 2016 Presidential election MOV[30]
Kansas' 4th Congressional District April 11, 2017 Republican Party Mike Pompeo Republican Party Ron Estes R+6 R+31 R+27
Montana's At-Large Congressional District May 25, 2017 Republican Party Ryan Zinke Republican Party Greg Gianforte R+6 R+15 R+21
California's 34th Congressional District June 6, 2017 Democratic Party Xavier Becerra Democratic Party Jimmy Gomez D+18[31] D+54[31] D+73
Georgia's 6th Congressional District June 20, 2017 Republican Party Tom Price Republican Party Karen Handel R+4 R+24 R+1
South Carolina's 5th Congressional District June 20, 2017 Republican Party Mick Mulvaney Republican Party Ralph Norman R+3 R+20 R+18
Utah's 3rd Congressional District November 7, 2017 Republican Party Jason Chaffetz Republican Party John Curtis R+32 R+47 R+24
U.S. Senate in Alabama December 12, 2017 Republican Party Jeff Sessions Democratic Party Doug Jones D+2 R+28 R+28
Pennsylvania's 18th Congressional District March 13, 2018 Republican Party Tim Murphy Democratic Party Conor Lamb D+0[32] R+100 R+19
Arizona's 8th Congressional District April 24, 2018 Republican Party Trent Franks Republican Party Debbie Lesko R+6 R+38 R+21
Texas' 27th Congressional District June 30, 2018 Republican Party Blake Farenthold Republican Party Michael Cloud R+23 R+24 R+23
Ohio's 12th Congressional District August 7, 2018 Republican Party Patrick Tiberi Republican Party Troy Balderson R+1 R+40 R+11
Michigan's 13th Congressional District November 6, 2018 Democratic Party John Conyers Jr. Democratic Party Brenda Jones D+78 D+61 D+61
U.S. Senate in Minnesota November 6, 2018 Democratic Party Al Franken Democratic Party Tina Smith D+11 D+10 D+2
U.S. Senate in Mississippi November 6, 2018 Republican Party Thad Cochran Republican Party Cindy Hyde-Smith R+8 R+22 R+18
New York's 25th Congressional District November 6, 2018 Democratic Party Louise Slaughter Democratic Party Joseph Morelle D+16 D+12 D+16
Pennsylvania's 7th Congressional District November 6, 2018 Republican Party Patrick Meehan Democratic Party Mary Gay Scanlon D+6 R+19 D+2
Pennsylvania's 15th Congressional District November 6, 2018 Republican Party Charlie Dent Democratic Party Susan Wild D+0 R+20 R+8


District history

2016

See also: Kansas' 4th Congressional District election, 2016

Heading into the election, Ballotpedia rated this race as safely Republican. Incumbent Mike Pompeo (R) defeated Daniel Giroux (D), Gordon Bakken (L), and Miranda Allen (I) in the general election on November 8, 2016. Pompeo faced no primary challenger, while Giroux defeated Robert Leon Tillman in the Democratic primary. The primary elections took place on August 2, 2016.[33][34]

U.S. House, Kansas District 4 General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngMike Pompeo Incumbent 60.7% 166,998
     Democratic Daniel Giroux 29.6% 81,495
     Independent Miranda Allen 6.9% 19,021
     Libertarian Gordon Bakken 2.8% 7,737
Total Votes 275,251
Source: Kansas Secretary of State


U.S. House, Kansas District 4 Democratic Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Giroux 51.5% 9,489
Robert Leon Tillman 48.5% 8,936
Total Votes 18,425
Source: Kansas Secretary of State

2014

See also: Kansas' 4th Congressional District elections, 2014

The 4th Congressional District of Kansas held an election for the U.S. House of Representatives on November 4, 2014. Mike Pompeo (R) defeated Perry Schuckman (D) in the general election.

U.S. House, Kansas District 4 General Election, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngMike Pompeo Incumbent 67% 138,757
     Democratic Perry Schuckman 33% 69,396
Total Votes 208,153
Source: Kansas Secretary of State

See also

Footnotes

  1. Race ratings from outside sources are their initial ratings for the 2018 election.
  2. Cook Political Report, "2018 House Race Ratings for April 10, 2017," accessed April 11, 2017
  3. Sabato's Crystal Ball, "Initial 2018 House Ratings," accessed April 11, 2017
  4. Rothenberg & Gonzales Political Report, "House Ratings," accessed April 11, 2017
  5. KWCH.com, "KS governor schedules special election to replace Pompeo in Congress," January 25, 2017
  6. The Wichita Eagle, "Pompeo confirmed; mission now is mending bridges between CIA, Trump," January 23, 2017
  7. Hotair, "Kansas closely watched today in first special election under Trump", April 11, 2017
  8. The Wichita Eagle, "Lawyer James Thompson wins Democratic nomination for Congress," February 11, 2017
  9. KSN.com, "Kansas Libertarians nominate Chris Rockhold for 4th district seat," February 11, 2017
  10. KWCH 12, "Ron Estes nominated as GOP candidate for 4th district seat," February 9, 2017
  11. This information was obtained by Ballotpedia through a phone call to the Sedgwick County Election Office and speaking with Melanie Callaway
  12. Kansas City Star, "Republicans sweat surprisingly close Kansas congressional race," April 10, 2017
  13. Kansas Redistricting Map, "Map," accessed August 30, 2012
  14. Candidates are listed by party and alphabetically within each party.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 The Wichita Eagle, "Here’s the latest on who’s running for Pompeo’s seat in Congress," January 24, 2017
  16. The Wichita Eagle, "Lawyer James Thompson wins Democratic nomination for Congress," February 11, 2017
  17. The Wichita Eagle, "Wichita lawyer George Bruce announces run for Congress," January 10, 2017
  18. The Wichita Eagle, "Wichita council member Pete Meitzner to run for Pompeo’s seat," January 12, 2017
  19. Politico, "Mini-Trumps look to replicate electoral success," January 25, 2017
  20. KWCH 12, "Ron Estes nominated as GOP candidate for 4th district seat," February 9, 2017
  21. Roll Call, "Trump Steps Into Closer-Than-Expected Kansas Special Election," April 11, 2017
  22. The Huffington Post, "Democratic Voters Pour Cash Into Kansas Special Election While National Party Stays Away," accessed April 11, 2017
  23. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/in-kansas-a-close-congressional-race-surprises-republicans/2017/04/10/8f0085e8-1e05-11e7-ad74-3a742a6e93a7_story.html?utm_term=.42bbdbad405d The Washington Post, " Republicans undertake unexpected rescue mission in deep red Kansas," accessed April 11, 2017]
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 The Hill, "Republicans scramble to hold Kansas seat," April 11, 2017
  25. Friends of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, "Endorsed: Ron Estes for Kansas 4," April 11, 2017
  26. The Wichita Eagle, "Endorsement," March 31, 2017
  27. Roll Call, "DFA Endorses Democrats in Kansas, Montana Uphill Races," March 29, 2017
  28. All campaign finance data was obtained from the Federal Election Commission
  29. 29.0 29.1 29.2 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  30. Daily Kos, "2008, 2012, & 2016 Presidential Election Results by District," accessed July 11, 2018
  31. 31.0 31.1 Both general election candidates were Democrats.
  32. Lamb won by a margin of 0.4 percentage points.
  33. Kansas Secretary of State, "Candidates for the 2016 Primary," accessed June 2, 2016
  34. Politico, "Kansas House Primaries Results," August 2, 2016


Senators
Representatives
District 1
District 2
District 3
District 4
Ron Estes (R)
Republican Party (5)
Democratic Party (1)