Wednesday, November 10, 2004

Why Kris Kobach Lost

Disclaimer: Dennis Moore is not a good representative for the Kansas 3rd Congressional District and should be replaced. I was involved in the Johnson County Republican Party's Dennis Moore Watch Project during from 2002 until this week, I know Dennis Moore's record, and that is why I believe the opportunity Kansas Republicans wasted this election cycle is especially disappointing.

Regardless, the explanations for Kris Kobach's loss have begun, and I want to throw in my two cents.

First we must understand that Kobach's loss was much different and much worse than any previous Republican loss against Dennis Moore. Here are numbers for the previous three KS-3 Congressional races (Johnson County only):

2000
BUSH & CHENEY REPUBLICAN......129,965........59.6%
PHILL KLINE REPUBLICAN............111,184........52.1%
DENNIS MOORE DEMOCRATIC.........95,831........44.9%

2002
ADAM TAFF R................................88,146........52.89%
DENNIS MOORE D..........................73,581........44.15%

2004
BUSH AND CHENEY R...................153,718......61.10%
SAMUEL D BROWNBACK R............157,992.....64.84%
KRIS KOBACH R.............................119,156.....48.02%
DENNIS MOORE D..........................124,550.....50.20%

In the end, Kris Kobach lost to Dennis Moore 44%-55%, an eleven point loss, significantly larger than the 2002, 2000 races or even Vince Snowbarger's 1998 race. Possibly the most telling statistic is that more than 33,000 people, in Johnson County alone, chose to vote for President Bush, and not vote for Kris Kobach, 15,000 more than 2000.

There are three reasons that I have read and or heard in the past couple of days for Kobach's loss: first, Kobach was too conservative. Second, the Republican Party was divided, and third, Moore's campaign unfairly ran ads alleging Kobach is a racist. All three have some validity, but all three miss the point to some extent.

Is Kobach too conservative? Maybe, but that isn't why he lost. True, Kobach took some pretty far out positions including an aggressive anti-immigrant stance that probably pushed away more voter than it brought in. However, Bush won 61% of the vote in '04 and Bush is kind of conservative, even more telling, Brownback got almost 65% of the vote, he is very conservative. I find it hard to believe that someone would vote against Kobach because he is too conservative, and then vote for Brownback. Sure, Taff did better than Kline or Kobach, but strong numbers for Bush and Brownback seem to indicate JoCo voters are willing to vote for conservatives, if they are the right conservatives.

Is the Republican Party too divided? Yes, but while that provides some explanation of Moore's success, it does not explain why he won Johnson County for the first time, nor does it explain his increased margin of victory this year.

In 2000, only two years after State Party Chairman David Miller challenged sitting governor Bill Graves in the most divisive Kansas election in recent memory, Kline, possibly the best known and most polarizing figure in Kansas politics, ran a tough primary against moderate Greg Musil. However, during the general election the party came together enough for Kline to give Moore an extremely close race and to win in JoCo with 52% of the vote. That is 4% more of the vote than Kobach got in '04 even though President Bush did better here in '04 than in '00. So while the party is divided, it was just as divided in 2000, but the race was much closer.

Is it because Moore called Kobach a racist? Maybe, but Moore called Kline all kinds of nasty things. I can't find copies of Moore's 2000 campaign materials, but trust me, they were nasty.

It doesn't help matters that Kobach was hired by FAIR, widely perceived as a racist, anti-immigrant group, DURING THE CAMPAIGN. Aligning yourself with groups most people perceive as racist is a bad idea any time, but an especially bad idea while you are running for Congress.

The point is that Kline and Taff both beat Moore by similar margins, and Bush and Brownback are winning by huge margins, so I think it is safe to look for a Kobach specific cause.

Kris Kobach ran an absolutely vicious primary campaign, worse than any of the previous primary campaigns, and remarkably one-sided. He called Adam Taff "ultra-liberal", he had Kansans for Life send out a letter saying that people who vote for Taff have the bloody water of abortionists on their hands, even though Taff supported restrictions on abortion. Kobach called the President's immigration plan a "liberal amnesty plan", Kobach sent out a letter from his wife that said Adam Taff made her think of her miscarried baby when he criticized Kobach, Kobach basically insulted everyone who was even a little less conservative than he was. That made a lot of people angry. I don't think most Republicans expect to be compared to Hillary Clinton and Ted Kennedy, or told that their views are ultra-liberal, they tend to take offense to that kind of thing and they don't tend to forget it.

During both the primary and general election Kris Kobach acted like a child, insulting people, calling anything he disagreed with "absurd" calling his opponent "utterly ignorant". People couldn't believe the things he did during public debates, his behavior was shocking. He insisted on calling State Representative Patricia Lightner "Trish" in public and to her face. He just didn't understand how adults act in public, he didn't show any kind of respect for his opponents and people took notice. People who were not involved in the primary were taken aback by his behavior during his debates with Dennis Moore, people want a Congressman who knows how to act civil.

A lot of people voted for Kobach because they believed in part of his message, or because they believe in the conservative movement, a lot of people voted for the Republican Party, a lot of people know Moore is a bad representative. But a lot of people couldn't get past the insults during the primary, they remembered how Kobach talked to and about people like them, Adam Taff, Jan Meyers, George Bush and Dennis Hastert and just couldn't vote for him. Kris Kobach divided the Republican Party and then made no effort to bring it together in the general.

The big three reasons are part of why Kobach lost, but the real reason is Kris Kobach and how he ran his campaign. It isn't fair to hide behind division, or to blame good people who just couldn't get on board with the way Kobach was running his race. This loss is not one to lay at the feet of the Republican Party, the blame shouldn't go to the party's moderates, or the good, hardworking people who really believe in the conservative cause. Moderates don't deserve to be called RINOs and good conservatives shouldn't have their views and candidates marginalized because they are "too conservative for the district" because of this race.

The blame for this loss belongs to one man, Kris Kobach. His conduct, his words, his actions are the reason Dennis Moore will be our Congressman for the next two years, and a Republican will not.

This race was not the end of opposition to Dennis Moore, but it will make it much more difficult to beat him. It will take an extremely strong candidate who can draw support from the entire party, and from unaffiliated voters. This race will probably mean that the RNC will be very reluctant to spend more money fighting Dennis Moore. This should be a wake up call for all Republicans, we must do better.

I have talked with a lot of people about this race, and I look forward to reading what my readers, both those who agree and those who do not, have to say in the comment section. This is the time to build a stronger Republican party, and I hope this helps us look at our weaknesses and fix them.

Timothy Burger

8 Comments:

At 7:52 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Outstanding analysis Tim. Kobach deserves all the blame for the 2004 disaster. He ran the worst campaign in the history of Kansas politics. He has forever given conservatives in Kansas a bad name. Kobach's campaign had me wishing for Snowbarger!

 
At 11:07 PM, Blogger Jessica Adkison said...

Tim,

Excellent analysis. I could not agree with you more. The primary was beyond nasty and most of all the accusations made by Kobach were divisive to the party. I wish I could see our fellow Kansas Republicans unite together during tough elections like this one. However, I fear now that we are more divided than ever before.

Jessica Adkison

 
At 4:26 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Any thoughts on the changing demographics of Johnson County and how that impacted the race? The county is becoming much more urban, especially the northeast area, which can boost moderate Republicans and Democrats. Seems like perhaps the Kansas Republican party is having trouble hanging onto the inner suburbs where moderate Republicans are increasingly less concerned about gays and abortion and more worried about education, economic development, and infrastructure.

Last month The Star did a big analysis of campaign contributions and zip codes. They found that at the northeastern Joco had flipped over and was giving more money to Democrats and Republicans - especially along the State Line Road corridor in Mission Hills and northern Leawood. This mirrored the trend on the other side in the Ward Parkway corridor, South Plaza, and Sunset Hill. Meanwhile, outer suburbs and new exurbs where very pro-Republican in their political giving.

BlogKC
http://blogkc.com

 
At 6:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Where did the McFarland Post go?

 
At 11:12 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I consider Kris to be a friend of mine. He has spoken to our civic club several times and has done an excellent job each time. Your analysis is pretty much on target as far as campaign was concerned. I have a number of friends that vote Republican and supported Taff. I do not think a single one of my friends choose to change and vote for Kris. I do think that our Congress would have been improved with the election of Kris. I will never vote for Moore for any reason and he knows that personally from me. The Johnson County voters voted for the better politician, not the best person for the job.

 
At 10:04 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dennis Moore tends to vote party-line, and not with the true ideals of the 3rd District of Kansas. That said, I am surprised that people didn't vote him O-U-T and somebody else in, like Kobach. I live out of the USA, so it is hard for me to keep tabs on local politics back home, and since I'm registered in Johnson County that is where I try to keep up. Unfortunately, I didn't keep up with the 3rd District GOP primary, so I can't comment on the mud-slinging there. I can, however, vouch for Vince Snowbarger: he was my professor my last year in college in a history class, and when he won the election to congress in `96, I was elated! I was stunned as anyone could be when he lost his seat to Moore two years later. Prof. Snowbarger was an excellent man and a great teacher. I think he'd have done a LOT better job than Moore has done if he'd been reelected. Anyway, there's my two yen's worht...

 
At 3:45 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

From the perspective of this liberal Democrat, I thought Kobach wasted a lot of time on the immigration issue which I view to be a peripheral issue at best in Kansas. The national polling data shows a lot of GOP voters care about immigration, but most of these voters live in border states.

Kobach's obsession with this issue and his attachment with FAIR allowed Moore an easy opportunity to clobber him with the racist label. Kobach was thus defined by his opponent, always a death knell for a rookie candidate.

The other issue Kobach really focused on was gay marriage. This was a winning issue for the GOP in Missouri and Ohio. However, when you're already defined as a racist it isn't a big leap to be labeled a bigot, too. Moore's position on gay marriage was fairly moderate as I recall.

Bottom line--moderates were uncomfortable with Kobach. And Kobach didn't tango his way out of it.

 
At 11:23 PM, Blogger The GOP Maharishi said...

Any thoughts on who the GOP might put up to challenge Moore in 2006?

 

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