2012 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas explained

Election Name:2012 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas
Country:Kansas
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2010 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas
Previous Year:2010
Next Election:2014 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas
Next Year:2014
Seats For Election:All 4 Kansas seats to the United States House of Representatives
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Last Election1:4
Seats1:4
Popular Vote1:740,981
Percentage1:70.05%
Swing1: 6.84%
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Last Election2:0
Seats2:0
Popular Vote2:195,505
Percentage2:18.48%
Swing2: 14.43%
Party3:Libertarian Party (United States)
Last Election3:0
Seats3:0
Popular Vote3:121,253
Percentage3:11.46%
Swing3: 8.18%

The 2012 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas were held on Tuesday, November 6, 2012, to elect the four U.S. representatives from the state of Kansas. The elections coincided with the elections of other federal and state offices, including a quadrennial presidential election.

Overview

United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas, 2012[1]
PartyVotesPercentageSeats+/–
Republican740,98170.05%4-
Democratic195,50518.48%0-
Libertarian121,25311.46%0-
Totals1,057,739100.00%4

Redistricting

The 2010 United States census reflected a shift of population "primarily from rural western and northern Kansas to urban and suburban areas in the eastern part of the state."

In spite of Republican political control of the governor's office, the state senate, the state house, and the entire U.S. Congressional delegation, redistricting had to be decided by a federal court. To decide the case, a three-judge panel was appointed by Mary Beck Briscoe, the chief judge of the Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit: Briscoe appointed herself, along with two judges from the District Court for Kansas: Chief District Judge Kathryn Hoefer Vratil, and District Judge John Watson Lungstrum.

According to the Court:

While legislators publicly demurred that they had done the best they could, the impasseresulted from a bitter ideological feud - largely over new Senate districts. The feud primarily pitted GOP moderates against their more conservative GOP colleagues. Failing consensus, the process degenerated into blatant efforts to gerrymander various districts for ideological political advantage and to serve the political ambitions of various legislators.

Once redistricting was finalized in federal court, primary elections were held on August 7, 2012.[2]

District 1

See also: Kansas's 1st congressional district. The redrawn 1st district will continue to encompass all or parts of 62 counties in western and central Kansas, and also taking in a sliver of the Flint Hills region. The district will now also include Pottawatomie and Riley counties, including Manhattan and Kansas State University, but will no longer include Barber, Comanche, Edwards, Kiowa, Pratt, and Stafford counties, and parts of Greenwood, Marshall, Nemaha, and Pawnee counties.[3]

Republican Tim Huelskamp, who has represented the 1st district since 2011, ran for re-election.[4] Huelskamp ran without challengers from any party.[5]

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Primary results

General election

Results

District 2

See also: Kansas's 2nd congressional district. The redrawn 2nd district will continue to encompass Allen, Anderson, Atchison, Bourbon, Brown, Cherokee, Coffey, Crawford, Doniphan, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson, Labette, Leavenworth, Linn, Neosho, Osage, Shawnee, Wilson, and Woodson, and parts of Douglas, Miami, and Nemaha counties. The district will now also include Montgomery County, parts of Marshall County, and the remainder of Douglas and Nemaha counties, but will no longer include Pottawatomie, Riley, and parts of Miami counties.[3] The district lost Kansas State University to the first district, but gained the state's other major college, the University of Kansas.

Republican Lynn Jenkins, who has represented the 2nd district since 2009, is running for re-election.[4]

Dennis Hawver is running as the Libertarian nominee.[6]

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominee
Eliminated in primary

Primary results

General election

Results

External links

District 3

See also: Kansas's 3rd congressional district. The redrawn 3rd district will continue to encompass Johnson and Wyandotte counties. The district will now also include the northeastern part of Miami County, but will no longer include the eastern part of Douglas County.[3]

Republican Kevin Yoder, who has represented the 3rd district since 2011, is running for re-election.[4] Joel Balam, a college professor, ran as the Libertarian nominee. Even though he lost, Balam's 31.5% set a new record for the highest percentage a Libertarian candidate ever received in any U.S. House election, mostly because Yoder had no Democratic opponent running against him.[11] [12]

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Primary results

General election

Results

District 4

See also: Kansas's 4th congressional district. The redrawn 4th district will continue to encompass Butler, Chautauqua, Cowley, Elk, Harper, Harvey, Kingman, Sedgwick, and Sumner counties, as well as the southern part of Greenwood county. The district will now also include Barber, Comanche, Edwards, Kiowa, Pratt, and Stafford counties, the remainder of Greenwood County, and the southwestern part of Pawnee County, but will no longer include Montgomery County.[3]

Republican Mike Pompeo, who has represented the 4th district since 2011, is running for re-election.[4] Thomas Jefferson, a computer technician formerly known as Jack Talbert, is running as the Libertarian nominee.[13]

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Primary results

Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominee
Eliminated in primary

Primary results

General election

Results

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statistics of the Presidential and Congressional Election of November 6, 2012. Karen L. Haas. 2013. Washington, DC. clerk.house.gov.
  2. Web site: 2012 Election Calendar. March 24, 2012. Office of the Kansas Secretary of State.
  3. Web site: State of Kansas with 2002 Overlay. June 15, 2012. U.S. District Court-District of Kansas. https://web.archive.org/web/20120619024156/http://redistricting.ks.gov/_Plans/District_Court/m5_district%20court%20-%20congressional/02-m5_districtcourt-congress-02overlay.PDF. June 19, 2012. dead.
  4. Web site: Redistricting delays favor incumbents. April 17, 2012 . May 24, 2012. The Topeka Capital-Journal. Tim. Carpenter. https://web.archive.org/web/20120422171217/http://cjonline.com/news/state/2012-04-17/redistricting-delays-favor-incumbents. 22 April 2012 . dead.
  5. Web site: No challengers for Huelskamp in 1st District. June 11, 2012. June 13, 2012. The Hutchinson News. Mary. Clarkin. https://archive.today/20130126134546/http://hutchnews.com/Localregional/Huelskamp-and-race--3. January 26, 2013. dead. mdy-all.
  6. Web site: Jenkins makes pitch to local tea party. July 20, 2012. October 6, 2012 . The Topeka Capital-Journal. Andy. Marso.
  7. Web site: Schlingensiepen over Eye in Democratic battle in Congressional District 2; will now face Jenkins. August 7, 2012. October 6, 2012. Lawrence Journal-World. Scott. Rothschild.
  8. Web site: Scott Rothschild . 3 Democrats vying for chance to challenge U.S. Rep. Lynn Jenkins . Lawrence Journal-World . 13 February 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120803005809/http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2012/jul/28/3-democrats-vying-chance-challenge-us-rep-lynn-jen/ . 3 August 2012 . 28 July 2012.
  9. Web site: 2 Kan. Republicans seek re-election to Congress. June 5, 2012. June 8, 2012. Associated Press. The El Dorado Times.
  10. Web site: Deadline causes filing scramble. https://archive.today/20130125161854/http://hutchnews.com/todaystop/A1--filings-COPY. dead. January 25, 2013. June 11, 2012. June 13, 2012. Associated Press. The Hutchinson News. John. Hanna.
  11. Web site: Coast is clear for Yoder in Kansas' 3rd District. June 12, 2012. June 13, 2012. The Kansas City Star. Dave. Helling.
  12. Web site: Kevin Yoder, Kansas Congressman, Likely To Survive Skinny-Dipping Scandal. August 20, 2012. October 6, 2012. The Huffington Post. John. Celock.
  13. Web site: House hopeful changes name to Thomas Jefferson. July 23, 2012. October 6, 2012. The Topeka Capital-Journal. Andy. Marso.