This Is Not a Drill
President Trump Scores Another MAJOR Win
BRUTAL: Scott Bessent Just Bulldozed Janet Yellen
Watch This GOP Senator Cook the WSJ Over the Trump-Epstein Birthday Card Hoax
That Astronomer CEO's Coldplay Concert Fiasco Just Got Worse
Trust the Administration on the Epstein Files
Wall Street Journal Does Not Get a Birthday Scandal Wish, and a Fox...
Evil, Thy Name is Democratic Party
Coca-Cola Issues Statement After Trump Says the Company 'Agreed' to Use Cane Sugar
The Terrible Cost of 'Hipster' Socialism
At Least 30 Injured After Driver Rams Car into Crowd of People in...
'Onward': Heritage Foundation Founder Ed Feulner Dies, Leaves Legacy of Freedom and Faith
Is Ilhan Omar the New Standard-Bearer for Democrats?
What We Should Takeaway from DNI Gabbard’s Declassified Russia Hoax Documents
America’s Energy Mother Lode Is More Vital than Ever
Tipsheet

Kansas Supreme Court May Swing KS Senate Race

The national Democratic Party was celebrating this week after a ruling from the Kansas Supreme Court will allow the Democratic Party to remove its candidate from the race to represent Kansas in the U.S. Senate.
Advertisement

Chad Taylor, the Democratic Party nominee, is withdrawing from the race because of pressure from Democrats. Greg Orman, an "independent" candidate who has been a Democrat for his whole life, will for the time being be opposing incumbent Republican Sen. Pat Roberts with no Democrat on the ballot. (A Libertarian Party candidate is also in the running but polling poorly.)

Greg Orman will likely caucus with the Democratic Party in the Senate.

A poll from liberal outfit Public Policy Polling this week placed Orman with a ten-point lead in a head-to-head matchup with Roberts:

Orman leads Roberts 41-34, with Democrat Chad Taylor — who announced plans to end his campaign earlier this month — capturing 6 percent of the vote. Libertarian Randall Batson earned 4 percent support in the poll, which was first provided to the Huffington Post. The automated phone and online survey of 1,328 likely voters was taken between Sept. 11 and Sept. 14. The margin of error is plus-or-minus 2.7 percentage points.

In a head-to-head matchup, Orman’s lead grows to 10 percentage points, according to the poll.

Republican secretary of state Kris Kobach insists that Democrats must nominate a replacement candidate if Taylor is removed from the ballot, but that has not proven to be binding so far.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement