The Great Bend, Kansas, native is currently serving his second term as the state's top election official. If elected in 2026, Schwab said he would work to lower property taxes and help rural communities that are falling behind.
AP calls Kansas House District 3 for Sharice Davids. Nov 5 • 11:13 PM ET AP calls Kansas House District 2 for Derek Schmidt. Nov 5 • 11:03 PM ET AP calls Kansas House District 4 for Ron Estes.
The Kansas Attorney General’s Office blocked school bond funding for Greely County after it broke state law by not posting an election notification on a county-owned website. Greely County doesn’t have a website. If passed, Senate Bill 2 would get the school district its money so it can make improvements.
Republicans made claims about illegal voting by noncitizens a centerpiece of their 2024 campaign messaging and plan to push legislation in the new Congress requiring voters to provide proof of U.S. citizenship.
A western Kansas school district faces a multimillion-dollar setback after the state rejects its school bond proposal, despite voters approving it.
Nov 5 • 9:00 PM ET Fox News calls Kansas for Donald Trump ... to date with the most crucial states of the 2024 presidential election. Our editorial team has highlighted key races to watch ...
Two Republican Senate newcomers say the main reason they beat their Democratic incumbent opponents — and the reason behind the expanded Republican supermajorities in the Legislature — was constituents’ concerns about taxes.
Kansas provides a cautionary tale about how pursuing an election concern that in fact is extremely rare risks disenfranchising a far greater number of people who are legally entitled to vote.
The state’s top election official spent the last six years responsibly overseeing elections, and isn’t leaning into the culture wars. | Opinion
Secretary of State Scott Schwab spotlighted his 2025 legislative agenda fewer than 24 hours before announcing a bid for Kansas governor, with proposals to update old laws and systems and add new election laws,
Emboldened Republicans have vowed to slash property taxes, setting up a clash with Gov. Laura Kelly over whether Kansas can afford another round of cuts.