The 2026 election has the following races on the ballot:
Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, Senator, Congress, State House, Constitutional Amendments
Important Dates:
Tuesday, August 4: Primary Election
Tuesday, November 3: General Election
Kansas Governor: (4 Year Term)
Cindy Holscher Ethan Corson Marty Tuley
United States Senator: (6 Year Term)
Christy Davis Sandy Spidel Neumann
Patrick Schmidt Michael Soetart
Kansas Attorney General: (4 Year Term)
Kansas Secretary of State (4 Year Term)
Kansas Insurance Commissioner
First Congressional District
Colin McRoberts Lauren Reinhold
Second Congressional District
Kansas Representative
Henry Johns (District 5th District)
Why Vote NO: Our Courts are not for SALE. This constitutional amendment would turn judges into political candidates forced to raise money from outside special interests for their partisan political campaigns.
VOTE NO! A vote against this constitutional amendment would continue our proven fair, merit-based Kansas supreme court nominating commission. To fill a vacancy on the Kansas supreme court, this Nominating Commission provides the governor a choice among three throughly vetted individuals. Justices hold office for a term of six years and must retain their offices through nonpartisan elections in which they do not face an opponent.
Our Courts are not for sale.
We want good judges - not good politicans.
Keep politics out of the Supreme Court.
Justice should not be for sale to the highest bidder.
Keep dark money out of our courts.
Our current merit-based system has worked extremely well over seven decades.
Our constitutional repoductive rights, required adequate funding of our public schools, and fair elections must be protected.
A "YES" vote would abolish the current merit-based Kansas supreme court nominating commission. Judges would then be forced to become partisan candidates raising money from outside special interest groups.
Our courts would then be up for sale.
Our courts would judge cases influenced by their campaign funders.
Our courts would become influenced by partisan politics rather than the law.
You will get even more fundraising solicitations.
ORGANIZATIONS ADVOCATING VOTING NO
Douglas County Democratic Party
American Federation of Teachers-Kansas
ACLU of Kansas
Kansas Appleseed Center for Law and Justice
Kansas Association of School Boards
Kansas Bar Association
Kansas Women Attorneys Association
Loud Light Civic Action
Planned Parenthood Great Plains Votes
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
KANSAS INFORMATION NETWORK: OVERVIEW, HISTORY, CURRENT VS. PROPOSED PROCESS
Explanatory statement: The measure would amend Section 1 of Article 5 of the Kansas Constitution to specify that in order to vote in Kansas, individuals must be citizens, at least 18 years old, and a resident of the area in which the person is seeking to vote in. Currently, the constitution says, "Every citizen of the United States who has attained the age of eighteen years and who resides in the voting area in which he or she seeks to vote shall be deemed a qualified elector."
A "yes" vote supports amending the state constitution to state that only a citizen of the United States is eligible to vote.
A "no" vote opposes amending the state constitution to state that only a citizen of the United States is eligible to vote.
The amendment is opposed by the ACLU of Kansas, the League of Women Voters of Kansas, and Loud Light Civic Action. Rashane Hamby, director of policy and research for the ACLU of Kansas: "The language in HCR 5004 could be weaponized to justify a return to restrictive voter registration laws, as it explicitly conditions voter eligibility on U.S. citizenship, despite no evidence of noncitizen voting in Kansas elections. Furthermore, the amendment’s reference to "laws of this state relating to voting for presidential electors" could allow legislators to tighten residency requirements or impose further barriers under the pretense of aligning with federal law. ... This constitutional amendment changes the language of the Kansas constitution from the federal default standard promoting everyone one who fits the following criteria are able to vote, to only those who fit these criteria may vote. This subtle but dangerous distinction promotes voter suppression through its exclusionary tone, instead of inclusionary and default language." BALLOTPEDIA
US Senators: Jerry Moran (R) & Roger Marshall (R)
US Representatives: Derek Schmidt (R) (2nd District)
Kansas Governor: Laura Kelly (D)
Kansas Senator:Beverly Gossage (R) (9th District)
Kansas Representative: Carrie Barth (R) (5th District)
Kansas Board of Education: Connie O’Brien (R) (District 4)
County Commissioners, County Officials, City Council, School Board, and Township
Sample ballots are typically available 45 days prior to an election.
You can view your sample ballot, when available, by accessing the Douglas County Sample Ballot webpage or the Kansas Secretary of State Voter View webpage.
View Voter Rights & Responsibilities (PDF) from the Kansas Secretary of State website.
The ACLU of Kansas website also features voter rights information.
View the Douglas County Precinct Map. On the map, click on the magnifying glass to search for your address and district.
Visit the elections page on the Kansas Secretary of State website or reach out to your precinct contacts.
The Douglas County Democrats value and work for:
Affordable Health Care for All
Funding Public Education
Fair Tax System
Living Wage
Protecting the Environment and Safeguarding our Climate
Diversity, Equal Rights, Human Dignity
Protecing Voting Rights
Transparent and Truthful Government