
Kansas GOP chair asks two candidates to drop out of Senate primary
Kansas Republican Party Chairman Mike Kuckelman asked former Johnson County Commissioner Dave Lindstrom and state Senate President Susan Wagle to drop out of the Aug. 4 Senate primary.
Kuckelman wrote, "Failure to suspend your campaign could negatively impact the outcome of the race — something we’ve seen in recent Kansas history — and could possibly cost Kansas Republicans the U.S. Senate seat." Kuckelman also wrote, "It is time to allow our Party to coalesce behind a candidate who will not only win, but will help Republicans down the ballot this November."
Wagle and Lindstrom said they won’t drop out.
Lindstrom said, "The polling information I have, it says that I can win." 
Wagle's campaign representative Matt Beynon said, "Private conversations with Mike Kuckelman over the past year have made it clear he’s been opposed to Susan’s campaign from the start, and today, he simply put that on paper. Others can speculate on his motives, but it may be as simple as he doesn’t support strong, pro-life conservative women."
University of Kansas Prof. Burdett Loomis said, "The chair is seeing what all attentive observers are seeing—that a fractured primary could well nominate Kobach, which would make the race a legit toss-up."
State party executive director Shannon Golden said the party wants a contest between Kris Kobach and U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall and that the party did not favor either candidate.
Kobach was Kansas' secretary of state from 2011 to 2019. He defeated incumbent Jeff Colyer in the 2018 gubernatorial primary and lost to Democrat Laura Kelly in the general election 43% to 48%. Marshall was first elected to the House in 2016.
Kobach said of Kuckelman's letters, "Grassroots Republicans should be outraged. Our next Senator will be chosen by the people of Kansas — not the party elites."
Marshall's campaign representative Eric Pahls said, "The last thing Kobach wants [is] a one-on-one race with Dr. Marshall. … While we can’t control what others do, we can keep working harder than anyone."
The state party did not send letters to the three other candidates in the race.
The Senate seat is open as incumbent Pat Roberts (R), in office since 1997, is retiring.
Chase, Herrell release opposition ads in NM-02
Former state Rep. Yvette Herrell and Claire Chase, director of government relations at Mack Energy Corporation, each released opposition TV ads in their race for the 2nd District Republican nomination.
Chase's ad calls Herrell a career politician, says she voted for a tax hike, and says she "undermined Trump's campaign." The ad cites an Associated Press article from March which quotes Herrell saying, "We saw a lack of leadership when we had the House and the Senate and the Administration ... We did absolutely nothing, and there are so many issues that could have been put to bed, that we could have addressed, that we haven't."
Herrell's campaign manager said, "Yvette meant exactly what she said in the interview: too many establishment Republicans in Washington refused to stand with President Trump and support his policies during his first two years in office."
Herrell's ad features a voice reading Chase's Facebook posts criticizing Trump during his presidential campaign. Quotes included, "Donald Trump’s an a**hole unworthy of the office of the President" and "836,297 reasons not to vote for him. #Dump Trump."
Chase said in February, "I'm going to say something politicians rarely say. I was wrong. … And I've been very pleased with President Trump and what he has done."
Mathys Properties owner Chris Mathys is also running in the June 2 primary.
Herrell was the 2nd District's Republican nominee in 2018. Xochitl Torres Small (D) defeated Herrell 50.9-49.1%. New Mexico's 2nd is one of 31 House districts the president won in 2016 and a Democratic House candidate won in 2018.
DeMint endorses Landing in SC-01
Former U.S. Senator and former Heritage Foundation president Jim DeMint (R) endorsed Mount Pleasant Town Councilmember Kathy Landing in South Carolina's 1st Congressional District GOP primary.
DeMint called Landing "the conservative candidate who can beat Joe Cunningham this fall." The House Freedom Fund also endorsed Landing.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) have endorsed state Rep. Nancy Mace in the June 9 primary. Club for Growth PAC also endorsed Mace.
Bikers for Trump co-founder Chris Cox and Lowcountry Affordable Housing Coalition chairman Brad Mole are also running.
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