United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas, 2016

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2014

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2016 U.S. House Elections in Kansas

Primary Date
August 2, 2016

Partisan breakdownCandidates

Kansas District Pages
District 1District 2District 3District 4

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2016 U.S. Senate Elections

Flag of Kansas.png

The 2016 U.S. House of Representatives elections in Kansas took place on November 8, 2016. Voters elected 4 candidates to serve in the U.S. House, one from each of the state's 4 congressional districts.

Candidate Filing Deadline Primary Election General Election
June 1, 2016
August 2, 2016
November 8, 2016

Primary: A primary election is an election in which registered voters select a candidate that they believe should be a political party's candidate for elected office to run in the general election. They are also used to choose convention delegates and party leaders. Primaries are state-level and local-level elections that take place prior to a general election. Kansas utilizes a semi-closed primary process, in which previously unaffiliated voters can participate in the partisan primary of their choice (a voter who is already affiliated with a party can only vote in that party's primary).[1][2][3][4]

For information about which offices are nominated via primary election, see this article.



Partisan breakdown

Heading into the November 8 election, the Republican Party held all four of the congressional seats from Kansas.

Members of the U.S. House from Kansas -- Partisan Breakdown
Party As of November 2016 After the 2016 Election
     Democratic Party 0 0
     Republican Party 4 4
Total 4 4

Incumbents

Heading into the 2016 election, the incumbents for the four congressional districts were:

Name Party District
Tim Huelskamp Ends.png Republican 1
Lynn Jenkins Ends.png Republican 2
Kevin Yoder Ends.png Republican 3
Mike Pompeo Ends.png Republican 4

Margin of victory for winners

The following table shows the margin of victory for each district winner, which is calculated by examining the percentage difference between the two candidates who received the most votes. If the race was uncontested, the margin of victory is listed as 100 percent.

District Winner Margin of Victory Total Vote Top Opponent
District 1 Republican Party Roger Marshall 39.6% 257,971 Kerry Burt
District 2 Republican Party Lynn Jenkins 28.4% 297,401 Britani Potter
District 3 Republican Party Kevin Yoder 10.7% 343,113 Jay Sidie
District 4 Republican Party Mike Pompeo 31.1% 275,251 Daniel Giroux

Candidates

Candidate ballot access
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Find detailed information on ballot access requirements in all 50 states and Washington, D.C.

District 1

General election candidates:

Republican Party Roger Marshall Approveda
Libertarian Party Kerry Burt
Grey.png Alan LaPolice

Primary candidates:[5]

Democratic

No Democratic candidates filed to run.

Republican

Tim Huelskamp - Incumbent[6]
Roger Marshall[7] Approveda

Third Party/Other

Kerry Burt (Libertarian)[8] Approveda
Alan LaPolice (Independent) - 2014 candidate[9][10] Approveda

District 2

General election candidates:

Republican Party Lynn Jenkins Approveda
Democratic Party Britani Potter
Libertarian Party James Houston Bales

Primary candidates:[5]

Democratic

Britani Potter[6] Approveda

Republican

Lynn Jenkins - Incumbent[6] Approveda

Third Party/Other

James Houston Bales (Libertarian)[8] Approveda

Withdrew:
James Pryor (D)[11]

District 3

General election candidates:

Republican Party Kevin Yoder Approveda
Democratic Party Jay Sidie
Libertarian Party Steve Hohe

Primary candidates:[5]

Democratic

Reggie Marselus[6]
Nathaniel McLaughlin[6]
Jay Sidie[12] Approveda

Republican

Kevin Yoder - Incumbent[6] Approveda
Greg Goode[6]

Third Party/Other

Steve Hohe (Libertarian)[8] Approveda

District 4

General election candidates:

Republican Party Mike Pompeo Approveda
Democratic Party Daniel Giroux
Libertarian Party Gordon Bakken
Grey.png Miranda Allen

Primary candidates:[5]

Democratic

Daniel Giroux - Attorney[13] Approveda
Robert Leon Tillman[6]

Republican

Mike Pompeo - Incumbent[6] Approveda

Third Party/Other

Gordon Bakken (Libertarian)[8] Approveda
Miranda Allen (Independent)[14] Approveda


Important dates and deadlines

See also: Kansas elections, 2016

The calendar below lists important dates for political candidates in Kansas in 2016.

Dates and requirements for candidates in 2016
Deadline Event type Event description
January 11, 2016 Campaign finance Report due covering January 1, 2015–December 31, 2015
June 1, 2016 Ballot access Candidate filing deadline for the primary election
July 25, 2016 Campaign finance Report due covering January 1, 2016–July 21, 2016
July 28, 2016 Campaign finance Report due for last minute contributions of $300 or more received between July 22, 2016, and July 27, 2016
August 1, 2016 Ballot access Candidate filing deadline for the general election
August 2, 2016 Election date Primary election
October 31, 2016 Campaign finance Report due covering July 22, 2016–October 27, 2016
November 3, 2016 Campaign finance Report due for last minute contributions of $300 or more received between October 28, 2016, and November 2, 2016
November 8, 2016 Election date General election
January 10, 2017 Campaign finance Report due covering October 28, 2016–December 21, 2016
Source: Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission, "2016 Election Cycle Reporting Periods and Due Dates for Campaign Finance Reports," updated April 21, 2015
Kansas Secretary of State, "2016 Election Information," accessed October 28, 2015

See also

External links

Footnotes


For information about public policy issues in the 2016 elections, see: Public policy in the 2016 elections!


Senators
Representatives
District 1
District 2
District 3
District 4
Ron Estes (R)
Republican Party (5)
Democratic Party (1)