Kansas GOP’s redistricting delay a small break for Rep. Davids

While the setback is good news, it may also play to Davids' disadvantage by giving her less time to mount a U.S. Senate campaign

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November 5, 2025 - 2:28 PM

Kansas Republicans have Rep. Sharice Davids's Congressional seat as their target. Republican legislators want to redraw the Democratic Congresswoman's 3rd District so that it has a more conservative constituency. Photo by Kylie Graham/Johnson County Post/Kansas News Service

There are no permanent victories — or losses — in politics. That’s the thing to keep in mind now that Kansas Republicans have given up (for now) on their dreams of stealing Sharice Davids’ seat in Congress. 

State House Speaker Dan Hawkins on Tuesday admitted Tuesday he wasn’t able to gather enough signatures from his members to force a special gerrymandering session of the Kansas Legislature. 

Honestly, it’s fantastic news. But it’s also only a reprieve. 

Because two months from now, legislators will gather in Topeka anyway for their annual regular session, and you can be sure Republicans will make another attempt at that point.

Senate President Ty Masterson — a GOP candidate for governor — promised as much on Tuesday. 

Kansas voters “expect their leaders to keep fighting for the America First agenda,” he said in a statement posted to X. 

Republicans in the Legislature are “not backing down, and we’re not sitting out of this fight.” 

We should believe him. 

Why the GOP might win this one 

Here’s the thing: A delay of two months might actually be beneficial to Republicans. 

Davids, after all, had threatened to run for the U.S. Senate against Roger Marshall next year if Republicans carve up her district to give their party an advantage. 

It’s clear she was serious. Politico reported this week that Davids met with Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff of California — a former House member — “to talk through the logistics of a Senate campaign and garner advice from a lawmaker who’s transitioned from the lower chamber.” 

Schiff, incidentally, is the No. 2 guy on the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, which recruits candidates and raises money to help them run. 

That means Davids’ talk of challenging Marshall was anything but idle.

Marshall would probably win that battle. Kansas Republicans always win Senate races. 

But Davids could probably give him a run for his money, enough to make life a little bit difficult for the national GOP as it figures out how to distribute its resources in 2026. 

A delay in the redistricting fight, though, means that the 2026 campaign could already be underway by the time Davids finds out her fate — and the fate of Johnson County voters who would be split up in any redistricting scheme. It would be too late to mount a credible run by then.

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