Stark differences between Kansas candidates, parties and decisions

The fates of Jeff Colyer and Curt Skoog say a lot about the state of the two parties. A single individual has almost complete control of Republicans while unaffiliated voters may determine the fate of Democrats’ nominee.

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Columnists

July 17, 2026 - 2:53 PM

Former Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer had his hat in the ring to seek the Republican nomination for governor this year until President Donald Trump gave state Senator Ty Masterson the nod.

Kenny Rogers famously sang, “You’ve got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em, know when to walk away, and know when to run.”  

This summer, two candidates for Kansas Governor made wildly different risk assessments. This not only tells us a lot about them, but also about their respective parties.

Former Gov. Jeff Colyer entered the race as a strong contender, maybe even front runner for the Republican nomination.  In the fall 2025 Kansas Speaks poll, Colyer had the highest name recognition of any gubernatorial candidate in either party.  

He started raising money and placing billboards along highways, featuring a photo of himself next to President Trump, quoting Trump saying that Colyer was “one helluva governor.”  

Then it ended. Just days after Trump endorsed outgoing state senate President Ty Masterson for governor, Colyer withdrew.  

Granted, Colyer already had one major liability — he served as Lieutenant Governor in the Sam Brownback administration, with its disastrous tax-cutting experiment.  

Yet Colyer carved his own, more prudent record for two years as governor, and could easily have run on his own record and name recognition.  

No matter. After Trump endorsed Masterson, Colyer folded.

Overland Park Mayor Curt Skoog is as bold and risk taking as Colyer is cautious.  

On June 1, the Democratic field was already set, with Johnson County state senators Ethan Corson and Cindy Holscher each barnstorming the state.  

Corson is framing himself as a moderate pragmatist in the vein of Gov. Laura Kelly, who endorsed him early.  

With the help of her daughter, Holscher is running as a more aggressive candidate, denouncing corporate giveaways, courting younger voters, and appearing in nontraditional social media.  

Then, all at once, Skoog came out of nowhere, filing for the Democratic nomination on June 1, just shy of the deadline. 

Skoog’s high-stakes gambit infuriated Kelly, who denounced his “last minute, thrown together” campaign.  

He didn’t even tell her he was running until a day or two beforehand. 

Skoog announced his entry into the race by saying he didn’t want Masterson to be governor, not only suggesting that the Republican race is already decided, but also implicitly dismissing Corson and Holscher’s chances.  

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