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Senate District 3. Sen. Rick Kloos, R-Berryton, reported $23,312 in receipts, $28,896 in disbursements and $41,065 cash on hand. Dena Sattler, D-Topeka, reported $21,780 in receipts, $18,120 in ...
The Kansas experiment was a name given to a controversial and widely noted tax-cutting policy/agenda of Kansas Governor Sam Brownback that began with Brownback signing a bill cutting state taxes (Kansas Senate Bill Substitute HB 2117), in May 2012, [1] [2] and ended with the Kansas legislature's repeal of the bill in June 2017.
Diagram by the Sunlight Foundation depicting the American campaign finance system. The financing of electoral campaigns in the United States happens at the federal, state, and local levels by contributions from individuals, corporations, political action committees, and sometimes the government. Campaign spending has risen steadily at least ...
The gradual Kansas food sales tax cut has its second installment on Jan. 1, cutting another 2% off the state sales tax on grocery food.
Auditor Josh Luthi told lawmakers Dec. 12 that so far, Panasonic has only used the sales tax exemption. But no one at the Kansas Department of Commerce or the Kansas Department of Revenue knows ...
The office also receives campaign finance reports and registers lobbyists. The duty of regulating lobbying and campaign finance is shared with the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission. The secretary was granted by the Kansas Legislature prosecutorial power in voter fraud cases and is the first and only secretary of state to hold that power. [3]
It is unclear whether Kansans will see substantive tax cuts in 2024 after the Senate failed to override Gov. Laura Kelly's veto of a big tax cut plan.
The Thompson campaign raised about $254,000 by the final campaign finance-reporting deadline, and over 97% was from individual donors—with a last-minute infusion of only $10,000 from the state party, reflecting a lack of support from his state party and national organizations. [5]