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Kansas, State Senate, District 21

Kansas State Senate District 21
Current incumbentDinah Sykes Democratic Party

Kansas' twenty-first state senate district is represented by Democratic Senator Dinah Sykes.

Kansas state senators represent an average of 71,328 residents. After the 2000 Census, each member represented 67,210 residents.

About the chamber

Members of the Kansas State Senate serve four-year terms and are not subject to term limits. Kansas legislators assume office the second Monday of January after their election.

Qualifications

Section 4 of Article 2 of the Kansas Constitution states, "During the time that any person is a candidate for nomination or election to the legislature and during the term of each legislator, such candidate or legislator shall be and remain a qualified elector who resides in his or her district."

Salaries

State legislators
SalaryPer diem
$88.66/day$144/day

Pension

As of 2011, when pensions are calculated for Kansas legislators, their normal annual salary is inflated by nearly $78,000. This is composed of $32,982, which comes from multiplying their daily salary by 372 (the number of days they would work if in session every day and if every month had 31 days), $45,756 from adding in their daily per diem (also based on 372 days), and $7,083 from expense payments. According to Sen. Steve Morris, this is intended as compensation because of low legislative salaries which are seen as difficult to raise.

Vacancies

The Governor is responsible for filling all vacancies in the senate.

The political party committee that last held the vacant seat must call for a convention within 21 days of the vacancy. The convention is designed to select the Governor's appointee and involves all the committeemen and committeewomen that represent the vacant senate district.

The committeemen and committeewomen present for voting must approve a replacement on a simple majority vote. Once the vote has been conducted, the party committee must send the paperwork certifying the selection to the Governor within 24 hours or the next business day. The Governor has seven days after receiving the paperwork to act on the appointment.

Elections

2016

Elections for the Kansas State Senate took place in 2016. The primary election was held on August 2, 2016, and the general election was held on November 8, 2016. The candidate filing deadline was June 1, 2016.

Dinah Sykes defeated Logan Heley and Michael Kerner in the Kansas State Senate District 21 general election.

Kansas State Senate, District 21 General Election, 2016

Party Candidate Vote % Votes
Republican Green check mark transparent.png Dinah Sykes 50.34% 18,149
Democratic Logan Heley 42.40% 15,287
Libertarian Michael Kerner 7.26% 2,617
Total Votes 36,053
Source: Kansas Secretary of State

Logan Heley defeated Michael Czerniewski in the Kansas State Senate District 21 Democratic primary.

Kansas State Senate, District 21 Democratic Primary, 2016

Party Candidate Vote % Votes
Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Logan Heley 81.68% 2,956
Democratic Michael Czerniewski 18.32% 663
Total Votes 3,619

Dinah Sykes defeated incumbent Greg Smith in the Kansas State Senate District 21 Republican primary.

Kansas State Senate, District 21 Republican Primary, 2016

Party Candidate Vote % Votes
Republican Green check mark transparent.png Dinah Sykes 57.93% 4,442
Republican Greg Smith Incumbent 42.07% 3,226
Total Votes 7,668

Primary election

In the primary elections held on August 2, 2016, six incumbents were defeated in the state Senate, while nine incumbents were defeated in the state House. Outside of the one incumbent Democrat who was defeated in the House, moderates defeated 14 conservative Republican incumbents in the primary. Before the 2016 primary, moderate Republicans had been losing ground in the state legislature since the 2010 election of Gov. Sam Brownback (R), shifting from a more moderate Republican-controlled state legislature to a more conservative one after the 2012 elections. Eighteen Republican incumbents were defeated in the conservative wave in 2012. Greg Smith was one of 14 Republican incumbents who were defeated in the 2016 primary.

2012

Elections for the office of Kansas State Senate consisted of a primary election on August 7, 2012, and a general election on November 6, 2012. The signature filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was June 11, 2012. Greg Smith (R) defeated Juanita Roy (D) in the general election and defeated Joe Beveridge in the Republican primary. Roy was unopposed in the Democratic primary.

Kansas State Senate, District 21, General Election, 2012

Party Candidate Vote % Votes
Republican Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith 53.2% 17,527
Democratic Juanita Roy 46.8% 15,441
Total Votes 32,968

Kansas State Senate, District 21 Republican Primary, 2012

Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith 52.1% 3,581
Joe Beveridge 47.9% 3,290
Total Votes 6,871

Campaign contributions

From 2002 to 2016, candidates for Kansas State Senate District 21 raised a total of $673,740. Candidates who raised money in contributions earned $39,632 on average. All figures come from Follow the Money.

Campaign contributions, Kansas State Senate District 21

Year Amount Candidates Average
2016 $246,607 5 $49,321
2012 $214,044 3 $71,348
2010 $8,099 1 $8,099
2008 $72,227 3 $24,076
2006 $9,758 1 $9,758
2004 $26,120 1 $26,120
2002 $0 1 $0
2000 $96,885 2 $48,443
Total $673,740 17 $39,632