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  • Decades ago, Le Carré worked for British intelligence services MI5 and MI6. He has channeled that experience into more than 50 years of espionage thrillers.
  • Record deals with all three unionized automakers means a historic 6-week strike is ending — for now. The deals still need to be ratified by members, who could choose to go back to the table.
  • Too Good To Go works with businesses to sell leftovers at a reduced price. This helps prevent food waste from ending up in landfills, where it decomposes and produces a potent planet-warming gas.
  • The former vice president says he'll pick a woman. California Sen. Kamala Harris, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham are on the list of candidates.
  • Republican Senator Pat Roberts (L), independent candidate Greg Orman (R), after a recent debate in Overland Park. (Photo by Stephen Koranda)One of the most contentious campaigns in the country is the battle for a U.S. Senate seat in Kansas. Republican Pat Roberts is trying to hold on to his seat but is now facing the toughest campaign of his career. Roberts is in a close race with independent candidate Greg Orman, a wealthy businessman and political outsider. The Democrat in the race dropped out and won't appear on the ballot. That leaves voters with three choices: Roberts, Orman or... the Libertarian candidate Randall Batson. KPR’s Stephen Koranda has more on the race.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7d1940000(SCRIPT)At a campaign office in Topeka, Senator Pat Roberts is meeting with dozens of supporters. His decades of campaigning show. He’s jovial, and polished when speaking with people and shaking hands.At events like this, Roberts’ main message is that this isn’t just about Kansas. He has called this a “national campaign,” and he says electing him will help solidify a Republican majority in the U.S. Senate.“With a Republican majority, we can repeal Obamacare, we can stop amnesty, open the Keystone pipeline and grow the economy,” says Roberts.Roberts mentions his experience and accomplishments at stops like this, but those aren’t his main focus.He’s been criticized for his decades in Washington, especially in the primary, with claims he’s been there too long.After a tough primary fight and falling behind in some polls, Roberts has been working to shore-up his Republican base. He’s even brought in some big name Republicans to help him campaign.“We’ve had everybody from Jeb Bush to Sarah Palin. It shows you that every segment of the Republican Party is united behind my race,” says Roberts.“What does Pat Roberts stand for? You’ve seen it. A constitutional conservative, a fiscal conservative, a social conservative,” says Coburn.That’s Tom Coburn, a conservative Republican senator from Oklahoma who is joining Roberts at this campaign stop. Coburn repeats the second main point Roberts is pushing: the claim that independent Greg Orman isn’t really so independent.“He’s a liberal Democrat cloaking himself as a moderate independent, and he’s anything but that,” says Coburn.In Roberts’ ads and speeches, he mentions President Obama and Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid repeatedly.He says a vote for Orman is a vote for President Obama’s agenda and he points out that Orman has given money to several Democrats. But Orman is firing back.“Some of the contributions he’s failed to talk about are my contributions to Republicans,” says Orman.Orman says he’s been both a Republican and a Democrat, he’s donated to both parties and he’s been dissatisfied with both.He touts his business experience as a successful entrepreneur and says that has required him to fix problems on a daily basis.“If you want to look at how my history defines me, my history defines me as a fiscally responsible, socially tolerant businessman who really just wants to solve problems,” says Orman.Some of Orman’s business dealings haven’t helped him in the race. The Roberts campaign points to lawsuits against him and connections to someone jailed for insider trading.Speaking after a recent debate, Orman took aim at Pat Roberts’ argument that a Republican majority would end gridlock in the Senate.“After 47 years in Washington, he’s telling us that he’s the solution to the gridlock in Washington. I want to know how someone who didn’t talk about working together up there, spent all his time talking about fighting, how that person actually is able to move into an environment where we solve problems,” says Orman.Orman says he would likely caucus with whichever party has a clear majority in the U.S. Senate. If neither has a majority, he'll choose the party that is willing to take up his ideas.Orman doesn’t have the campaign experience of Roberts, but he has a bright smile and youthful charm on the campaign trail.He also has a lot of money, a personal fortune and impressive campaign donations for an independent candidate. That’s helped him hit the airwaves.“As an independent, I won’t answer to either party, I’ll answer only to the people of Kansas,” says Orman.“This has been a bizarre election,” says Rackaway.That’s Fort Hays State University political science professor Chapman Rackaway.He says Roberts has experience and a voting record that should appeal to many Kansans, but there’s some anti-incumbency feelings in the air that could be stirred up by touting his experience.“And that’s exactly the tightrope that Senator Roberts walks,” says Rackaway.Rackaway says Orman’s outsider angle helps him. He says political outsiders like Orman can make promises about what they’ll do if elected, but without a past record of political experience it’s hard to judge those promises.“There's no record of their performance to run on, and so it ends up being very much a measure of their personality,” says Rackaway.No matter who is elected, Rackaway says this is the first time since Ross Perot ran for president in 1992 that an independent candidate has made such a major splash in Kansas.
  • The Israeli military said Iran launched retaliatory strikes throughout the night. This followed a major Israeli attack on Friday, targeting Iran's nuclear facilities and killing top military leaders.
  • Polling location in Kentucky Township, Jefferson County (Photo by Laura Lorson)More registered Republicans in Kansas voted for someone other than Pat Roberts for the U.S. Senate... but the long-time politician still won his primary election Tuesday night. It was a close call for Senator Roberts, but ultimately... he claimed victory by fighting-off his main challenger, the tea party-backed Milton Wolf. Roberts beat the Leawood radiologist - but only by seven percentage points.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7cfba0000Roberts finished the race with just 48 percent of the vote. The other 52 percent was split among his three Republican challengers, with Wolf capturing 41 percent of the vote. Roberts will now face two more challengers in the fall: Democrat Chad Taylor and independent candidate Greg Orman. Taylor, the Shawnee County District Attorney, advanced in the Democratic primary. And Orman, the independent candidate, has been gaining more name recoginition with a heavy advertising campaign.
  • You may think you’re pretty app-savvy now that you’ve mastered Pokémon Go, Uber-ed a ride home from the party, or Snapchat-ed your latest athletic accomplishment.
  • Outside a polling station in Lawrence, Kan. (Photo by J. Schafer)TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas voters will decide several races in Tuesday's primary, choosing their candidates for a U.S. Senate seat and two U.S. House seats. Polls opened at 7 am across Kansas, and state election officials are reminding voters that they'll need to show a valid photo ID in order to vote. The marquee race involves incumbent Senator Pat Roberts facing off against tea party challenger Milton Wolf. And for U.S. Congress, incumbent Mike Pompeo is being challenged by former U.S. Representative Todd Tiahrt in the state's 4th Congressional District, while 1st District incumbent Tim Huelskamp is being challenged by Alan LaPolice. Statewide office primaries also include races for governor, insurance commissioner and secretary of state.
  • Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (Photo credit: Stephen Koranda) TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Secretary of State Kris Kobach is criticizing his opponent in the August 5 Republican primary for holding views on social issues that Kobach says are out of sync with the Kansas GOP's conservative platform. But GOP challenger Scott Morgan said Tuesday that the criticism shows that Kobach doesn't care about his office. Their exchange began Monday, the deadline for Kansas voters to switch parties. Kobach's re-election campaign sent out a tongue-in-cheek statement reminding Morgan of the deadline and suggesting that he'd registered as a Republican by mistake. Morgan ran unsuccessfully for the state Senate in 2008. In a survey, he expressed support for abortion rights and civil unions for gay couples and opposition to allowing the concealed carrying of guns. Morgan said such issues are irrelevant in the secretary of state's race.
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