Voters have been submitting questions to our Kansas elections project team and now, two members of that team try to find the answers. Editor Amy Jeffries interviewed KHI News Service reporter Andy Marso about one question that seems to come up almost every election season: why do people sometimes vote against their own best interests -- specifically their economic interests?
That's Andy Marso, of the KHI News Service, speaking with Kansas Elections Editor Amy Jeffries. He was answering a question sent to our team of reporters who are collaborating to cover elections statewide.
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Elections Question: Why Do Kansans Vote Against Their Economic Interests?
By Andy Marso, KHI News Service, and Amy Jeffries, KCUR
Our Kansas elections coverage team has been taking questions.
One question that seems to come up almost every election season, is why people sometimes vote against their own best interests -- specifically their economic interests.
Diane Wahto of Wichita asked it this way:
“Why do Kansans often vote against their best interests? ... When we don't have money to fix the highways or fund social programs, who cares about those other things?”
Ernest Schein of Olathe sent a follow-up:
“When will people stop voting against their economic interest? The governor who was supposed to lower taxes actually raised them on the vast majority of residents when he signed the sales tax increase into law.”
There is some evidence that some Kansans have voted against their own economic interests.
In 2015, the Kansas Legislature passed a historic sales tax increase in an attempt to balance the budget. Before that, the Legislature passed and Governor Sam Brownback signed into law major changes to the income tax structure in 2012. It was sold as a tax cut for all Kansans.
Former State Budget Director Duane Goossen, who served in the Graves, Sebelius, and Parkinson administrations and who is no fan of those tax changes, has done some new number crunching. The analysis shows that Kansans making $25,000 a year or less ended up paying more in income taxes. That's because, in addition to reducing income tax rates, the 2012 changes also included the elimination of credits and deductions, like the food sales tax rebate, that lower income Kansans benefited from most. When the changes first came into play in 2013, about 600,000 Kansas income tax filers were in that $25,000-or-less income category -- more than a third of all filers. For that group at least, the 2012 tax changes were detrimental.
Then in 2014, voters reelected Governor Sam Brownback and gave Republicans a bigger majority in the Kansas House. That was despite a Docking Institute poll conducted in September of 2014 showing almost two thirds of Kansans were concerned that economic conditions in the state would hurt their families, and barely 30 percent were satisfied with how Brownback and Legislative leaders were handling the economy at the time.
Fiscal issues often take a backseat to social issues, perhaps especially in Kansas. Thomas Frank famously took note of that in his 2004 book What's The Matter With Kansas. Gary Brinker, director the Docking Institute and a sociology professor at Fort Hays State, says abortion in particular has been a litmus test for many Kansas voters. But there are indications economic interests are mattering more in 2016.
In the primaries, voters cast out six Republican state senators and eight incumbent house members. Those lawmakers had generally been in line with Brownback on tax policy and had been endorsed by Kansans For Life, an anti-abortion group. And now, with Election Day less than a week away, we're hearing more talk of the state economy from the governor and conservative Republicans who are still in the running. They argue it's not the 2012 tax changes that have hurt the state budget, it's the downturn in industries like agriculture and oil and gas. And they contend the tax plan passed in 2012, on a macroeconomic level, is still beneficial for all Kansans.
Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service. Follow Andy on Twitter @andymarso.
Amy Jeffries, based at KCUR, is the editor of a statewide collaboration covering elections in Kansas. Follow Amy on Twitter @amyoverhere.