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Dennis McKinney

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Dennis McKinney
38th Treasurer of Kansas
In office
January 5, 2009 – January 10, 2011
GovernorKathleen Sebelius
Mark Parkinson
Preceded byLynn Jenkins
Succeeded byRon Estes
Minority Leader of the Kansas House of Representatives
In office
2002–2008
Preceded byJim Garner
Succeeded byPaul Davis
Member of the Kansas House of Representatives
from the 116th district
In office
1992–2008
Preceded byLee Hamm
Succeeded byPat Maloney
Personal details
Born (1960-07-24) July 24, 1960 (age 64)
Coldwater, Kansas, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseJean McKinney
EducationWichita State University (BA, MPA)

Dennis McKinney (born July 24, 1960) is a former Kansas State Treasurer. He was a member of the Kansas House of Representatives where he represented the 116th House District for ten terms, the last six as the Democratic Party's leader (Minority Leader) in the Kansas House. In January 2017, he was a Democratic candidate for the party's nomination as the 4th District of Kansas nominee in the U.S. House of Representatives. At the Democrats' 4th District nominating convention February 10, 2017, he narrowly lost to James Thompson.

Early life, education & career

McKinney, the youngest in a fourth-generation family of settlers was born in the Coldwater, Kansas hospital. He was raised on a farm astride the Comanche and Kiowa county line, south of Greensburg, Kansas, which is the county seat of Kiowa County.[1]

He graduated with a B.A. from Wichita State University, where he also earned a master's degree in Public Administration (MPA). He and his wife Jean (a public school paraprofessional), reside on the south side of Greensburg, where they raised daughters Kelly and Lindy.[1]

Despite heavy involvement in politics, McKinney continued his career in farming and ranching through 2017.[2][3]

Political & Public Service career

Kiowa County Commission

From January 1989 through May 1992, prior to serving in the Kansas Legislature, McKinney was a Kiowa County Commissioner.[1][3]

Kansas House of Representatives

After being appointed to a vacancy in his district's seat in the Kansas House of Representatives in May 1992, he was subsequently re-elected to the seat for nine more terms.[3][1][4][5] His 116th Kanss House District covers a large portion of rural south central Kansas, including Kiowa county, Barber County, Comanche County, Kingman County, northern Harper County, and southeastern Ford County.[6][7][8]

During his tenure, McKinney was noted largely for promoting public education, and pushing to preserve funding for education and health services, particularly for the elderly and disabled.[1][9][7][6][8]

He particularly emphasized "constituent services" to district constituents needing a personal advocate in Topeka to help solve their problems with state government.[8]

He was elected by fellow Democrats as the Minority Leader in that body, leading the House Democrats from January 2003 until his resignation from the Legislature in December 2008. As Leader, he served on Legislature leadership councils, including the State Finance Council, the Calendar and Printing Committee, the Interstate Cooperation Committee and the Legislative Coordinating Council.[1][6] He also directed organizing activities of the minority caucus, and streamlined legislative business, and worked across party lines successfully.[9][7]

He resigned in 2008 to accept a gubernatorial appointment as State Treasurer, and was replaced in the Kansas House of Representatives by Pat Maloney of Kingman, Kansas.[1][8]

Kansas State Treasurer

On November 18, 2008 Governor Kathleen Sebelius appointed McKinney Kansas State Treasurer to replace outgoing Treasurer Lynn Jenkins, who had been elected to Congress representing the 2nd Kansas District. McKinney resigned from his legislative post in order to assume duties as Treasurer on January 5, 2009.[3][1][10][6][8]

While working with essentially the same staff and budget as his predecessor, McKinney managed a "major increase" in the amount of state-held unclaimed property returned to Kansans.[8] With a booth at the Kansas State Fair, McKinney outreached taxpayers to familiarize them with the office role in locating unclaimed property. In 2010, his staff helped about 1,000 Fair attendees to recover $201,397 that was due to them which was being held in trust by the state.[11][8]

He was defeated in 2010 by Republican Ron Estes.[1][6]

Greensburg City Manager (interim)

Following the sudden 2010 resignation of Greensburg City Manager Steve Hewitt, who had guided Greensburg through its tornado-disaster recovery, McKinney accepted, for three months, the job of interim City Manager, until a replacement could be found. McKinney's focus was on continuing the massive recovery from one of the nation's worst tornado disasters, which had destroyed the entire town—emphasizing continuing support for Greenburg's nationally noted energy-efficient, environmentally-sensitive "green" renovation.[8][2]

Kansas Historical Foundation board

In 2015, at the Kansas Historical Society, McKinney, was elected to the Board of Directors of the Kansas Historical Foundation.[3][12]

Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission

McKinney was appointed to the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission in March 2011, by Governor Sam Brownback, and was listed, in January 2017, as the Vice Chair of the Commission, which oversees and regulates gambling and animal-racing in Kansas.[13]

U.S. House of Representatives candidate

District Opening & History

McKinney announced his candidacy to seek the Democratic party's nomination for Kansas's 4th congressional district in the 2017 special election to fill the vacancy left by the departure of new CIA Director Mike Pompeo.[6][7][14] The seat, in a strongly Republican district, had not been won by a Democrat since popular moderate Dan Glickman narrowly lost his re-election bid for a 10th term in 1994. In the 2016 General Election, the Republican nominees for President (Trump) and Congress (Pompeo) overwhelmingly defeated the Democratic nominees (Clinton and Giroux), by two-to-one margins in the 4th District.[6][7][14] In 2012, federally mandated redistricting resulted in the Fourth District shifting westward into more conservative[15] Western Kansas.[16][17]

Endorsements

McKinney secured endorsements for Congress from former Kansas Governor John Carlin, State Senator Oletha Faust-Goudeau, and State Representatives Ed Trimmer and Tim Hodge.[18][19]

He also had support from labor unions representing over 40,000 workers—particularly the Wichita/Hutchinson Labor Federation of the AFL-CIO, a coalition of 30 local unions representing over 30,000 union members, in South-Central Kansas, including teachers, aviation industry workers, operating engineers, construction workers, electricians, firefighters, state employees, janitors, train operators and other occupations. Another AFL-CIO affiliate, the Building and Construction Trades Council of Central and Western Kansas—a coalition of 13 Kansas building-trades unions, respresenting over 10,000 members—also endorsed McKinney for Congress. [19]

Issue declarations

In announcing his candidacy, McKinney blasted Congressional efforts to privatize Medicaid, citing Kansas troubles with that approach in its failing Kancare system.[1]

McKinney also criticized the state's shift from income taxes to higher sales and property taxes, while funding for schools was sharply cut—particularly criticizing state and Congressional moves towards privatizing or cutting education, describing education as "good for the economy," and workforce education as critical to the District's primary manufacturing industry: aviation.[1]

Citing his farmer/rancher background, McKinney claimed his experience with those issues, first-hand, and as a legislator, could bring a competent voice to the drafting of the upcoming Farm Bill, critical to the state's foremost industry, agriculture.[1]

Contest

McKinney faced four Democratic opponents, none of whom had been elected to public office before.[7] The Party nominee was selected by a vote of delegates to the 4th District Democratic convention, at the Sedgwick County Courthouse Jury Room, in Wichita, on Saturday, February 11, 2017. In the first round of voting, by 39 pre-selected party delegates, McKinney and civil rights lawyer James Thompson had the most votes, but neither had the required "50% plus one vote," so they went to a final round of voting, in which Thompson defeated McKinney 21-18.[20][14][21]

The general election was held on April 11, 2017, with Thompson facing Kansas State Treasurer Ron Estes, the Republican nominee.[22][1][6][7] Estes won, 52.5 to 47.7%, in a race where the Democratic National Committee chairman Tom Perez refused to provide financial support to Thompson.[23] The National Republican Congressional Committee substantially outspent the Democrat, James Thompson. The NRCC contributed $92,000, in part for last minute "venomous" ads supporting Estes, which without any basis, characterized Thompson as an advocate of taxpayer funded, late term abortions, and those based on gender selection. Prior to the election, it was reported that Estes had raised $459,000 to Thompson's $292,000. Late in the race, the Kansas Democratic party finally contributed $3,000 to the Thompson campaign, but new Democratic National Committee Chair Tom Perez said his organization would not be transferring any funds to the election. Thompson lost to State Treasurer Ron Estes, McKinney's successor, but by 6.2% in a district where the incumbent, Mike Pompeo, and presidential candidate Donald Trump, won by 31% the previous November.[24]

Tornado and recovery

City center, twelve days after the tornado struck (2007)

On the evening of May 4, 2007, the first of a series of powerful storms and one of the strongest tornadoes of the century, an EF5 tornado with a 1.7-mile-swath, and winds exceeding 200 miles per hour (320 km/h), flattened 95% of McKinney's hometown of Greensburg, Kansas.[25][26][2]

The tornado left the area without power, plunging it into darkness. The destruction included the city hospital, schools and McKinney's own house in town. Together with his daughter, Lindy, in their basement, they barely survived the complete collapse of their residence.[25][26]

As the funnel passed, McKinney emerged from the wreckage to search for, and assist, stricken neighbors. Joined by the Superintendent of Schools, Darren Hedrick, they soon found and extricated a mother and her nine-month-old son from where they had been buried, deep in the rubble of her home.[25][26]

Not all were so fortunate: Out of the roughly 1,500 residents, ten others were killed in Greensburg during the cataclysm, with more dying or found dead later,[2][27][28][29] plus two more in neighboring smaller towns.[30][31] The destruction caused more than half the now-homeless and traumatized population to depart; a third of the population—500 people—moved away permanently.[31]

McKinney immediately declared his intent to remain and rebuild.[26] With city officials, McKinney helped guide the community in the mobilization of rebuilding efforts and resources. On May 23, still homeless from the storm, McKinney was in the State capitol shepherding a relief bill for Greensburg through the Legislature. It passed unanimously in both houses, transferring an additional $25 million to a pre-existing $10 million state emergency fund, and granting another $5 million in business restart grants for the community.[32]

Elected officials from President George W. Bush, Governor Sebelius and U.S. Senator Pat Roberts, soon visited the recovering municipality.

Utilizing state of the art, sustainable technology, and marshalling prodigious public, corporate and private funding, Greensburg was rapidly transformed into perhaps the "greenest" city in America.[31] A year into the restoration and recovery, McKinney wrote, "The Kiowa County we had a year ago was a testament of the tenacity of our grandparents. The Kiowa County we are building today will be testimony to future generations of our resilience."[33]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Guy, Jeff, "McKinney running for Congress," February 1, 2017, Dodge City Globe, retrieved February 10, 2017
  2. ^ a b c d "Former Kansas treasurer, Dennis McKinney, takes Greensburg post," January 19, 2011, Dodge City Globe retrieved February 11, 2017
  3. ^ a b c d e "Dennis McKinney," Kansas Historical Society official website, retrieved February 11, 2017
  4. ^ http://www.kslegislature.org
  5. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved December 6, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Hancock, Peter, "Former lawmaker Dennis McKinney to announce bid for Congress," January 24, 2017,, Lawrence Journal-World, retrieved February 10, 2017
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Lowry, Bryan; Daniel Salazar and Dion Lefler, "Here's the latest on who's running for Pompeo's seat in Congress," January 24, 2017, Wichita Eagle, retrieved February 10, 2017
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "McKinney says he's unlikely to make Greensburg post permanent," January 31, 2011, Pratt Tribune,' Pratt, Kansas, retrieved February 10, 2017
  9. ^ a b http://www.kshousedems.com
  10. ^ http://cjonline.com/stories/010609/sta_374348049.shtml
  11. ^ State Treasurer Dennis McKinney used Kansas State Fair to return $201,397, KWBW, September 27, 2010. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  12. ^ "NW Kansans elected to Kan. Historical Foundation board," November 14, 2015, Hays Post, Hays, Kansas, retrieved February 11, 2017
  13. ^ "Commissioners," , Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission official website, retrieved February 11, 2017
  14. ^ a b c "Kansas Democratic Party picks James Thompson as nominee for 4th District race," February 11, 2017, KWCH-TV News, retrieved February 12, 2017
  15. ^ "Political Geography: Kansas," March 9, 2012, in Five Thirty-Eight blog of the New York Times, retrieved February 12, 2017
  16. ^ "Court releases redistricting plans; bad news for two conservative Senate hopefuls," June 8, 2012, Wichita Eagle, retrieved February 12, 2017
  17. ^ "Judges' decision moves Pratt County into 4th Congressional District," June 9, 2012, Pratt Tribune, Pratt, Kansas, retrieved February 12, 2017
  18. ^ Tim Hodge, Kansas House of Representatives, [1], January–February, 2017 Facebook statements transcripted on the official website "Tim Hodge - Kansas House District 72," retrieved February 10, 2017
  19. ^ a b "ENDORSEMENTS", McKinneyForKansas.com, retrieved February 10, 2017
  20. ^ "Lawyer James Thompson wins Democratic nomination for Congress," February 11, 2017, Wichita Eagle, retrieved February 12, 2017
  21. ^ "James Thompson wins Democratic nomination to fill Mike Pompeo's seat in 4th District," February 11, 2017, KSN-TV News, Kansas State Network, retrieved February 12, 2017
  22. ^ Kansas governor sets April 11 election to fill Pompeo's seat[permanent dead link], Belleville News Democrat, January 24, 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  23. ^ "Live Results: G.O.P. Keeps Control of House Seat in Kansas Special Election". Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  24. ^ Kansas, a close congressional race surprises Republicans, The Washington Post, Dave Weigel, April 10, 2017. Retrieved 26 June 2017.
  25. ^ a b c Springer, John, "Kansas twister survivors: 'Very lucky',", May 7, 2007, NBC Today Show, retrieved February 10, 2017.
  26. ^ a b c d Norris, Michelle, NPR interviewer, "State Representative Rides Out Tornado in Tub," transcript, May 7, 2007·4:00 PM ET, All Things Considered, National Public Radio, retrieved February 10, 2017.
  27. ^ Kansas Tornado Death Toll Rises,CBS, Scott Conroy, May 8, 2007. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  28. ^ Storm Stories, Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  29. ^ "Man Dies Months After Kansas Tornado Hit". U.S.A. Today. September 24, 2007. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  30. ^ Tornado claims another life, Capital Journal, May 15, 2007. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  31. ^ a b c "Raw emotions underlie new, green Greensburg," May 3, 2010, The Wichita Eagle, retrieved February 11, 2017
  32. ^ Carlson, James "Relief approved for Greensburg: Tax breaks, grants aimed at helping tornado-ravaged town rebuild," May 23, 2007, Topeka Capital Journal / CJOnline.com, retrieved February 11, 2017
  33. ^ Attitude, Partners Made Recovery Possible, Dodge City Daily Globe, Dennis McKinney, May 3, 2008. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
Political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of Kansas
2009–2011
Succeeded by