News .

0

KC Week in Review
November 9, 2012

Billions and billions of dollars have just been spent trying to influence your vote. Now Election 2012 is finally over, we try to make sense of the choices Kansas and Missouri voters made at the ballot box on Tuesday and assess its impact on our future.

THIS WEEK: Friday, November 9, 2012 @ 7:30pm
(Rebroadcast Sunday @ 11am )

Photo Courtesy: Kansas City Star

UNDERSTANDING ELECTION 2012
Billions and billions of dollars have just been spent trying to influence your vote. Now Election 2012 is finally over, we try to make sense of the choices Kansas and Missouri voters made at the ballot box on Tuesday and assess its impact on our future.

McCASKILL WINS: The polls before Election Day showed that St. Louis area Congressman Todd Akin (R) still had a shot at unseating Missouri U-S Senator Claire McCaskill. But he loses by 16 points. Was it simply the illegitimate rape comment that sank his campaign? Or was there more to it than that?

CIGARETTE TAX FAILS: It had been on the ballot twice before. Third time lucky anyone? Not so for the Missouri tobacco tax. Efforts to raise Missouri’s lowest in the nation cigarette tax failed on Election night by the slimmest of margins. Tuesday’s vote was 50.8 percent against. By the way, in 2002, the vote was 51 percent against. In 2006, it was 52 percent.

KANSAS: Who would control the Kansas Senate was a big story line of this election in the Sunflower State. According to the Associated Press, “Conservatives are now on track to hold a super-majority of 27 in the 40-member Senate.” So what does that mean?

VOTING LINES, MACHINES & PHOTO ID: In Kansas, this was also the first election where you had to show a picture ID. You may remember there were lots of concerns that many people would be disenfranchised. Voters would be turned away at polling stations. Did we witness any of that on Tuesday? Were there any big problems reported of any kind at our bi-state polling stations?

THE OTHER STATEWIDE BALLOT ISSUES: Missouri voters on Tuesday overwhelming approved a ballot measure that blocks the governor or any state agency in the Show-Me-State from setting up a “health care exchange,” an integral part of the Affordable Care Act. Now that President Obama won the election, what does this mean? Also on Election Day, voters reject changing the way higher court judges are picked, but opt to give the city of St. Louis the right to govern and control its own police force. Will KCMO Mayor Sly James now head straight to Jefferson City to demand a similar local control measure for the Kansas City police department?

NIXON FOUR MORE YEARS: Missouri voters gave four more years to Governor Jay Nixon. Peter Kinder is awarded another term as Lt. Governor. Chris Koster earns re-election as Attorney General. Clint Zweifel will continue on as State Treasurer. But there will be a new Secretary of State and he’s from Kansas City. Missouri State Representative Jason Kander, a Democrat wins by the slimmest of margins. He will replace Robin Carnahan, who opted not to seek re-election. But if Missouri is such a “red state” why are four of the five statewide officeholders now Democrats?

CONGRESSIONAL STATUS QUO: There were celebrations at the headquarters of Vicky Hartzler Tuesday night and at the Emanuel Cleaver campaign. In fact every single member of our Congressional delegation is re-elected by wide margins. For all the frustration that nobody likes Congress (and their approval rating back in August was at 10%, according to Gallup) are there any lessons to learn here?


OUR POST-ELECTION REVIEWERS:

Patrick Tuohey
Missouri Record, Editor

Bill Grady
Newsradio KMBZ

Steve Kraske
The Star/KCUR

Dave Helling
Kansas City Star

***A NOTE FROM NICK:
Your thoughts are always important to me. Send an e-mail to nhaines@kcpt.org or share and connect at the Nick Haines page on Facebook. Thanks for watching Kansas City Week in Review.
Nick!

Tags: ,
0

KC Week in Review
November 2, 2012

PRE-ELECTION EDITION: Those pesky ballot questions explained. From cigarette taxes to changing the way we select our judges. From health insurance exchanges in Missouri to the taxing of  boats in Kansas.

THIS WEEK: Friday, November 2nd 2012 @ 7:30 pm
(Rebroadcast Sunday @ 11 am )

Photo Courtesy: Knight Foundation

THOSE PESKY BALLOT QUESTIONS EXPLAINED ON BOTH SIDES OF STATE LINE
From cigarette taxes to changing the way we select our judges. From health insurance exchanges in Missouri to the taxing of boats in Kansas. These are those “other” decisions you’ll be asked to make when you head to the ballot box on Tuesday. We sort through these pesky, wordy ballot questions on this pre-election edition of the program.

TOBACCO TAX: Currently Missouri has the lowest tobacco tax in the nation. Proposition B would raise the state tax on a pack of cigarettes from 17 cents to 90 cents. The proposal is projected to generate between $283 million and $423 million annually. But where would the money go?

POLICE: Some of our viewers may be confused as to why we started with Proposition B. Is there a “Proposition A?” Well there is…and the reason we’re not starting our program discussing it, is because its sure to be confusing to many Kansas City area voters. Prop A asks whether the city of St. Louis should have local control over its police force? Currently, it is one of just two cities in the country along with Kansas City to be overseen by a state appointed panel. Why should people in metro KC care about this issue and how could their vote on this question affect them in the future?

KANSAS BALLOT: While Kansans won’t be voting for any U-S Senators, a Governor or any big state officeholders, did you know you do have a statewide ballot issue to decide involving the taxing of boats? OK, it’s not the biggest issue in the world, but you may be left scratching your head when you walk into your local polling station Tuesday and see this massive one page ballot question on the taxation of watercraft in the Sunflower state. Should your neighbor with the speedboat of fishing boat get a tax break? What’s at stake?

HEALTHCARE DEBATE: As President Obama and Mitt Romney have battled over the Affordable Care Act, you may not be aware that if you live in Missouri, you will be deciding the issue of healthcare on the ballot Tuesday. If approved by you, Proposition E would block the governor or any Missouri agency from creating a state health exchange without approval from voters or the legislature. What are the pros and cons of Prop E?

JUDGES: If you live in Missouri, you’ll also be asked to decide at the ballot box on Tuesday whether or not to change the system of picking higher court judges in Missouri. Missouri Constitutional Amendment 3 would give the governor more authority over the nomination process for Court of Appeals and Supreme Court judges in the state.

MISSOURI STATEWIDE OFFICES: The race for the U-S Senate seat in Missouri has robbed attention from most of the other statewide campaigns in Missouri. We don’t leave you in the lurch. We try to make sense of the candidates running for those other statewide offices, we’re told are important, but have thus far been starved of media time. State Treasurer, anyone? What about Secretary of State?


OUR PRE-ELECTION BALLOT REVIEWERS:

Dave Helling
Kansas City Star

Stacey Cameron
KCTV5

Lynn Horsley
Kansas City Star

***A NOTE FROM NICK:
Your thoughts are always important to me. Send an e-mail to nhaines@kcpt.org or share and connect at the Nick Haines page on Facebook. Thanks for watching Kansas City Week in Review.
Nick!

0

KC Week in Review
October 26, 2012

Celebrating the metro's biggest success story this week, league champion winning Sporting KC. Plus, we countdown to election day by tracking our area's big political stories and examine some of those races you've heard little about this campaign season.

THIS WEEK: Friday, October 26th 2012 @ 7:30 pm
(Rebroadcast Sunday @ 11 am )


GOP RIDING HIGH IN KANSAS: New figures from the Kansas Secretary of State’s office show the ranks of Republicans surging while the number of Democrats has plummeted since 2008. In fact, there are 45,000 fewer registered Democrats in Kansas than there were during the last Presidential election according to the latest numbers. Democrats now make up just a little more than 25 percent of the state’s registered voters. We analyze the shift and its implications.

STUMPING BROWNBACK: The Kansas Governor stumps for Romney in the swing state of Ohio this week. Brownback was on a five city tour of northeastern Ohio campaigning for his former rival. But would anyone in Ohio know who he is? Who’s footing the bill? Is Brownback just anxious to get his name out there in advance of 2016?

BULLSHITSU: Much ado about nothing? Or a new low in the civility of campaigns? Is the latest controversy in Missouri’s U-S Senate race simply distracting voters from the real substantive policy differences that seperate Claire McCaskill from Todd Akin?

IGNORING MISSOURI: During this entire Presidential campaign, Barack Obama has not stepped foot in Missouri once to campaign. And Republican hopeful Mitt Romney stopped over only briefly at KCI to refuel his plane and have catered barbecue delivered to his staffers on board. Not one rally or event featuring Obama or Romney. And neither candidate has run any ads specifically targeting Missouri. If you live in Kansas, you expect this kind of treatment, but Missourians are not used to getting the “cold shoulder” like this. Why?


HARTZLER & HENSLEY: It’s not a law firm. They are the last names of the two major party candidates running for Missouri’s 4th District Congressional seat. The U-S Senate race in Missouri is sucking the oxygen out of coverage of many of the region’s other political races. Before election day we will spotlight those other campaigns. This week, we track the Missouri 4th district seat currently held by Republican Vicky Hartzler who replaced longtime Washington veteran Ike Skelton. Now completing her first term in Congress, Hartzler is running against Cass County prosecutor Theresa Hensley. Dave Helling, writing in the Kansas City Star says this is the most competitive House race in our region this election season. Yet most of us have never heard anything about it.


GRAVES: Why have we not heard anything from Sam Graves this election season? Is the Missouri 6th District Republican Congressman running unopposed this election cycle or is the Akin-McCaskill race simply sucking all the publicity from this campaign?


SPORTING KC LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: And finally we leave you with scenes from Livestrong Sporting Park, where Sporting Kansas City defeated Philadelphia this week before a sellout crowd to capture the Eastern Conference title. While metro sports fans lament the fortunes of the Royals and the Chiefs, is this a franchise that is finally doing something right on and off the field?

REVIEWING THE HEADLINES:

Steve Kraske
KC Star/KCUR Radio

Scott Parks
Newsradio FM 98.1 KMBZ

Mary Sanchez
Kansas City Star

Dave Helling
Kansas City Star

***A NOTE FROM NICK:
Your thoughts are always important to me. Send an e-mail to nhaines@kcpt.org or share and connect at the Nick Haines page on Facebook. Thanks for watching Kansas City Week in Review.
Nick!

Tags:
0

KC Week in Review
October 19, 2012

Watch online now. Overland Park Mayor Carl Gerlach joins Week in Review. He unpacks what the new Sprint deal means for the metro, answers questions about his city's new "open carry" gun law as well as the ongoing dispute over "bare-breasted" art at the OP Arboretum.

THIS WEEK: Friday, October 19th 2012 @ 7:30 pm
(Rebroadcast Sunday @ 11 am )




NEWSMAKER INTERVIEW: Overland Park Mayor, Carl Gerlach
As Japanese powerhouse Softbank buys hometown Sprint, we wonder what it all means for our metro. We’re joined by newsmaker guest Overland Park Mayor Carl Gerlach who’s city will rise and fall more than any other as a result of this $20 billion deal. Gerlach is also at the epicenter of so many other news stories, from his city’s recent decision to allow the “open carry” of guns to the ongoing saga over public art at the OP Arboretum. We dissect those stories with him too.

PLUS, THE REST OF THE WEEK’S NEWS….

THE NEW KCI?: Terminal “A” is now the likely site for a new KCI. “Site A wins, hands down,” Kansas City Aviation Director Mark VanLoh tells a City Council committee this week as he summarizes months of studies and planning geared toward transforming Kansas City International Airport.

HOSPITALS: What on earth is happening to our area hospitals? While this summer the news that the city of North Kansas City had hired a consultant to evaluate the sale of North Kansas City Hospital was making the headlines, this week it’s reported that for-profit hospital chain HCA is negotiating to take over St. Joseph Medical Center in south Kansas City and St. Mary’s Medical Center in Blue Springs.

FORTE: Kansas City, MO police chief Darryl Forte has just finished his first year on the job as the city’s top law enforcement official. What’s the verdict thus far?

BOARD OF TRADE: The 156 year-old Kansas City institution is sold off this week. What’s been its place in our city’s history?

FINAL DEBATE: The last debate between Claire McCaskill and Todd Akin in the race for Missouri’s U-S Senate Seat was held Thursday night in suburban St. Louis. But did we learn anything new from the exchange?

REVIEWING THE HEADLINES:

Bill Grady
Newsradio FM 98.1 KMBZ

Stacey Cameron
KCTV5

Dave Helling
Kansas City Star

***A NOTE FROM NICK:
Your thoughts are always important to me. Send an e-mail to nhaines@kcpt.org or share and connect at the Nick Haines page on Facebook. Thanks for watching Kansas City Week in Review.
Nick!

Tags:
Page 7 of 32« First...56789...2030...Last »