Kansas
Supreme Court ruling on Roe vs. Wade could immediately impact Kansas clinics
WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) – The Supreme Courtroom’s resolution to overturn Roe vs. Wade is predicted to depart the few clinics that supply the service in Kansas with extra sufferers than they’ll serve. It comes because the Kansans put together to take a vote on Aug. 2 that would decide the way forward for abortion within the state.
The Supreme Courtroom’s announcement was anticipated for weeks, however the impacting is now taking maintain of the nation. Whereas not a shock, it’s making Kansas a focus for what’s subsequent for abortion and reproductive rights as a result of will probably be the fist state to carry a public referendum on abortion.
What’s come down from the nation’s highest courtroom already is impacting Deliberate Parenthood Nice Plains in Overland Park.
“Arduous day for us to course of as a result of individuals we love and know and truly ourselves are within the place of residing in states now the place we’ve fewer rights than we did yesterday,” Deliberate Parenthood Nice Plains President and CEO Emily Wales stated.
Friday morning, Deliberate Parenthood Nice Plains stopped abortion providers in Arkansas. Of the 4 states the group serves; Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas, solely their clinics in Kansas are offering abortion providers.
“Individuals who want abortion care are going to see it, whether or not they can get it domestically or must journey,” Wales stated. “The problem we’ve proper now in Kansas is that we don’t have sufficient suppliers to serve Kansans as it’s.”
Wales stated they beforehand noticed the impression of legal guidelines in Texas and Oklahoma main individuals to get providers in Kansas. In Deliberate Parenthood’s Nice Plains area, Wales stated a lot of the main focus is on what occurs in Kansas the place abortion at present is protected within the state structure.
“Folks know their lives and their our bodies higher than the politicians who now management medical care in lots of different states,” Wales stated. “Kansas’ state constitutional safety is below menace.
With Kansas voters figuring out the destiny of that safety on Aug. 2, abortion rights supporters are on the forefront of urging a “No” vote.
“Our private liberties are very valuable,” stated Ladies’s March Air Capital Co-Chair Religion Martin. “Clearly at the moment, this resolution has highlighted that that could possibly be taken away at any second.”
Whereas the modification vote doesn’t straight ban abortion in Kansas, it provides that authority to state lawmakers. Martin stated it’s authority that would transcend abortion.
“It’s giving the federal government the facility to make choices earlier than us. In the event that they determine to make an abortion invoice or in the event that they determine to make every other healthcare invoice, that’s eradicating the facility away from Kansas voters,” she stated.
Martin stated within the hours after the Supreme Courtroom resolution, individuals began reaching out to Ladies’s March, seeking to get entangled. The group is holding a “Vote No” rally on July 9, forward of the August vote. Deliberate Parenthood stated its clinics in different states will stay open to offer different well being providers.
Copyright 2022 KWCH. All rights reserved.

Kansas
Kansas House Democrats kick off statewide tour in Topeka on Thursday

Tariffs prompting Walmart to raise prices in coming weeks
Walmart says they are raising prices soon due to President Donald Trump’s tariffs and trade policy.
- Kansas House Democrats are launching an 11-stop “Fight Back Tour” across the state, including areas where they’ve lost electoral support.
- Democrats acknowledge the challenge of localizing political discourse in a nationalized environment, aiming to shift focus from Trump to state-level issues.
- The tour targets areas with little to no Democratic representation, seeking to counter negative perceptions and rebuild support for 2026.
Kansas House Democrats are kicking off their statewide “Fight Back Tour” at 6 p.m. May 29 at Compass Point, 800 N. Kansas Ave. in Topeka, in an 11-stop tour that mostly focuses on regions Democrats have fallen out of favor electorally.
Every House Democrat will be featured in at least one stop on the tour. In Topeka, three current Topeka Democrats will be involved, as well as two former representatives, House Minority Leader Brandon Woodard and Gov. Laura Kelly.
Rep. Kirk Haskins, D-Topeka, said he’s viewing the tour as a way to hear from voters as much as it is about sharing a message with them.
“I’m going to focus a lot on learning more from the constituents on what we need to be focusing on. That’s my primary goal,” Haskins said.
As the ranking member of the House Committee on Elections, Haskins said he plans to spend some of his speaking time on updates in election law — specifically Senate Bill 4, which repealed a law allowing the acceptance of mailed ballots three days after Election Day.
He also plans to speak about school funding and workforce development.
Rep. Alexis Simmons, D-Topeka, said her message will be about “the complete and total abuse of power that takes place in the state Legislature.”
“We’re forced to vote on bills that we’ve not had a chance to review because the leadership knows that they’re unpopular, quite honestly, and they don’t want to give the public a chance to speak out against them,” Simmons said.
All politics is national
All politics is local, a longtime truism of American campaigning, no longer seems true with politicians increasingly following the lead of the national news cycle.
Grassroots Democratic opposition in the wake of the 2024 election has largely been focused on the Trump administration. The 50501 Protest movement, a loosely affiliated network of sources primarily organizing through online communities, has largely channeled frustrations about the Trump administration rather than on politicians that are closer to home.
Contentious town halls where Republicans were peppered with tough questions by attendees were usually targeted at members of the U.S. Congress and Senate.
The House Democrats in their tour will try to avoid making the tour about President Trump, but acknowledge the subject is unavoidable when discussing politics.
“We really want to talk about the stuff that people may not have heard about in the news that is going to affect them more directly than all the huge headlines that are coming down from Washington,” said Nicole Norvelle, communications director of the House Democrats.
Explaining the process and responsibilities of state, local and federal politics is half the battle, according to Haskins and Simmons. Haskins said when campaigning, he’s often asked about things like potholes, a local issue or about goings-on at the federal level.
Simmons said conversations about Trump can be brought back to the local level.
“A lot of the things taking place right now in our Legislature, we could fight back on if it were not held by a supermajority that is hyper and blindly loyal to President Trump,” Simmons said.
Campaigning outside of Democratic strongholds
Though three stops of the tour are in areas with Democratic representatives in the House, the remaining eight will be held in areas where there is no current representation in the Kansas House.
“This is our effort to go out across the state and talk to Kansans who don’t normally hear from us, so that they know that we’re gearing up for 2026 to win back seats, and that we’re not going to take what happened this last year lying down,” said Nicole Norvelle, communications director of the Kansas House Democrats.
Norvelle said House Democrats are working with county-level parties to select the right speakers for each community.
In Newton, that means selecting representatives Democrats think will resonate with Bethel College students. In Garden City and Dodge City, that means selecting representatives Democrats think will connect with Hispanic populations.
Countering Democratic unpopularity
Polling after the elections shows Democratic voters are pessimistic about their party, with a Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs poll in May showing just one-third of Democrats are optimistic about their party, down from 6 in 10 in July.
“I think the perception of Democrats has just really altered over the years, I think that’s the general consensus, is people have a new idea of what a Democrat is, which is a very elitist image,” Norvelle said.
Norvelle said House Democrats will focus on issues like health care access, affordable housing, supporting public schools and combating tax cuts for the rich to counter the narrative.
“This is a great starting point to really connect with people and say, ‘Hey, this idea you have of Democrats is not correct. A lot of the policies that were created this year by the Republicans are going to hurt you, your family, your business,’” Norvelle said.
Democrats don’t hold a seat in many of the communities they’re visiting, but it’s not unprecedented for some representation in central and west Kansas.
Hutchinson, which the tour will stop at on June 20, elected former Rep. Jason Probst, D-Hutchinson, as recently as 2022. All House representatives from Leavenworth are Republican, but former Sen. Jeff Pittman, D-Leavenworth, was elected in 2020.
“I think showing that we’re not the big, bad scary libs is a good place to start,” Simmons said. “A lot of these places have historically been held by Democrats, and so the more we can define ourselves as fighters for working class Kansans, the more successful we’re going to be.”
Here are the communities House Democrats will appeal to
Following are the towns and dates at which House Democrats will appear in a statewide “Fight Back Tour.” Times for most appearances haven’t been announced yet.
- Topeka, 6 p.m. May 29.
- Wichita: June 5.
- Newton: June 6.
- Hutchinson: June 20.
- Abilene: June 21.
- Garden City: July 18.
- Dodge City: July 19.
- Pittsburg: July 24.
- Hays: Aug. 15.
- Kansas City, Kansas: Aug. 21.
- Leavenworth: Aug. 28.
Kansas
Keeping Michael Massey in Kansas City isn’t helping anyone

Michael Massey is easy to root for. We’ve all seen athletes who are full of themselves, and frankly you want athletes to have a little swagger—it’s a mentally demanding profession where fans can switch from giving you love to sending you death threats.
But some players come across as good guys, and in Massey’s case, that’s true for the folks who work with him. There’s an award given by the Kansas City chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America called the Mike Swanson Good Guy Award, and Massey has won it in back-to-back years.
So when Massey struggled out of the gate this year, fans weren’t particularly phased. In part, this is because Massey was legitimately good at the plate last year. In part, it’s because other players—MJ Melendez, Hunter Renfroe, Cavan Biggio—drew the lion’s share of the ire, and a fanbase can’t get mad about everybody (most of the time).
Now, all three of those other players are no longer with the team. Massey, however, is, though he really shouldn’t be. Per Fangraphs’ version of Wins Above Replacement, there are 17 players this year with 100 or more plate appearances and less than -0.5 WAR. Of this 287-player set, Massey is fourth-worst at -0.9 WAR. The others worse than him? Andrew Vaughn, who the White Sox optioned to Triple-A. The aforementioned Renfroe, who the Royals cut recently. And LaMonte Wade Jr., whose recent track record is enough to keep him on the field for longer.
What has happened to Massey? Well, the answer might be what hasn’t happened to Massey? Just about everything is worse in his hitting portfolio: he’s walking at a career worst level, he’s barreling balls at a career worst level, his average and max exit velocity are at career lows, his hard hit rate is at a career low. It hasn’t been good.
This also does not feel good. To put this into, like, normal people terms, doing this poorly for such a long time is like playing Overwatch or Counter-Strike or League of Legends and getting into a big losing streak. This sucks, and when you’re in the middle of the losing streak, you’re more likely to be grumpy to teammates and see your performance go down, which begets more losing and bad play. Massey probably isn’t a Hanzo main or anything, but that doesn’t matter because we can see how he’s reacting to screwups like this popup on Sunday’s game: he’s mad at himself!
We have reached the point in the season where keeping Massey up in Kansas City isn’t helping anybody. It’s not helping Kansas City, where Massey is now functionally the second-worst hitter in the league and an offensive black hole. It is also not helping Massey, who looks just plain lost out there. If he’s going to get back on track, it is not going to be here in Kansas City, where he is making outs at a huge clip.
Frankly, I don’t think there’s a route forward for Massey to be a productive big leaguer regardless what he does. It all comes down to getting on base, which he does not do. In about 1,200 plate appearances, Massey’s on base percentage is .277. That’s just not going to cut it, especially when you look at his historical exit velocities and barrel rates, which aren’t high enough to yield the power that he needs to produce to overcome such a low OBP.
Who could take Massey’s place? There are two options. One is a like-for-like replacement, with infielder Cam Devanney getting the call. Devanney is a 28-year-old who is in his fourth year in Triple-A, but he’s crushing it this year to the tune of a .301/.382/.618 triple slash. The other option is a lefty-for-lefty callup with Jac Caglianone taking Massey’s spot. Realistically, that’s probably what’s likely to happen—in a few weeks at minimum.
So yeah, it might stink to send Massey down, as he’s been an exemplary teammate and ambassador for the team. But this is a results-based business, and the results have been so poor in such a way that nobody is really benefiting from the reunion right now. I wish it wasn’t the case. I, too, would like Massey to succeed. It’s just not happening.
Kansas
Bill Self and Kansas Offer Ascending 2026 Recruit Kohl Rosario

The Kansas Jayhawks coaching staff has been active on the recruiting trail lately, popping in to watch several players on the AAU circuit.
Per his X page, Bill Self recently offered highly touted 2026 guard Kohl Rosario, a 6-foot-5 sharpshooter attending Moravian Prep in North Carolina.
Rosario is a 4-star recruit and the No. 96 overall player in 247 Sports Composite rankings for the Class of 2026.
An incoming high school senior holding offers from programs like Baylor, Tennessee, and Villanova, Rosario is absolutely killing it in AAU and Overtime Elite tournaments.
In the Nextgen Euroleague Tournament in Abu Dhabi, Rosario recently finished with an incredible 30-point performance for Overtime Elite.
He went a perfect 10-for-10 from the field, knocking down all six of his 3-point attempts in a 113-89 victory over Zalgiris Kaunas.
Rosario plays for Team CP3 in the Nike Elite Youth Basketball League and the YNG Dreamerz in Overtime Elite. He averaged 15.7 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 2.1 assists for the Dreamerz this past season.
Kansas is just the latest blue blood to enter Rosario’s recruitment. Duke reportedly reached out to him last week, which makes sense given his location.
A versatile combo guard, Rosario is a dangerous shooter from beyond the arc and possesses exceptional traits on the defensive end.
All eyes in Lawrence are on top-ranked recruit Tyran Stokes, but KU recently contacted under-the-radar prospects like Rosario, Jahda Swann, Trey Thompson, and others.
Considering the Jayhawks are without a commitment in their 2026 recruiting class, Rosario could be a player worth watching moving forward.
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