Missouri
Donald Trump hedges endorsement for Missouri governor, backs three major GOP candidates
Former President Donald Trump on Saturday evening hedged his endorsement in the Republican primary for Missouri governor, pledging his support to all three major candidates.
The decision, which Trump announced just before 7:30 p.m. on his social media platform, Truth Social, comes amid a tight race for governor between Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe, Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft and Sen. Bill Eigel of Weldon Spring.
“All have had excellent careers, and have been with me from the beginning. They are MAGA and America First all the way!” Trump wrote in the post. “I can’t hurt two of them by Endorsing one so, therefore, I’m going to Endorse, for Governor of the Great State of Missouri, Jay Ashcroft, Mike Kehoe, and Bill Eigel. Choose any one of them – You can’t go wrong!”
The split decision allows each of the candidates, who have long fought for Trump’s support, to claim his endorsement before the Aug. 6 primary election. It also gives the former president the opportunity to claim victory no matter which candidate wins.
Each candidate quickly seized on the endorsement. Ashcroft was the first, saying he was “excited to stand with” Trump.
“No one has fought harder for President Trump than me,” Ashcroft posted on social media. “Thank you President Trump!”
Eigel posted that he was grateful for “the kind words” and endorsement. He followed up by posting a graphic touting the endorsement and promising to “deport every illegal” as Republicans attempt to draw attention to illegal immigration ahead of the election.
Kehoe also thanked Trump, saying he looked forward to working with Trump “as we close the wide-open southern border, back our police, and stand strong for our conservative values.”
Trump’s post marked the second time the former president has hedged his endorsement in Missouri. In the 2022 Republican primary for U.S. Senate, Trump backed “ERIC,” without specifying whether he was supporting then-Attorney General Eric Schmitt or former Gov. Eric Greitens. Schmitt went on to win the primary and the general election.
Trump, who is running for president, has loomed over Republican primary races across the country. Missouri Republicans have battled to demonstrate loyalty and support to the former president, including making immigration a central focus of their campaigns.
Jean Evans, a former executive director of the Missouri Republican Party, previously told The Star that each candidate for governor would try to earn an endorsement from Trump.
“The best case scenario he’s supporting you, worst case scenario he’s supporting somebody else,” she said at the time. “So you’re trying to stem that off, but I would imagine all three of them have some attempts to meet with Trump.”
Publicly available polling has consistently shown a tight race between Kehoe and Ashcroft at the top, followed by Eigel in third.
Trump, in his post, said he loved Missouri “for every reason in the book, including the fact that it is ‘loaded up’ with truly GREAT people.”
“I also like Endorsing Candidates for Office if I think they’re good, and usually there is a differentiation, usually a big one, where it is not that difficult to do,” he said. “But Missouri has three great people running for Governor – Jay Ashcroft, Mike Kehoe, and Bill Eigel.”
House Minority Leader Crystal Quade and businessman Mike Hamra, both from Springfield, are the two major Democratic candidates running for governor.

Missouri
Crash along rural Missouri highway leaves both drivers seriously injured

MARYVILLE, Mo. (KCTV) – An attempt to turn onto a county road from a rural Missouri highway led to a rear-end collision that left both drivers seriously injured.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol indicates that around 11 a.m. on Friday, June 6, emergency crews were called to the area of Missouri Highway 148 and County Road 220, about 3 miles north of Maryville, with reports of a 2-vehicle crash.
When first responders arrived, they said they found a 49-year-old Pickering man had been stopped on the highway in a 2020 Chevrolet Silverado as he attempted to turn west onto County Road 220. However, he was hit from behind by a 32-year-old Maryville man in a 2021 Ford van.
State Troopers indicated that the impact of the crash caused both vehicles to veer off the roadway and crash into a nearby ditch.
Emergency crews said both drivers were taken to Mosaic Life Care in Maryville with serious but non-life-threatening injuries. No one involved had been wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash.
Investigators noted that both vehicles were extensively damaged as a result. No further information has been released.
Copyright 2025 KCTV. All rights reserved.
Missouri
Man on the run for Kansas rape for nearly 5 years found, arrested in Missouri

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – A man who had been wanted for a Kansas rape for nearly 5 years was taken into custody after he was found in Kansas City, Missouri.
Jackson County, Missouri, Circuit Court records filed on Wednesday, May 28, indicate that Mario Perez, 38, has been found and arrested in connection to 2020 rape charges filed in Kansas.
Wyandotte County, Kansas, District Court documents revealed that Perez was charged with rape and aggravated criminal sodomy for an incident that happened in November 2019. The charges were filed in August 2020, upon the completion of an investigation by the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department.
Law enforcement officials noted that a warrant for Perez’s arrest was issued the same day charges were filed, however, he was not taken into custody until he was found in Kansas City, Missouri, nearly 5 years later.
A waiver of extradition was filed in Jackson County on Wednesday, and Perez was transported to the Wyandotte County Detention Facility, where he awaits a 9 a.m. court appearance on June 17.
Copyright 2025 KCTV. All rights reserved.
Missouri
Missouri Senate backs aid for tornado victims and Kansas City Chiefs and Royals

Missouri senators on Thursday approved a plan to provide over $100 million in aid for tornado-ravaged St. Louis and authorized hundreds of millions of dollars worth of incentives to try to persuade the Kansas City Chiefs and Royals to continue playing in Missouri in new or improved stadiums.
Lawmakers are acting with urgency in a special session because the professional sports teams face an end of June deadline to accept a competing offer from Kansas while residents in St. Louis are struggling to recover from May storms that caused an estimated $1.6 billion of damage.
The aid measures advanced in a series of early morning votes only after Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe struck a deal with some holdouts that included more disaster relief money and the potential for property tax breaks for some homeowners facing rising tax bills. The package also contains funding for building projects around the state, including $50 million for a nuclear research reactor used for cancer treatments at the University of Missouri.
Though House approval is still needed, the Senate vote marked a major hurdle, because the stadium incentives stalled there last month. Tornadoes struck St. Louis and other parts of Missouri on May 16, a day after lawmakers wrapped up work in their regular session.
In addition to the $100 million for St. Louis disaster relief, the package authorizes $25 million for emergency housing assistance and a $5,000 income tax deduction to offset insurance policy deductibles for people in any area included in a request for a presidential disaster declaration.
Kehoe said the plan would “help those in crisis, while also making smart decisions that secure opportunity for the future.”
The future of the Chiefs and Royals has been up in the air for a while.
The teams currently play professional football and baseball in side-by-side stadiums in eastern Kansas City in Jackson County, Missouri, under leases that run until January 2031.
Jackson County voters last year turned down a sales tax extension that would have helped finance a $2 billion ballpark district for the Royals in downtown Kansas City and an $800 million renovation of the Chiefs’ Arrowhead Stadium.
That prompted Kansas lawmakers last year to authorize bonds for up to 70% of the cost of new stadiums in their state.
Missouri’s counterproposal would authorize bonds for up to 50% of the cost of stadium projects while also providing up to $50 million of tax credits to go with unspecified support from local governments.
While testifying Tuesday to a Senate committee, Chiefs lobbyist Rich AuBuchon described the Missouri offer as “legitimate” and “competitive.” If the Chiefs stay in Missouri, he said they likely would begin a $1.15 billion plan to renovate Arrowhead Stadium and upgrade the team’s practice facilities in either 2027 or 2028. It would take three years to complete.
AuBuchon pointed to other recent publicly financed stadium projects in Baltimore, New Orleans, Nashville and Buffalo, New York.
“Throughout the country states are funding stadiums. They are a big economic development. They are a big business,” AuBuchon said.
However, many economists contend public funding for stadiums isn’t worth it, because sports tend to divert discretionary spending away from other forms of entertainment rather than generate new income.
“What the teams are doing is playing Kansas and Missouri against each other,” said Patrick Tuohey, senior fellow at the Show-Me Institute, a free-market think tank whose St. Louis headquarters got hit by the tornado.
“When cities and states do this, they hollow out their tax base for the benefit of wealthy billionaire team owners … they lose the ability to provide public safety, basic services,” Tuohey said.
Royals lobbyist Jewell Patek said that even with the state incentives, a planned stadium district likely would need voter approval for local tax incentives in either Jackson or Clay counties, which couldn’t happen until later this year.
He made no guarantee the Royals would pick Missouri over Kansas, but Patek added: “We love the community, we love the state … we think this is a step in the right direction for the state of Missouri.”
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