2019 Wichita mayoral election


The 2019 Wichita mayoral election took place on November 5, 2019, to elect the mayor of Wichita, Kansas. The election is officially nonpartisan. Incumbent Jeff Longwell ran for reelection and faced Brandon Whipple in the runoff election. Whipple defeated Longwell, who conceded on election night.

Primary campaign and election

In a contest with nine candidates, the three principal candidates who emerged were incumbent mayor Jeff Longwell, state representative Brandon Whipple, and businessman Lyndy Wells. While Longwell emphasized his track record, and plans for area development, Whipple and Wells focused on other issues, particularly the transparency in government, and promotion of local education development.
Whipple further prioritized "an underfunded police force. crime rising in our city." and proposed the involvement of mental health professionals in sensitive police conflict situations. He also proposed re-instituting the Wichita Commission on Civil Rights, and a new "comprehensive non-discrimination ordinance expanding protections to include Military, Veterans, gender identity, gender expression, and sexual orientation."
In the 2019 city primary election, preliminary results put Whipple second only to Mayor Longwell.
Candidate Lyndy Wells, however, had nearly the same number of primary votes as Whipple, and initially delayed acceptance of the defeat in hopes that a review of 1,000 yet-uncounted ballots would turn the election to his favor. Accordingly, Whipple delayed a formal declaration of victory until the final canvass the following week. However, the final count nearly doubled Whipple's lead.

Results

Run-off campaign and general election

As the two top vote-getters, Whipple and Longwell were on the November 5 ballot as the two finalists for voters to choose between in the runoff in the city's 2019 general mayoral election. During the run-off campaign, Whipple gained endorsements from the unions representing the city's police and firefighters.
In late September, a heated controversy arose over Mayor Longwell's actions to steer the city's largest-ever contract – a $500-million contract to replace the city's water-treatment facility – away from the experienced out-of-state contractor recommended by an official study, and initially approved by the City Council – towards, instead, a less-experienced Wichita contractor who relied partly on project guidance from a firm implicated in the Flint water crisis. The local contractor was headed by one of the mayor's golfing partners, who had a lengthy personal relationship with the mayor, and who had given the mayor an unreported $1,000 gift.
Longwell argued that his efforts were not simply favoritism, but an attempt to bolster "keep money in the community", but the revelation aggravated questions of transparency in government that Whipple and Wells campaigned on. An investigation by the District Attorney declined to charge Longwell, but advised him to report gifts from the contractor.
In response to the controversy, Wichita restaurateur Jon Rolph, aided by former mayors, launched a $10,000 campaign to persuade third-place primary loser Lyndy Wells to resume his campaign as a write-in candidate, noting that Whipple lacked experience in city affairs. Whipple countered that he had "governing experience", and Wells did not. Whipple expressed anger at the move, calling it an attack upon his candidacy to actually get Longwell elected. In late October, Wells agreed to resume his campaign.
In October, Whipple found himself the victim of an elaborate, covert, multi-state defamatory campaign in which Republican state Representative Michael Capps was implicated. After the publication of the identities of those involved in the attacks, Sedgwick County, Kansas, Republican party chair Dalton Glasscock called for Capps to resign. Two days before the election, Capps claimed that Glasscock had actually approved the production of the ad, an allegation which Glasscock denied. Newly created anonymous entities also attacked both Whipple and Wells weighed via several mailers. Although the sending organizations used different names, they were all linked through a postal permit held by a Kansas City bulk-mail service. The funding of the salacious video as well as the anonymous mailers will not be required to be reported, according to the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission. It has ruled outside organizations must report their identities and spending only if they use specific key terms such as "vote for," "elect," "vote against" or "defeat". The Democratic party was also criticized for publicly sending a mailer claiming that Longwell was being investigated by the District Attorney for "corruption". In fact, he had just been advised to report contributions and gifts received from the contractor to which a half-billion-dollar contract had been awarded.

Results

On election day, November 5, 2019, Longwell conceded the election to Whipple, who won 46.43% of the ballots versus 36% for Longwell. The results were certified on November 15, 2019. Write-in candidate Lyndy Wells finished third with 16.88% of the total cast.