fbpx
Warren Announces Campaign for the Kansas Senate
March 27, 2020

Warren Announces Campaign for the Kansas Senate

Says Kansas Needs Leaders Dedicated to Common-Sense, Real-World Solutions

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 27, 2020

LEAWOOD:     Blue Valley mom, attorney, and current Republican State Representative for District 28, Kellie Warren, this morning announced her campaign for the State Senate.

Warren, elected to the Kansas House in 2018, has quickly positioned herself as an independent leader who has worked to find lasting solutions for Overland Park and Leawood.  Warren has helped lead the effort to ensure Kansans can fully benefit from federal tax reform and supported legislation to end a decades long legal battle over school funding in Kansas.

“Kansas voters consistently have embraced leaders who will champion real solutions and set aside partisan politics.  It becomes more important than ever as our state works to combat COVID-19 and later rebuild our economy, that we have Senate leaders at the decision-making table who are dedicated to common-sense, real-world solutions that will get our economy growing again,” Warren said.

“I’m running for the Kansas Senate because our communities deserve leadership that will get the job done.  I’ve successfully helped pass a comprehensive transportation plan, ended the constant litigation that has plagued our schools, supported vital tax relief for our Kansas families, worked to lower your utility bills and property taxes, and consistently stood up to protect the sanctity of all human life,” remarked Warren.  “I’m ready to be a State Senator focused on the traditions of strong community values, common-sense solutions and pragmatic leadership that Johnson County has come to expect.  But most importantly — our kids, our seniors, our businesses and our families deserve leaders who have experience finding lasting solutions and achieving them.” Warren a prodigious fundraiser and hard-working campaigner successfully won the most expensive GOP house primary in Kansas 2018 in a district inside of Senate District 11.  Registered Republicans out-number Democrats by an almost 2-1 margin.­