Soros-backed Lefties fight Kansas’ new ballot deadline

Follow the money – Who’s fundingt election lawfare in Kansas?

Three nonprofit groups filed a lawsuit last week to overturn a new Kansas law requiring mail ballots be returned by election day.

The 2024 Kansas legislature passed Senate Bill 4 eliminating a 3-day grace period that was law since 2017.

AN ACT concerning elections; relating to advance voting ballots; requiring the return of such ballots by 7:00 p.m. on the day of the election

Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed the bill on March 24, but both houses of the legislature overrode the veto and the bill became law to be implemented next year.

The remedy suggested in the lawsuit if the law were overturned was to extend the old 3-day grace period to 7 days — making procrastinators some sort of protected legal class?

If timing were such a problem, why did plaintiffs not ask to have advance ballots mailed a week earlier but still require ballot arrival by election day? That would eliminate problems with missing postmarks since all ballots would be accepted on or before election day. 

Let’s take a look a deeper look at the plaintiffs and their counsel in this case.

Litigants

Plaintiffs 

These plaintiffs seem to have a lawfare business of suing governments over election matters, which costs them very little when pro bono counsel is paid by unknown outside sources.

The first two nonprofits below receive funding from “dark money” sources, George Soros’ nonprofits, and other progressive nonprofits. 

The third nonprofit receives almost all of its funding from the federal government. So, federal government money is involved in getting this case started in Kansas district court?

Kansas Appleseed Center for Law and Justice

A Feb. 2023 Capital Research Center report said Kansas Appleseed Center “uses nutrition and public health as cover to push voter turnout campaigns and election ‘reforms.’ The group demands expanded use of absentee ballots and drop boxes to collect them, and it rails against allegations of election fraud.”

Kansas Appleseed’s largest donor is the Kansas Health Foundation, which spent millions on “Integrated Voter Engagement” from 2017-2024. Kansas Appleseed received $606,000 for IVE from KHF, but also received another $135,000 from Kansas City area healthcare foundations for IVE.

Kansas Appleseed received $50,000 directly from George Soros’ Foundation to Promote Open Society nonprofit, as well as $155,950 in “dark money” funds from the Tide Foundation.

Kansas Appleseed in a report thanked the Kansas Health Foundation and the Movement Voter Project for supporting Appleseed’s work to “increase civic participation and health in Kansas.” The Movement Voter Project has received considerable funding from George Soros’ Open Society Policy Center nonprofit.

See details in this article about Kansas Appleseed:

Kansas Appleseed's connections to dark money sources and George Soros' nonprofitsKansas Appleseed’s connections to dark money sources and George Soros’ nonprofitsEARL F GLYNN·MAY 12Read full story

Loud Light

Davis Hammet has been building Loud Light and the sister Loud Light Civic Action organizations in Kansas for several years.

Loud Light says their mission “engages, educates, and empowers individuals from underrepresented populations to build community power that has an impact on decision makers.”

But Loud Light cannot find the largest underrepresented population in the state?  Male voters are underrepresented in Kansas: there are more males than females for age intervals under 60 years, but females have more voters than males in all age intervals except for the 18-19 interval.

Loud Light has received $755,000 from the Alliance for Youth Organizing and Loud Light Civic Action has received $267,000 from Alliance for Youth Action. These “Alliance for Youth” nonprofits are heavily funded directly by George Soros’ nonprofits, and a number of “dark money” organizations, including Arabella Advisor funds and Tides Foundation/Tides Advocacy.

See details in this article about Loud Light and Loud Light Civic Action:

Loud Light's connections to dark money sources and George Soros' nonprofitsLoud Light’s connections to dark money sources and George Soros’ nonprofitsEARL F GLYNN·3:30 AMRead full story

Disability Rights Center of Kansas

Disability Rights Center historically has received about 98% of its funds from federal government grants — it’s almost like being an extension of the federal government.

IRS 990s document 98% of revenue to the DRCK is from government grants from 2016-2023.  View these 990s with ProPublica’s Nonprofit Explorer

IRS990s show total amounts from government grants, but not the source of the money.

USASpending.gov shows that during the approximate dates of the IRS 990s above, DRCK received $13.7 million in funding from these three federal agencies:

  • Dept. of Health and Human Services, $8.57 million (63%)
  • Social Security Administration, $2.64 million (19%)
  • Department of Education, $2.49 million (18%)

So federal funds are being used to create a lawsuit against Kansas state government?

Congress should require nonprofits that are substantially funded by the federal government to be subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, like other federal agencies, so the public can learn more about how tax dollars are spent.

Plaintiff’s Counsel

In Aug. 2024 in a separate election legal matter involving Kansas Appleseed and Loud Light from 2021, Kansas Appleseed’s litigation director, Teresa Woody, acknowledged being “grateful to our pro bono partners, The Elias Group and Irigonegaray, Turney, & Revenaugh, for their partnership.”

Is it reasonable to assume Elias Law Group and Irigonegary & Revenaugh are pro bono partners in this matter?

Elias Law Group

In 2015 Hillary Clinton’s top campaign lawyer, Marc Elias, was behind a multi-state push challenging voter ID laws. At the time Elias worked for the Perkins Coie law firm, which was funded with a pledge of $5 million from George Soros according to the Washington Free Beacon

In 2020 Elias sued to overturn ballot harvesting bans in Georgia and Arizona but failed.

Elias was involved in 2022 with the Congressional Integrity Project as he split from Perkins Coie to form the Elias Law Group. “Dark money” at that time funded CIP to discredit investigators in the new GOP majority.

So, is the involvement by the Elias Law Group in Kansas (or any state) election matters a surprise?

IRS 990 tax forms from the Hopewell and North Funds, two of the seven Arabella Advisors’ dark money funds, show a staggering $40 million in funding for the Elias Law Group in recent years.

IRS 990 documentation of Hopewell Fund paying Elias Law Group nearly $32.5 million from 2021-2023 for “legal services”
IRS 990 documentation of North Fund paying Elias Law Group about $8.2 million from 2021-2023. Another $2.5 million to Perkins Coie were possibly for Marc Elias services also.

These documents cannot prove a George Soros connection via the Hopewell or North Funds, but Soros’ nonprofits have given $444 million to Arabella Advisors and other “dark money” funds from 2016 to 2023.

Marc Elias, founder of “Democracy Docket,” documents his firm’s lawfare cases online.  This case is already mentioned there.

Irigonegary and and Revenaugh

Attorney Pedro Irigonegary’s name appeared as a member of the Kansas Appleseed Board of Directors in their IRS 990 filings from 2016 to 2021. 

No documentation has been found for payments for legal services to Irigonegary. However, Pedro Irigonegary has represented progressive causes in Kansas for more than two decades. 

Lawsuit

Download and read the 30-page petition:

DG-2025-CV-000206 Petition465KB ∙ PDF file
Petition from Kansas Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, Inc., et al vs. Scott Schwab, in his official capacity as the Kansas Secretary of State, et al, filed in Douglas County on May 5, 2025. [30 pages] From Kansas District Court Public Access Portal
Download

RelatedDownload

Dark money and nonprofits in Kansas politics (video)Dark money and nonprofits in Kansas politics (video)EARL F GLYNN·APRIL 30, 2024Read full story
Earl Glynn – Watchdog Lab

Earl F. Glynn is a mostly-retired data scientist, scientific programmer, software engineer and physical scientist living in the Kansas City metro area, and the publisher of the substack Watchdog Lab.

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