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Democratic U.S. Senate candidate eager to broaden Kansas voice in D.C. politics
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate eager to broaden Kansas voice in D.C. politics

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate eager to broaden Kansas voice in D.C. politics

Christy Davis, one of three candidates seeking the Kansas Democratic Party's nomination for U.S. Senate, is eager to challenge in 2026 incumbent U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall, a Republican loyal to President Donald Trump. (Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector) TOPEKA — Democrat Christy Davis' campaign for U.S. Senate is steeped in the politics of incumbent Republican Sen. Roger Marshall and President Donald Trump. But the resident of Cottonwood Falls is also driven by frustration that many folks holding power in Washington, D.C., have been quick to disenfranchise Kansans with no interest in placing a Marshall sign in the yard or branding themselves by wearing a MAGA cap. 'All Kansans are served by their elected officials, or should be,' Davis said on the Kansas Reflector podcast. 'When you're elected to the U.S. Senate, you're representing everyone in the state regardless of who they voted for.' 'Kansans deserve the best representation, and we're not getting it in Washington,' she said. 'Register to vote, show up at the polls and help however you can.' Davis said Marshall, who won a competitive race in 2020 and has committed to seek reelection in 2026, chose to be among the Senate GOP's most partisan members rather than bring civility to the job. 'There's not enough resources in the world … for us to be spending all of our energy fighting each other,' she said. 'Kansans need to know that they're being heard, not just the ones who are invited to private meetings.' Davis, who hasn't held elective office, launched one of three bids for the Kansas Democratic Party's nomination for Senate. In terms of the August 2026 primary, her rivals would include Michael Soetaert of Wellington and Anne Parelkar of Overland Park. Davis grew up in Harvey County and earned degrees at Kansas State University and Wichita State University. She worked as a preservation planner for the city of Newton and was a preservation officer with the Kansas Historical Society. She moved to Chase County in 2013 to become executive director of Symphony in the Flint Hills. 'The Flint Hills is one of the most endangered landscapes on the planet and so we were really focused on conservation of that landscape,' Davis said. From 2023 until January, she was state director of rural development for the U.S. Department of Agriculture in the administration of President Joe Biden. The job was to deliver hard-to-fund projects important to communities, she said. 'During the Biden administration, we invested about $1.3 billion in projects in Kansas and worked on housing, local business, energy efficiency in agribusiness and also a lot of hospitals, clinics, child care, those sorts of projects,' she said. Davis is married with a son. She said her grandfathers served in World War II, one as a surgeon and the other with soldiers who helped liberate concentration camps. She said their service wasn't easy, but they did it because they 'understood the importance of right and wrong, and they believed that it was an American value.' Davis said her sister was a physician who died while advocating for the Affordable Care Act, the landmark law signed by President Barack Obama that reshaped health care in the United States. 'I tell people I've survived 36 hours of labor, and I've survived a double mastectomy, and after that, it doesn't seem so hard to fight, to fight for what's right,' Davis said. Davis ran for the U.S. House in 2020 but lost the Democratic primary. That 1st District campaign was won by U.S. Rep. Tracey Mann, a Republican who still serves a district stretching from Dodge City to Lawrence. The last time Kansas elected a Democratic candidate to the U.S. Senate was in 1932. Both of the state's Senate seats have been held by Republicans since 1939. 'Sometimes there are other factors at play besides who the best candidate is,' Davis said. 'The key is garnering that support, raising enough money early to get, you know, on the ground and begin the hard work.' She said one of her strengths as a candidate was that she had worked in every county in Kansas and understood issues relevant to a diverse constituency. She said Congress wasn't fighting battles that needed to be fought for Kansans, including affordable housing and the rising cost of living. Congress should stand up for fundamental rights, including due process, amid the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, Davis said. She said she was an unwavering supporter of public education and was convinced the effort to close the U.S. Department of Education would make education a significant campaign issue in 2026. She opposed appropriation of tax dollars to private schools. 'I believe that we should be doing everything we can to shore up public education,' she said. Davis denounced the proposed amendment to the Kansas Constitution that would have laid the foundation for more stringent restrictions on abortion. In 2022, Kansas voters rejected the amendment to nullify a Kansas Supreme Court opinion that said the state constitution guaranteed women bodily autonomy and the right to end a pregnancy. Votes in Congress to remove millions of people from Medicaid could jeopardize dozens of rural hospitals in Kansas, she said. Davis said work by Republicans to demolish the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID, was a tragedy. 'It's an embarrassment that we have cut funding to USAID, that we have had opportunities to help people who are experiencing food insecurity, and that we have cut those programs off at the knees,' she said. Solve the daily Crossword

Used Rolexes, Pateks are bright spot in struggling watch world
Used Rolexes, Pateks are bright spot in struggling watch world

Fashion Network

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Fashion Network

Used Rolexes, Pateks are bright spot in struggling watch world

The second hand market is also benefiting as record gold prices drive up the cost of new watches and shoppers look to avoid delays that can occur when seeking to buy a new model, according to Christy Davis, founder of London-based Subdial, a watch dealer and trading platform. In boutiques, high-demand new models are often tightly allocated, forcing would-be buyers to wait months or longer for delivery, while secondary platforms offer immediate access to a broader range of pieces, said Davis. The increased prices for Rolex's gold Daytona come during a boom for bullion amid tariffs and wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, while Patek Philippe's Aquanaut is outperforming the Swiss brand's hallmark Nautilus sports models, perhaps underscoring a growing trend toward restrained opulence, Davis said. 'There's definitely something around people looking for more quiet luxury these days, and the Aquanaut is that when compared with the Nautilus.' The primary watch market, by contrast, is suffering. Swiss watch exports dropped 5.6% in June, extending a year-long rout that's seen declines in shipments to the US, the biggest export market, along with Japan and Hong Kong. Watchmakers like Rolex, Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet are also contending with the consequences of a stronger Swiss franc and a broader weakness in luxury demand. Swatch Group AG — whose high-end brands include Omega and Blancpain — reported a 7.1% drop in sales in the first half of the year, which it said was 'exclusively attributable' to China, including Hong Kong and Macau. Trump's trade war has exacerbated the pain. Switzerland is reeling from the US imposition of the 39% tariff, the highest in the developed world. While that levy has now taken effect, the country is keeping up efforts to negotiate with the US, raising the prospect that it could yet change.

Used Rolexes, Pateks are bright spot in struggling watch world
Used Rolexes, Pateks are bright spot in struggling watch world

Fashion Network

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Fashion Network

Used Rolexes, Pateks are bright spot in struggling watch world

The market for used luxury timepieces recorded its best half-year performance since early 2022, providing a bright spot in an otherwise grim landscape for high-end watches. The Bloomberg Subdial Watch Index, which tracks the 50 most-traded timepieces by transaction value, gained 5.3% in the first half of 2025 — and extended that recovery in the third quarter. Rolex 's gold Daytona 116508 and Patek Philippe 's Aquanaut 5167A were among the top performers. The rebound is modest compared with the pandemic-era boom, when housebound consumers, flush with cash, splashed out on fancy timepieces. Still, it comes as new watch sales face US tariffs — including a 39% levy on Swiss exports — and stubbornly low demand in Asia. The second hand market is also benefiting as record gold prices drive up the cost of new watches and shoppers look to avoid delays that can occur when seeking to buy a new model, according to Christy Davis, founder of London-based Subdial, a watch dealer and trading platform. In boutiques, high-demand new models are often tightly allocated, forcing would-be buyers to wait months or longer for delivery, while secondary platforms offer immediate access to a broader range of pieces, said Davis. The increased prices for Rolex's gold Daytona come during a boom for bullion amid tariffs and wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, while Patek Philippe's Aquanaut is outperforming the Swiss brand's hallmark Nautilus sports models, perhaps underscoring a growing trend toward restrained opulence, Davis said. 'There's definitely something around people looking for more quiet luxury these days, and the Aquanaut is that when compared with the Nautilus.' The primary watch market, by contrast, is suffering. Swiss watch exports dropped 5.6% in June, extending a year-long rout that's seen declines in shipments to the US, the biggest export market, along with Japan and Hong Kong. Watchmakers like Rolex, Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet are also contending with the consequences of a stronger Swiss franc and a broader weakness in luxury demand. Swatch Group AG — whose high-end brands include Omega and Blancpain — reported a 7.1% drop in sales in the first half of the year, which it said was 'exclusively attributable' to China, including Hong Kong and Macau. Trump's trade war has exacerbated the pain. Switzerland is reeling from the US imposition of the 39% tariff, the highest in the developed world. While that levy has now taken effect, the country is keeping up efforts to negotiate with the US, raising the prospect that it could yet change.

Former USDA official files to run for Sen. Roger Marshall's seat as a Democrat
Former USDA official files to run for Sen. Roger Marshall's seat as a Democrat

Yahoo

time08-08-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Former USDA official files to run for Sen. Roger Marshall's seat as a Democrat

Former congressional candidate Christy Davis filed to run as a Democrat for Kansas's Senate seat held by Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kansas. Davis ran for the Democratic Party's nomination for Kansas's First Congressional district in 2020. She lost in the primary to Kali Barnett, who in turn lost to now-Rep. Tracey Mann, R-Kansas. Davis told hundreds of protestors at the June 14 No Kings Protest in Topeka that she was exploring a run. She expressed frustration at the lack of action from Congress pushing back on the Trump administration and at Kansas's junior senator. 'The administration is clawing back funding for our public schools and dismantling the entire farm economy,' she said at the rally, according to the Kansas Reflector. 'And what is Senator Marshall doing in response? He doesn't even live here. Not what the Constitution says he's supposed to. Instead of representing us and checking the power of the tyrant in the White House, he's trying to flatter him.' On Aug. 5, Davis officially filed for the office with the Federal Election Commission. Johnson County Democrat Anne Parelkar has also filed to run for the office. Democrat Michael Soetaert hasn't filed with the FEC for the campaign but did register a campaign for Senate with the Kansas Secretary of State's Office. Davis, a Cottonwood Falls resident, is a former White House appointee to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Rural Development under the Biden administration. In her career, she has worked as a historical preservation specialist for the Kansas Historical Society, the executive director of the Symphony in the Flint Hills and as a public affairs specialist for Terry Humphrey Public Affairs Group. Davis couldn't be immediately reached for comment. All Democrats will have a long road ahead to catch up to Marshall's campaign. His most recent campaign filing with the FEC shows he had $2.7 million cash on hand as of June 30. This article originally appeared on Topeka Capital-Journal: Three Democrats now filed to run for Roger Marshall's Senate seat

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