海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Forget prom king 鈥 they're running for governor

In Kansas, a lack of a minimum age requirement for gubernatorial candidates has led at least six teenagers to throw their hats in the ring 鈥 another example of the surging youth movement in politics today.

By Christa Case Bryant, Staff writer
Wichita and Kansas City, Kan.

Jack Bergeson, the garrulous 17-year-old Democrat running for Kansas governor, hadn鈥檛 even bothered to put his phone number on his campaign website until recently 鈥 because everyone already seemed to have it.

鈥淣ational networks all have my stuff,鈥 says the young Mr. Bergeson, nibbling on a few fries at his parents鈥 Wichita burger joint. 鈥淭hey can get ahold of me if they want.鈥

It鈥檚 a Saturday, and he has been up since 4:30 a.m., when he headed to Kansas City for a CNN interview 鈥 only to be displaced at the last minute by the latest Trump drama. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to reschedule me, hopefully. I don鈥檛 know when. But they said they would.鈥

At least five other teenagers, and, briefly, a dog named Angus, have followed Bergeson鈥檚 lead since he discovered one Sunday afternoon two years ago that Kansas has no minimum age requirement 鈥 actually, no requirements at all 鈥 for gubernatorial candidates. A predictable flood of media attention has followed, something Bergeson, like many other teens who鈥檝e entered the political spotlight of late, is handling with remarkable cogency and the self-assurance of youth 鈥 if at times an understandable touch of naivet茅.

A former Mitt Romney supporter, Bergeson says he became disillusioned with Republican politics under former Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, whose drastic tax-cutting experiment sparked a revolt even within the state GOP. So, Bergeson now champions Bernie Sanders (one of his slogans is 鈥淔eel the Berg!鈥), and has designed a campaign platform that includes universal health care, raising the minimum wage to $12, and legalizing marijuana, which he says could help restore state budgets.

His comrade and foil in this quest for the statehouse is Republican candidate Tyler Ruzich, a high schooler from the Kansas City area who works part-time at the local Hy-Vee grocery store. Mr. Ruzich, like many young people, is not afraid to challenge traditional GOP stances; he supports LGBTQ rights, advocates reining in the National Rifle Association, and criticizes his party for using the 鈥渆uphemism鈥 of voter ID to engage in voter suppression.

While Bergeson and Ruzich are technically opponents, they have a good deal in common: both believe in bipartisanship, reject what they see as tired political posturing, and share a desire to engage their generation in changing America鈥檚 unhealthy political environment.

鈥淪omebody has to step up,鈥 says Ruzich, perched on a Starbucks bar stool and swinging his legs. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the adults are working together that well.鈥

How it all began

As Bergeson tells it, his involvement in politics started years ago, when as a freshman he got hooked on an 鈥渋nsanely nerdy鈥 mock government on the old Instagram app called 鈥淭wo Parties, One Nation.鈥 Every Saturday was Election Day.

鈥淚 ran for president every time and never got any votes,鈥 he admits, noting that the participants tended to lean Republican (not unlike Kansans). He did however, run the Chicago Transit Authority and got elected to Congress. It was through that online community that Bergeson first met Ruzich, a colleague in the mock US House of Representatives.

After Bergeson launched his gubernatorial campaign 鈥 and after he got on the Jimmy Kimmel show and began to make something of a name for himself 鈥 he realized he could have an even bigger impact if he had a fellow teen running from across the aisle to help boost youth engagement. So, he persuaded Ruzich to launch his own campaign and 鈥渄ouble the impact.鈥

鈥淚f I鈥檓 [taking] a Democratic message to a young audience and he鈥檚 out there talking to a young Republican audience, we鈥檙e going to get more people involved,鈥 Bergeson says, noting that three more teenage conservatives have since thrown their hats in the ring 鈥撎鼸than Randleas, Dominic Scavuzzo, and Joseph Tutera. (Aaron Coleman, a Green Party candidate, had also announced his candidacy at one point, though his current status is unclear.) 鈥淲e need to engage voters of the next generation.鈥

Not welcome on the debate stage

Ruzich has not exactly been embraced by the state Republican Party, which 鈥 in consultation with the leading gubernatorial candidates 鈥 has set debate rules requiring all participants to have voted in the 2014 election. At that point, some of the teens weren鈥檛 even teens, let alone voters.

Ruzich says he dislikes pointing fingers, but after some caveats and niceties, confesses he disagrees with how Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who is in charge of state elections and is also a front-runner in the Republican gubernatorial primary, has used his power to render teenage candidates effectively ineligible in this election. 鈥淚 see that as a great threat to 鈥 the impact the young people can have on this democracy,鈥 says Ruzich.

For their part, state GOP officials argue that it鈥檚 hard to know if someone who has never voted before is actually a Republican.

And while they don鈥檛 want to squelch political enthusiasm among young conservatives, they also don鈥檛 want to risk complicating a race that should be relatively easy for a Republican to win 鈥 especially with a field that includes Kobach, a Trump ally, as well as the incumbent governor, Jeff Colyer, a surgeon with degrees from Georgetown, Cambridge University, and the University of Kansas.

鈥淲e have confidence that our voters will select the right candidate,鈥 says chairman Kelly Arnold, who served for more than a decade with the Young Republican National Federation and has advised some of the teen candidates on the process of running. 鈥淏ut you also want to do everything you can to produce a primary candidate that can win the overall election.鈥

That means limiting the number of people on a debate stage, Mr. Arnold says 鈥 not unlike the decision in the 2016 presidential primary season to hold one prime-time debate for top contenders and another for lower-tier candidates. Except in this case, the also-rans have been limited to venues like high school gymnasiums.

The state Democratic Party, on the other hand, has welcomed Bergeson鈥檚 participation 鈥 including in a gubernatorial forum at their recent convention.

鈥淚 think people appreciated having Jack on stage and hearing from him,鈥 says Ethan Corson, executive director of the Democratic Party in Kansas. 鈥淥therwise, you鈥檙e sort of guessing at what those younger people are interested in.鈥

What their peers are saying

Even some young Kansans have mixed feelings about their peers鈥 campaigns.

鈥淚 admire the kids that are protesting against gun violence 鈥 I think that鈥檚 a more useful use of our time than running for governor, where you can鈥檛 actually do anything,鈥 says Ben Engle, a high school debater from Kapaun Mt. Carmel Catholic High School in Wichita.

Others wonder whether some of the teenage candidates may be motivated more by a desire to burnish their resumes for college than to actually lead the state of Kansas 鈥 and say the quixotic campaigns have been limited to well-off, white kids who can afford the $2,100 necessary to get on the ballot. (Bergeson says he raised the sum from about 60 donors who contributed an average of $40 each, and Ruzich 鈥 who says he was born into a 鈥渧ery, very poor family鈥 that pulled ahead through financial responsibility 鈥 has even had out-of-state donors contribute.)

But some point out that social change has often been led by young people. The Marquis de Lafayette, a Frenchman who played a key role in the American Revolution, was just 19 when Congress commissioned him as a major general, and Alexander Hamilton was 21 when he signed the Declaration of Independence.

鈥淲e have spent so much time and energy telling kids, 鈥楧o whatever you want to be, be the change you want to see,鈥 鈥 says James Harris, a debate coach at Andover High School outside Wichita. 鈥淏ut all of a sudden when they step up to the plate we tell them, 鈥極h, it鈥檚 not your time.鈥 鈥

Ruzich, for his part, remains unswayed.

鈥淲hen there is a debate, whether I鈥檓 invited or not 鈥 I鈥檓 going to be there,鈥 he vows. 鈥淚 deserve to be in the same room.鈥