TOPEKA — Democratic congressional candidate Nancy Boyda failed to disclose who paid for her advertisements as required by federal election rules, according to a complaint filed by Kansas Republican Party chairman Mike Brown.
Boyda admitted to “clerical errors” but she said Republicans were trying to distract voters from the impact of her opponent’s anti-abortion views. She faces Republican Derek Schmidt in the November election for the 2nd District seat being vacated by Republican U.S. Rep. Jake LaTurner.
Schmidt is a former Kansas Senate Majority Leader and three-term attorney general, and was the GOP nominee for governor in 2022. Boyda held the 2nd District seat for one term after winning a race in 2006.
Brown, who rose to GOP chairman by promoting false claims about election integrity, said he filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission alleging Boyda failed to include “paid for by” disclosures on billboards, videos, yard signs, campaign communications, and her campaign website. He questioned whether Boyda was trying to hide dark money interests.
“It’s shocking that Nancy Boyda, who previously served in Congress, wants to go back to writing laws for the rest of us while Boyda is unable or unwilling to follow federal rules herself,” Brown said. “The law is clear.”
Under FEC rules, candidates are to include legible disclaimers on printed communications.
Boyda’s campaign, responding to an inquiry for this story, faulted Republicans for talking about “clerical errors” after reports linked Georgia’s strict abortion ban to the deaths of two pregnant women.
“When you run a small grassroots campaign for Congress, mistakes happen,” Boyda said.