kansas city, johnson county, kansas in particular, like a quarter of all votes in the giant state of kansas will come out of this one county, bedroom communities right outside k.c. traditional republican voters. they say those voters would be unnerved by kobach. there is some polling evidence to back up that theory. this was a poll that came out just before the primary, and it tested two different republican nominees here, colyer and kobach against kelly. check this out. here's what it found. colyer the incumbent governor was running ten points ahead of kelly. you see greg norman running as an independent. that's a name you might remember from 2014. but the bottom line republicans with colyer were up ten in this poll. substitute kobach in for colyer and all of a sudden kelly the democrat goes up by one. down ten for the democrats, up one democrats say that's the difference of having kobach. and then they say look, you get a midterm year in a climate favorable, maybe that would help too. >> amazing. kind of a todd akin situation is what democrats are looking at