Kayden Bennett - Kansas House District 81 - Full Conversation
Kayden Bennett is running for Kansas House District 81 in the August 4th Democratic Primary.
Learn more about Kayden Bennett here: www.kaydenforkansas.com [http://www.kaydenforkansas.com/]
The full conversation introduces Kayden Bennett as a Democratic candidate for Kansas House District 81, which he describes as including Plainview, McConnell Air Force Base, parts of unincorporated Sedgwick County, Wichita, and north Derby. Bennett talks about growing up poor, moving around often, and understanding what it feels like to not have one more penny. He reflects on how becoming middle class as an adult can still feel financially insecure when the cost of living keeps rising and when stability once felt completely out of reach.
Bennett explains that he decided to run after feeling dismissed by his current representative when he tried to raise concerns about property taxes and fully funding special education. He says he did not originally plan to get involved in politics, but the experience made him feel that regular people in the district needed someone who would listen and take their concerns seriously. The conversation connects that decision to the larger goal of getting more everyday people involved in running for office, especially in districts where voters have not always had a Democratic option.
Bennett and Helen also discuss what a grassroots campaign looks like when it is not built around large fundraising totals. Bennett talks about relying on direct voter contact, door knocking, postcards, simple campaign materials, and conversations with people in the district instead of assuming a candidate needs tens of thousands of dollars to be viable. The conversation frames the campaign around showing up in neighborhoods, talking to regular people, and proving that a campaign can be built through organizing and community contact.
The interview also covers term limits and the problem of elected officials becoming disconnected from the people they represent. Bennett discusses the need for representatives who continue to talk with regular people and understand the lives of their constituents. He and Helen talk about the difference between experience and being so entrenched that elected officials stop listening, especially when communities feel ignored or dismissed.
On policy, Bennett discusses marijuana legalization and connects it to funding public schools and easing pressure on property taxes. He talks about the need to legalize, tax, and regulate marijuana instead of continuing a system where Kansas loses potential revenue and where people can still be criminalized. The conversation also touches on the August 4 judicial amendment vote and why Helen and Bennett believe voters should understand what is at stake before casting a ballot.
Bennett talks about guns, gun safety, and police accountability from his perspective as a disabled combat veteran and former military police officer. He says he understands firearms and supports responsible ownership, but he also believes gun owners should be held accountable when weapons are left unsecured and children gain access to them. He and Helen also discuss police shootings, de-escalation, body camera footage, public trust, and why accountability matters when officers use force.
A major part of the conversation focuses on foster care reform. Bennett talks about his family’s experience with foster care and adoption, including how foster children can be treated differently than biological children and how the system can fail to provide stability. He discusses the need for better support for foster families, more consistency across the system, and a deeper understanding of trauma. The conversation also includes the importance of keeping children safe while recognizing that poverty, messy homes, or families needing help should not automatically be treated the same as abuse.
Bennett also discusses senior care and Medicaid expansion. He talks about older Kansans who need more support, people who fall into gaps in the healthcare system, and families who cannot afford medication, dental care, vision care, hearing care, or long-term support. The conversation connects Medicaid expansion to emergency room use, healthcare costs, and the strain placed on families and hospitals when people cannot get care earlier.
The interview includes a discussion about banning child marriage. Bennett says children should not be entering legal marriages and connects the issue to basic protections for minors. He and Helen talk about how young people are restricted from making many other adult decisions, but in some places can still be allowed or pushed into marriage. The conversation frames child marriage as an issue of protecting children, not as a partisan issue.
Bennett and Helen also talk about data centers, water use, and the importance of asking questions before giving powerful interests access to public resources. Bennett says he does not know everything about the issue yet, but that is part of the point: elected officials should be willing to learn, ask questions, and make sure everyday people have a voice before major decisions are made. The conversation connects that issue to a broader theme of representation and making sure wealthy interests are not the only people heard in Topeka.
The conversation also covers reproductive health and bodily autonomy. Bennett talks about the need for government to stay out of private medical decisions and says people should not have lawmakers inserted into doctor’s appointments. He and Helen connect reproductive rights to privacy, personal freedom, and the broader pattern of politicians trying to control people’s bodies and family decisions.
Bennett discusses unions and civil rights, including the importance of workers organizing together and using collective power. He and Helen talk about how people are often stronger when they act together, whether in workplaces, politics, or civil rights movements. The conversation connects labor rights to the broader idea that everyday people should not have to face powerful institutions alone.
The full conversation closes with Bennett and Helen discussing attacks on marginalized communities, especially LGBTQ+ people and transgender Kansans. Bennett says lawmakers should stay out of people’s bathrooms, bedrooms, and doctor’s appointments. He argues that the state has more urgent issues to address, including groceries, gas, special education, healthcare, and survival, instead of targeting people who are not hurting anyone. The conversation ends with a clear message that people in power should mind their own business and stop using marginalized communities as political targets.
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