"Kansas political history has not been tidy. It has been uncertain, tense, confusing, and contradictory. Here is the story of how reforms of the 1960s gave way to the tensions of the twenty-first century. Reform and Reaction unpacks the old saying that ‘as goes Kansas, so goes the nation.’ Sometimes, Kansas defined the issues that defined a nation. Sometimes, it was more that Kansas adopted something because the nation had already accepted it. This book drills down beyond broad trends and blanket statements to explore the human and personal interactions that shaped the story of the Sunflower State over the past fifty years and will be an invaluable resource for those who wondered ‘how did we get here?’ . . . or perhaps more accurately, ‘what on earth happened?’"—Jay M. Price is a professor of history and director of the Local and Community History Program at Wichita State University"Kansas is a ‘Red’ state, but its politics are more varied and elections more competitive, especially in gubernatorial races, than one might expect. Applying an effective ‘reform and reaction’ framework, Smith and Flentje explain the trajectory of politics in the Sunflower State since the 1960s. Highly recommended."—John Fliter, associate professor of political science at Kansas State University, and author of Child Labor in America: The Epic Legal Struggle to Protect Children