The pastor of the nation's largest Methodist church is running for the US Senate in Kansas
Source: AP
Updated 5:44 PM EDT, April 30, 2026
LENEXA, Kan. (AP) The pastor of the largest United Methodist Church in the U.S. launched a campaign Thursday for the Democratic nomination for a U.S. Senate seat in Kansas, upending the race in a normally Republican state as the GOPs small majority seems less secure than it was a year ago. The Rev. Adam Hamilton enters the race as a potentially formidable candidate, though it appears likely that at least a few of the eight other, lesser-known Democrats who previously launched campaigns would remain in the Aug. 4 primary.
The winner will face incumbent Republican Roger Marshall, who aligned himself closely with President Donald Trump in his first run for the Senate in 2020. Hamilton, 61, has a national following among mainline Protestants, and hes built his Church of the Resurrection over the past 35 years in the Kansas City area with about 22,000 members giving him a base from which to tap volunteers and donors.
Hamilton weighed an independent run first
He had considered running as an independent, telling his congregation that he could bridge partisan divides in a highly polarized political climate. However, many Democrats believed that would simply split the anti-Marshall vote, giving Marshall a second term. Every week, it seemed there was another news story in the last year where I would find myself shaking my head and thinking, we have to do better, the self-described fifth-generation Kansan said.
While Democrats and Republicans have traded off the Kansas governors office for the past 60 years, Republicans havent lost a U.S. Senate race in the state since 1932. Democrats gave Marshall a vigorous challenge in 2020, but he still prevailed by more than 11 percentage points, even as Democrat Joe Biden ousted Trump and his party won control of both houses of Congress.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/methodist-megachurch-pastor-kansas-senate-candidate-c703c399ddd3f16a0f0d9dab1cc08e05
hatrack
(65,032 posts)Last edited Fri May 1, 2026, 09:24 AM - Edit history (1)
(Mrs. Hatrack here, posting on Hatrack's account.)
I saw an earlier post about Rev. Hamilton's decision to run for the US Senate in Kansas, and DU posters were saying they weren't sure what to make of it because they didn't know much about him. I don't go to his church, but I live in the metro area where his church is located, so I am very aware of him.
A few things to know about him:
When the United Methodist Church was having a major struggle over LGBTQ issues -- I believe it was over ordination of LGBTQ people to serve as clergy -- Rev. Hamilton was a major, high profile church leader on the pro-LGBTQ side of that issue.
If you read the AP article that the original post links to, it mentions that he was registered as a Republican for the August 2020 primary. Don't necessarily interpret that to mean that he considered himself a Republican at that time -- in that part of Kansas, Johnson County, which has evolved over the years from being predominantly Republican to being pretty consistently blue, it has been common for Democrats to register as Republicans to try to sway the Republican primaries to pick more moderate, sane Republican candidates. I don't know if that was his motivation for registering as Republican in 2020, but my hunch is that is why.
He is very highly regarded as a force for civility, and his church is very active in doing good works in the community.
Keep your eye on this race - it could be an interesting one, like the James Talarico race in Texas.
Mawspam2
(1,116 posts)Have a golden mega church? Chauffeured in a Rolls Royce? Wear custom tailored Italian suits?
Aristus
(72,399 posts)I was raised in the UMC, and even though I'm an atheist now, I'll always be grateful for the UMC's gentle, humanistic approach to modern American Christianity. Every time my family went to church, I felt like I was surrounded by good people who looked out for one another. There was no hate preached from the pulpit, no insistence on voting for racists and hatemongers.
My sister attends our very liberal local United Methodist Church. The pastor is a lesbian, and they fly pride flags outside the church. I hope this guy in Kansas can bring some of that to the "What Is Wrong With?" State.
Akakoji
(549 posts)Lets gooooooo!