Katy for Kansas

Katy for Kansas Fifth-generation Kansan, attorney, community organizer, and mother of three running to be the first U.S. Congresswoman for the fourth district of Kansas.
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Last night, I attended an important conversation hosted by Wichita City Councilman Joseph Shepard on the history and las...
05/29/2026

Last night, I attended an important conversation hosted by Wichita City Councilman Joseph Shepard on the history and lasting impacts of redlining in Wichita. I commend Joseph for creating space for this dialogue and am grateful to both him and Danielle Johnson for speaking so thoughtfully about the legacy of systemic inequities that continue to shape economic outcomes in our communities today.

As someone who studied race and ethnicity as an undergrad, I learned about redlining years ago in the classroom. But it never ceases to amaze me how few Americans were ever taught this history honestly or fully. And that matters. Because the truth matters. It matters not to assign guilt or to divide people. It matters because we cannot understand the systems we live in — or how to build something better — if we refuse to tell the truth about how we got here.

At one point during last night’s conversation, it struck me: we aren’t just talking about history, we are living through history right now.

Future generations will look back on this moment and ask difficult questions about the rollback of civil and voting rights protections, attacks on public education, the dismantling of diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, and the growing attempts to erase uncomfortable truths from our national story. They’ll ask whether people had the courage to speak up while it was happening. What we do now will impact whether certain inequalities in our society continue to deepen or start to improve.

That’s why conversations like last night’s matter so much. Telling the truth about the past gives us the courage to tell the truth about the present. We need that courage now more than ever, especially in our leaders. I understand the assignment. And I am committed to amplifying the truth about our history and our present, to ensure that the long moral arc of history bends a little more toward justice.

"Partisan division and political games are tearing at the fabric of our communities and distracting us from what matters...
05/29/2026

"Partisan division and political games are tearing at the fabric of our communities and distracting us from what matters most: our shared humanity.

Katy Tyndell represents a new generation of Kansas leadership grounded in common sense, accountability and service to others. Through her work leading a nonpartisan organization, she’s shown that bringing people together is still possible.

It’s time to put people ahead of power. That’s why I’m voting for Katy Tyndell."

Katie Grover
Mom. Wife. Advocate. Kansan.

Good conversations earlier this week with folks at the Southwest Wichita Neighborhood Association alongside local and st...
05/28/2026

Good conversations earlier this week with folks at the Southwest Wichita Neighborhood Association alongside local and state leaders.

I appreciated hearing Rep. Tom Kessler reflect on bipartisan cooperation in Topeka — a reminder that progress is still possible when we focus more on solving problems than scoring political points. That same spirit of working together across differences is exactly what I’d like to help restore in Washington.

This morning, Shawn and I joined the Murph Challenge in Park City hosted by the incredible men of F3 Wichita to honor th...
05/25/2026

This morning, Shawn and I joined the Murph Challenge in Park City hosted by the incredible men of F3 Wichita to honor the brave Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country.

For those unfamiliar with it, the Murph is no joke:
🏃‍♀️ 1 mile run
💪 300 squats
💪 200 pushups
💪 100 pull-ups
🏃‍♀️ another 1 mile run

So yeah…I may not be able to lift my arms above my head tomorrow. 😂

But today was about so much more than a workout. It was about reflection, gratitude, and remembering the cost of the freedoms we enjoy. I was especially moved by the remarks shared throughout the morning — including a powerful recitation of the Gettysburg Address and a reminder that unity, not division, is what carries democracy forward.

Thank you to everyone who organized this meaningful event—especially Kyle Tucker—for creating such a thoughtful tribute to our fallen service members and their families.

On this Memorial Day weekend, may we remember that freedom is never free — and may we honor those who gave everything in service to this nation.

Happy Memorial Day, everyone! 🇺🇸

Team Tyndell took a little road trip to Larned, Kansas yesterday to participate in their annual Santa Fe Trail Days cele...
05/25/2026

Team Tyndell took a little road trip to Larned, Kansas yesterday to participate in their annual Santa Fe Trail Days celebration.

One of the most unique things about Larned is that the congressional map literally splits the town in half. Everything north of 8th Street is in the 1st District, and everything south of 8th Street is in KS-04 — the district I’m running to represent.

Despite the rain, we had great conversations, met wonderful folks with the Pawnee County Democratic Party, visited local vendors, and were reminded once again just how kind and helpful Kansans are. (Special thanks to the local mechanic who came out on a Saturday to fix my flat tire for me! 😆)

"Katy Tyndell is a transformational leader. Katy is grateful for the gift of her life, for family, friends, colleagues, ...
05/24/2026

"Katy Tyndell is a transformational leader.

Katy is grateful for the gift of her life, for family, friends, colleagues, neighbors, community, and world. She builds relationships with the gifts of attention, care, humility, kindness, and justice.

Katy’s words match her deeds. Her learned truths guide her personal and public life.

Katy strives to engage with others in such a way that creates and elevates one and all toward an abundant, meaningful life lived in community.

Katy reminds me of an ancient picture word of a leader. At times, Katy jumps out in front, leading, at times, she comes alongside as an equal, at times, she comes behind, grateful that another person, with her help, is now a leader.

Katy is the ethical, moral, and political opposite of anyone who would say, “I alone can fix it.” She will be ever attune to people, not party, She will not be swayed by money or self-service. She will always affirm and commit to truths of “all human beings are created equal”. She will keep it simple, it’s “we the people.”

She has my vote."

- Keith Koch
Retired Presbyterian Pastor

Sometimes you’ve gotta break up the monotony of the campaign trail and meet people where they are. Tonight, we kicked of...
05/23/2026

Sometimes you’ve gotta break up the monotony of the campaign trail and meet people where they are. Tonight, we kicked off the Karaoke with Katy tour across KS-04 — something I’ve wanted to do since the day I decided to run.

Music has a way of bringing people together, bridging divides, and reminding us of our shared humanity. And let’s face it, karaoke is just a lot of fun! And right now, I think we could all use more joy and laughter in our lives—especially when it comes to politics.

Huge thank you to the gracious team at The Stop for hosting us tonight—Biff, Allen, Ryan, KJ Lacy—you guys are awesome!

Stay tuned for details about our next stop…🎤✨

I am honored to announce that I am officially a 2026 Moms Demand Action Gun Sense Candidate.This recognition means a gre...
05/22/2026

I am honored to announce that I am officially a 2026 Moms Demand Action Gun Sense Candidate.

This recognition means a great deal to me, not just because of the work I’ve done over the last decade with Moms Demand Action, but because of the values I was raised with in rural America.

I grew up around fi****ms. My grandfather was an avid sportsman and lifelong NRA member who helped reintroduce wild turkeys into Butler County in the 1970s. My dad hunted everything from ducks to elk. Guns weren’t something unfamiliar or frightening in our home; they were treated with respect.

In fact, I grew up sleeping down the hall from an unlocked gun case because my parents believed something important: if you’re going to own fi****ms, you teach your children responsibility, safety, and respect from the very beginning.

That’s the culture in which I was raised. And honestly, I believe those same values are exactly why we should be able to come together to address gun violence in America.

I respect the Second Amendment, and like many Kansas families, my own family owns guns. I understand that for many people, gun ownership is tied to sport, tradition, self-defense, and rural life.

But I also believe we are failing our children if we continue accepting school shootings, suicides, domestic violence, and preventable tragedies as simply “the way things are.”

That’s why I got involved with Moms Demand Action nearly a decade ago. And it’s why I’ll continue fighting for common-sense measures that help keep our communities safe while respecting responsible gun ownership.

I refuse to believe this is a problem Americans are incapable of solving. Since when do we decide the work is too hard? Since when do we tell grieving families nothing can change?

We can do better. We just need leaders with the courage and will to act.

Sometimes on the campaign trail—amidst all the chaos, the travel, the endless schedule of events—a moment unfolds that s...
05/21/2026

Sometimes on the campaign trail—amidst all the chaos, the travel, the endless schedule of events—a moment unfolds that stops you in your tracks and reminds you why this work matters.

I had one of those moments earlier this week.

At a campaign event, I had the opportunity to meet a lovely 17-year-old girl named Emme. I was immediately impressed. Only a high school junior, she is already more civically engaged than most adults. She’s bright, articulate, thoughtful, and deeply interested in what’s happening in our country—and in this congressional race in particular.

We talked for a while, and she told me how meaningful it was to see a woman running for Congress here in Kansas.

That conversation has stayed with me.

Because the next generation is watching.

Young women are watching.

They are paying attention to who shows up, who speaks up, and who is willing to fight for a future where women have a seat at every table where decisions are made.

And the truth is, I think about this every single day as a mother of two daughters: I had more rights growing up in the 80s and 90s than my daughters have today.

That reality weighs heavily on me.

Over the last several years, we’ve watched attacks on women’s rights, voting rights, and basic representation move from whispers behind closed doors into the mainstream. And I refuse to accept that as normal for our daughters.

These attacks aren’t abstract political debates anymore. They are affecting whether women can access healthcare, participate fully in our democracy, and compete equally in workplaces and institutions across this country.

I want my daughters—and girls like Emme—to know there is no room in which they don’t belong. No office they can’t seek. No sport in which they can’t compete. No decision-making table where their voice doesn’t matter.

That’s bigger than politics.

That’s about the kind of country we leave behind.

Kansas has never elected a woman to Congress from the Fourth District. At this moment in history, I believe that matters more than ever.

Not because women deserve symbolic representation, but because our voices, our experiences, and our leadership belong everywhere decisions are being made.

Prior generations of women unlocked doors so that I could walk through them and have a seat at the table.

I’ll be damned if I let those same doors get slammed shut on the faces of the next generation.

Not on my watch. Not now. Not ever.

Address

P. O. Box 781004
Wichita, KS
67207

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