News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Deal to pay for Chiefs, Royals stadiums fractures Missouri Freedom Caucus
by Jason Hancock, Missouri Independent
June 9, 2025
A group of renegade GOP state lawmakers whose quarrels with party leaders defined years of Missouri legislative inaction appears to be ripping apart over a plan to fund stadiums for the Chiefs and Royals.
On Friday, state Sen. Rick Brattin stepped down as chairman of the Missouri Freedom Caucus just days after voting in favor of $1.5 billion in tax incentives to finance new or renovated stadiums. He noted the stadium vote in the statement announcing his resignation.
The group had vowed to oppose the funding scheme, which it decried as a “handout to billionaire sports team owners.” But Brattin, a Harrisonville Republican, and state Sen. Brad Hudson, a Cape Fair Republican who is also a Freedom Caucus member, voted in support of the plan after a provision was added making changes to local property tax bills.
On Monday morning, state Sen. Nick Schroer, a Republican from Defiance, was announced as the new chairman.
The response from conservative activists after Brattin’s resignation was swift.
Some accused Brattin of betrayal, while others argued he was duped by the inclusion of language allowing the stadium funding to survive even if a court tosses out the property tax provisions.
“For several years, discussion in (Jefferson City) revolved around conservatives exposing moderate and liberal Republicans by getting them on bad votes that showed who they were,” Bill Eigel, a former Missouri Senate Freedom Caucus leader who is running for St. Charles County executive, posted on social media. “Gov. Mike Kehoe changed this dynamic. He is getting conservatives to vote as badly as the moderates.”
Jim Lembke, a former GOP state senator and adviser to the Freedom Caucus, said the group is “void of any leadership and has lost all credibility. They should disband and join the uniparty that runs Jefferson City.”
Missouri governor allows more spending, property tax cap as he pursues stadium deal
Tim Jones, state director for the Missouri Freedom Caucus, said during a radio appearance on Friday that he advised senators to vote against the stadium bill and was surprised when two members of the caucus ended up supporting it.
“In the light of day, there’s some buyer’s remorse. There’s some regret,” Jones said, though he later added: “To his defense, (Sen. Brattin) thought he was doing the right thing to protect the interest of his constituents.”
Brattin defended his vote on social media, posting a video saying that while the deal wasn’t perfect, he was determined that “if we’re going to be giving handouts to millionaires and billionaires, we need broad-based tax relief for people.”
“To me,” he said, “this was a massive win. On the stadium, they were going to get the votes, whatever it took. So I tried to weigh this out and make lemonade from the lemons we were given.”
Brattin’s chief of staff was less diplomatic, accusing Eigel of treating politics like a game.
“He’d rather chase likes on social media than deliver real wins,” Tom Estes, Brattin’s top legislative staffer, wrote in a now-deleted social media post. “It’s pathetic, and just one more reason he’s never been an effective leader.”
The war between the Freedom Caucus and Missouri Senate leadership raged for years, creating so much gridlock that fewer bills passed last year than any session in living memory — despite Republicans holding a legislative super majority.
Tensions cooled this year, with term limits pushing key figures on both sides of the fight out of the Senate. The detente led to a much more productive session, marked more by partisan squabbling than GOP infighting.
But the Freedom Caucus’ history of using procedural hijinks to upend legislative business made its opposition to the stadium bill an existential threat to its success, forcing Republican leaders to take demands for some form of tax cut seriously.
In the statement announcing Schroer’s new leadership role, did not mention the rifts within the group. He vowed to push an alternative agenda.
“We will not bend,” Schroer said. “We will not back down. The Missouri Freedom Caucus is here to fight — and we are just getting started.”
If approved by the House and signed by Kehoe, the legislation passed by the Senate would allocate state taxes collected from economic activity at Arrowhead and Kauffman to bond payments for renovations at Arrowhead and a new stadium for the Royals in Jackson or Clay counties.
The cost is estimated at close to $1.5 billion over 30 years.
Both teams have expressed interest in leaving Missouri when the lease on their current stadiums expire in 2030, and Kansas lawmakers have put a deal on the table that would use state incentives to pay for up to 70% of the costs of new stadiums.
The Kansas deal expires on June 30.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
In order to win over Democrats, who were skeptical of the plan and still upset with how the regular legislative session ended last month, Kehoe agreed to increase the size of a disaster relief package for St. Louis from $25 million to $100 million.
To quell any possible Freedom Caucus uprising, Kehoe allowed the inclusion of a provision in the stadium funding bill requiring most counties to put a hard cap on increases in property tax bills.
In 75 counties, tax bills would not increase more than 5% per year from a base amount, or the rate of inflation, whichever is less. In 22 others, including Brattin’s home county of Cass and Hudson’s entire seven-county district of southwest Missouri, no increase in the basic bill would be allowed.
The bill includes exceptions for newly voted levies and the additional value from improvements.
Many of the larger counties of the state, including Boone, Greene, Jackson, St. Louis County and the city of St. Louis, were excluded from the cap provisions. Franklin, Jefferson and St. Charles counties were put under the zero percent cap.
With the concessions, Kehoe stitched together a bipartisan coalition to get the stadium bill out of the Senate. There were 12 Republicans and seven Democrats voting to send it to the House on the 19-13 vote. Three of the chamber’s 10 Democrats joined 10 Republicans in opposition.
Eigel, who fell short to Kehoe in last year’s GOP primary for governor, poured cold water on the deal, arguing residents will never see any tax relief.
He points to language added to the bill after it cleared committee stating it is the “intent of the General Assembly” that if any piece of the legislation is eventually ruled invalid, “that provision shall be severed from the act and all remaining provisions shall be valid.”
“Kehoe’s guys snuck in a clause that will allow the property tax provisions of the bill to be stripped out by courts while the billionaire stadium bailout remains whole,” Eigel said. “When conservatives missed it in the final reading after being assured by the sponsor it wasn’t in there, the disaster was complete.”
A spokeswoman for the governor’s office didn’t respond to a question about the severability clause.
Brattin keeps hearing from people who say he “sold out,” he said, but he still believes the bill that passed the Senate was a win for Missourians.
“I just wanted to give some clarity to this,” Brattin said in his social media video. “Whether you agree or disagree, this is where my heart is on this.”
This article was updated at 7:30 a.m. Monday with state Sen. Nick Schroer’s appointment as chairman and at 8 a.m. to correct the size of the tornado relief package.
Support Local Journalism
As a nonprofit newsroom, our articles are free for everyone to access. Readers like you make that possible. Can you help sustain our watchdog reporting today?
Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.
The post Deal to pay for Chiefs, Royals stadiums fractures Missouri Freedom Caucus appeared first on missouriindependent.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
The content is focused on Republican state lawmakers, particularly members of the Missouri Freedom Caucus, and their internal conflicts over a tax incentive plan for sports stadiums. It emphasizes traditional conservative concerns such as opposition to government handouts to wealthy sports owners and tax relief for constituents. Criticism of GOP leadership and intra-party disputes are highlighted, reflecting tension within the right wing. The tone is factual and includes perspectives from multiple Republican figures, suggesting a neutral to mildly center-right framing consistent with coverage of conservative political dynamics.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
‘Spaghetti Wars’ creator dishes on show before airing in STL
SUMMARY: “Spaghetti Wars,” a new St. Louis-based reality TV show created by local chef Puppy Cam, premieres this weekend at the St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase. Described as “Family Feud meets The Sopranos,” the show features food challenges where competitors cook to climb the ranks within a fictional food family, the Cosa Nostra. The pilot episode, filmed over eight months, blends humor, drama, and emotion, highlighting food as a universal cultural heart. After the screening at High Point Theater, Cam and executive producer Barry Mendelson will host a Q&A. The project was partly funded by Missouri state tax credits and aims to evolve into a full series.
Eight months later, the “Spaghetti Wars” pilot episode is ready for public consumption. It will debut Saturday night at the Hi-Pointe Theatre as part of the St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase.
St. Louis News: FOX 2 covers news, weather, and sports in Missouri and Illinois. Read more about this story or see the latest updates on our website https://FOX2Now.com
Follow FOX 2 on social media:
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/FOX2Now
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FOX2Now/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/FOX2Now/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fox2now/
TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@fox2now
SnapChat: https://www.snapchat.com/add/fox2now
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Bolivar restaurant business owners sued for defamation, breach of contract
SUMMARY: Larry and Kathryn Gifford, former owners of Bolivar’s Kathy’s Pasta, have filed a lawsuit against Iris Pogue and Edward Cahoj, managers of Side by Side LLC, who rented the restaurant location in late 2023 and were evicted in 2024. The Giffords, who own the building, allege Side by Side failed to pay rent, neglected maintenance, and caused financial losses exceeding $60,000. They claim Pogue made false, defamatory social media posts accusing them of neglect and fraud, damaging their reputation. The Giffords seek damages, injunctive relief, and a jury trial. Side by Side LLC has not yet commented.
The post Bolivar restaurant business owners sued for defamation, breach of contract appeared first on www.ozarksfirst.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Chiefs’ tight end Travis Kelce makes shirtless cameo in Happy Gilmore 2
SUMMARY: Travis Kelce makes a comedic cameo in *Happy Gilmore 2*, now streaming on Netflix. Playing an over-the-top hotel server, Kelce clashes with Oscar (Bad Bunny) over a gin order, leading to a fiery outburst and dramatic firing. Later, Kelce chest-bumps two players through a table and appears in Oscar’s surreal dream sequence, tied up and covered in honey before being attacked by a bear. Adam Sandler praised Kelce’s performance, calling him “unbelievable.” The film features other celebrity cameos, including Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, John Daly, Eminem, and Post Malone, blending golf, humor, and star power in a wild sequel.
The post Chiefs' tight end Travis Kelce makes shirtless cameo in Happy Gilmore 2 appeared first on fox4kc.com
-
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed5 days ago
Helene devastated our region. Even more death and despair might be on the way. • Asheville Watchdog
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed6 days ago
Appeals court upholds Texas law limiting cities’ ordinances
-
News from the South - West Virginia News Feed2 days ago
Law blocks Planned Parenthood from Medicaid dollars, one third of WV patients affected
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed5 days ago
Texas health officials analyze lessons of measles outbreak
-
Mississippi Today5 days ago
Mississippi’s U.S. Rep. Michael Guest in running for Homeland Security chair
-
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed5 days ago
Still awaiting a budget in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Oregon | North Carolina
-
News from the South - Georgia News Feed5 days ago
Georgia conservationists push to ‘finish the job’ of protecting Okefenokee from mining
-
News from the South - Missouri News Feed6 days ago
The scoop on Missouri’s ice cream preferences, according to Instacart