Kansas Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, left, D-Topeka, holds up a copy of texts to Kansas voters as House Minority Leader Jim Ward, right, D-Wichita, watches during a news conference, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2018, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan. The texts claim to be from the Republican National Committee and President Donald Trump and the Democratic leaders fear they are confusing voters. (AP Photo/John Hanna)

Kansas Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, left, D-Topeka, holds up a copy of texts to Kansas voters as House Minority Leader Jim Ward, right, D-Wichita, watches during a news conference, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2018, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan. The texts claim to be from the Republican National Committee and President Donald Trump and the Democratic leaders fear they are confusing voters. (AP Photo/John Hanna)

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas election officials are reviewing text messages claiming to be from President Donald Trump and telling residents that their early votes hadn’t been recorded, as Democratic leaders were quick Thursday to worry that they were part of efforts to “steal” a close governor’s race.

State Elections Director Bryan Caskey said the Kansas secretary of state’s office received 50 or 60 calls about the texts Wednesday, mostly from the northeastern part of the state. Caskey said the office is trying to determine whether the texts broke a law before determining what to do next.

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One text says “Your absentee ballot is ready. Remember to vote for Pres. Trump’s allies.” A follow-up text says, “This is President Trump. Your early vote has NOT been RECORDED on Kansas’s roster.” It urges the voter to confirm his or her polling place.

Kansas Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Topeka Democrat, and Kansas House Minority Leader Jim Ward, a Wichita Democrat, said during a Statehouse news conference that they worry the texts are confusing voters because at least a few Democrats received them. Ward said some new voters may conclude that the voting process is too complicated and give up.

“The whole purpose of sending it out is to sow confusion,” Ward said. “Remember, we’re talking about an election that can be determined by 300 or 400 votes. So, 50 here, 50 there, 50 there, pretty soon, you’ve stolen an election.”

While one state GOP official said the texts appeared to signal a get-out-the-vote operation, Democrats are on edge because Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the state’s top elections official, is a Trump ally and the Republican nominee for governor. He’s in a dead heat with Democratic state Sen. Laura Kelly after defeating GOP Gov. Jeff Colyer in the August primary by only 343 votes out of more than 317,000 cast.

The Democratic leaders also said the potential confusion caused by the texts comes after other issues, such as local officials providing only one polling place for the Dodge City, the iconic cowtown of 27,000 residents in southwestern Kansas.

And, in June a federal judge struck down a state law requiring new voters to provide papers documenting their U.S. citizenship when registering, deeming it an infringement on voting rights. Kobach championed the law as an anti-fraud measure but critics believe it suppresses turnout.

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Ward and Hensley called on Kobach and his chief deputy, Eric Rucker, to step aside from administering elections so that final decisions in the secretary of state’s office are left to Caskey.

Kobach spokeswoman Danedri Herbert said he does not plan to step aside because he has a responsibility under the state constitution to oversee elections. She noted that most states, including Kansas, give the job to an elected official.

As for the top Democrats, she said, “Their claims are ridiculous.”

County election officials handle the actual counting of votes. The job is overseen by an elected clerk in 101 of 105 counties. Election commissioners appointed by Kobach are in charge in the state’s four most populous counties, which are home to almost half of the state’s more than 1.8 million registered voters.

Ward and Hensley sent an open records request Thursday to Kobach demanding copies of all written and electronic communications between him, his employees and his county election officials since the Aug. 7 primary.

“We’re not trying to cause chaos. We’re trying to make sure they know we’re watching and we’re not going to let them steal an election, OK?” Ward said. “This is an incredibly close election and any mistake or any action that diminishes or suppresses the vote could swing an election.”

The texts to voters link to a website for the Republican National Committee, and Kansas Republican Party Chairman Kelly Arnold said he suspects that’s who sent the messages. He said the texts didn’t come from state party officials.

The RNC didn’t respond by Thursday evening to an email seeking comment.

But Arnold said the texts appeared to be part of a get-out-the-vote effort. He said party officials pay for regular updates on who has requested and returned advance ballots or voted early in person, though that information can sometimes be slightly outdated.

“We are trying to get out as much information to our voters as possible,” Arnold said.

Caskey said voters should only trust voting information that comes from state or local election officials. He added that this is the first time the state has received a complaint about the content of a text, which campaigns have increasingly used this election cycle.

Lyon County Clerk Tammy Vopat, a Republican, said she spoke to one man who received one of the texts after voting early and assured him that his vote would be tabulated on election night. She said the texts, which she described as “bogus” were discussed Wednesday during a routine weekly phone call with state and county election officials.

“It worries me that information like this is being sent out that puts doubt in our voters’ minds,” Vopat said.

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Hollingsworth reported from Kansas City, Missouri.

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Follow John Hanna on Twitter: https://twitter.com/apjdhanna .