John Albert Potucek (July 17, 1901 - June 26, 1982) was a lawyer and state legislator in Kansas. He served in the Kansas Senate from 1945 to 1960. He lived in the city of Wellington.[1]
Potucek was born July 17, 1901, on a farm in Sumner County, Kansas.[1][2] His parents were Joseph and Louisa Potucek, and he had an older sister Adelaide and two younger siblings Lona and Joseph.[3] He went to the University of Kansas and received his law degree before obtaining the bar in 1924.[2]
Although he was a Democrat, he was invited to run for county attorney on the Republican ticket in 1924, but refused, saying he would wait to run as a Democrat.[2] He ran in 1928 but was defeated by the Republican candidate. He ran again in 1930 and won.[2] He was efficient in the role, prosecuting 300 cases in his first four months and winning all but four.[2] In total he was elected as county attorney five times.[2]
He refused to take several thousand dollars in $25 fees for convicting liquor law violations, saying "the taxpayers don't have to bribe me to do my job."[2]
In 1944 he was elected to the Kansas Senate, beating the incumbent Republican Otto B. Wenrich 4,755 to 4,350 votes. He was the only Democratic senator that session.[4]
He entered the race for governor of Kansas in 1946 but withdrew to focus on the Senate.[5] He stood again for the governorship in 1950,[6] but lost the Democratic primary to Ken Anderson, who he immediately started supporting. Anderson eventually lost to the Republican candidate Frank L. Hagaman.[7]
Potucek stood for re-election to the Senate in 1960 and lost to Republican Ford Harbaugh.[8]
Potucek served as a district judge,[9] and he later returned to the position of county attorney and served till he resigned in 1975 to take the new position of county counselor.[10]
Potucek married Vera Epperson on February 16, 1935,[11] and died June 26, 1982.[12]