Yost served two terms in the state senate, and served as senate vice president for four years. He made an unsuccessful run for Kansas's 4th congressional district in 1992.[1]
In 1996, Yost was elected as a district judge for Sedgwick County and spent nearly two decades there, leaving his judgeship in 2015 to become county counselor for Sedgwick County.[3]
In 2018, disputes erupted over a Federal Bureau of Investigation inquiry into alleged illegal behavior by several county commissioners regarding the firing of County Manager Mike Scholes.[4] Yost was accused of violating attorney-client confidentiality when he warned Scholes that he was being fired for an illegal reason. Yost resigned soon thereafter as county counselor.[5]
After leaving the county, Yost spent several years as a mediator, and was assigned cases by local judges to investigate and to make recommendations to the court. In 2024, Yost decided to run for district judge again in Sedgwick County, and was unopposed. He will close his law office in January 2025 when he is sworn in as district judge. [2]
^ abc"About Us". yostlaw.legal. The Law Office of David Yost. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
^Jill Tinsley and Kristi Zukovich (August 18, 2015). "Eric Yost Appointed to County Counselor". sedgwickcounty.org. State Library of Kansas. Archived from the original on November 9, 2022. Retrieved November 9, 2022.