Oklahoma lawmakers will consider several bills that could change voting procedures during the 2025 legislative session.
Bills filed include making changes to the number of in-person absentee voting and making voting days a state holiday.
Residents of several cities and municipalities went to the polls on Tuesday to vote on local issues. Below are results for the votes on propositions from across Oklahoma. Top Headlines Man on Oklahoma death row for killing Tecumseh police officer dies in prison Women's Health released its 2025 fitness awards.
Over 100,000 voter registrations were removed from Oklahoma voter rolls as part of the State Election Board's state-mandated maintenance following the 2024 General Election.
The Oklahoma State Election Board conducted its routine voter list maintenance, purging the rolls of inactive voters.
While some agencies are OK with flat budgets, a handful say they need extra funds. Those agencies are asking for a lot more money for the next session
Inola voters rejected a roughly $62.5 million bond package to fund a new building housing classrooms for grades 2 through 5. Students in Inola’s elementary school currently learn in a former high school built in 1964, which saw an addition built in 2008. To accommodate growing enrollment, the district uses modular buildings.
OKLAHOMA CITY – Lawmakers have filed a number of measures that seek to alter Oklahoma’s election processes. Senate Bill 129, by Senate Minority Leader Julia Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, and Senate Bill 273,
"In other words, they didn't respond to their address confirmation notice that they received in 2021, and since that time, they've had no voter registration act
Oklahoma lawmakers have filed several bills for the 2025 session aimed at improving election security and transparency, including measures on AI disclosure in campaigns, expanding early voting, and automatic voter registration.
The Oklahoma State Election Board completed a state-required maintenance of its voter list earlier this week, removing over 100,000 registrations from the state voter rolls. How many registrations ...
OKLAHOMA CITY – Lawmakers have filed a number of measures that seek to alter Oklahoma’s election processes. Senate Bill 129, by Senate Minority Leader Julia Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, and Senate Bill 273, by Sen. Mary Boren, D-Norman, would increase the ...