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The Tulsa Beacon

 

Tag: Election

Editorial: Reform Tulsa’s election process

Tulsa Beacon

Tulsa needs to change the method of municipal elections. Here’s the first problem. The primary for the Tulsa City Council election was held on the runoff date for federal, state and county elections. That was deliberately set to lower turnout and favor incumbents. Since there was no chance for a runoff, the two top vote…

Gov.-elect Stitt ready to work on Oklahoma’s turnaround

Tulsa Beacon

Gov.-elect Kevin Stitt is ready to get Oklahoma moving. He takes office on January 14. “Since the day I launched my campaign back in July of 2017, I’ve promised voters that with their support, and their vote, we’d get Oklahoma’s turnaround started right here, right now,” Stitt wrote in a message to supporters after the…

2018 Vote Results

Tulsa Beacon

U.S. Congress First District 149,938 – Kevin Hern 59 percent 102,878 – Tim Gilpin 41 percent Oklahoma Governor  643,987 – Kevin Stitt 54 percent 500,430 – Drew Edmondson 42 percent 40,768 – Chris Powell 3 percent Lt. Governor 728,547 –  Matt Pinnell 62 percent 406,340 – Anastasia Pittman 35 percent 42,120 – Ivan Holmes (I)…

Stitt elected governor

Tulsa Beacon

In the race for governor, Republican Kevin Stitt defeated Democrat Drew Edmondson and Libertarian Chris Powell. Stitt, a highly successful businessman, had never run for public office before. Edmondson, part of a Democrat family involved in state politics for decades, was a former state attorney general. In the First Congressional District, political newcomer Kevin Hern,…

Midterm election will bring new leadership to Oklahoma

Tulsa Beacon

On Tuesday, state voters will pick a new governor and First District citizens will select a new representative for the U.S. House. Gov. Mary Fallin is term limited and will be replaced by either Republican Kevin Stitt, Democrat Drew Edmondson or Libertarian Chris Powell. First District Congress is an open seat due to the retirement…

Early voting will begin on Thursday

Tulsa Beacon

Early voting for the November 6 midterm election will be available at the Tulsa County Election Board office, 555 N. Denver Ave., and the Hardesty Library, 8316 E. 93rd St., from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. November 1-2 and from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. November 3. Tulsa County Election Board Secretary Gwen Freeman said…

The nasty politics probably won’t end after the election

Tulsa Beacon

This week becomes the final week leading up to the 2018 Mid-Term Election on November 6, which many have stated is “the most important in my lifetime.” Well, maybe not in mine, as the last presidential election was one of the most, if not the most, critical elections in my nine-decade memory. That includes those…

Survey shows teachers will vote no on State Question 801

Tulsa Beacon

A survey conducted by Professional Oklahoma Educators indicates that almost 80 percent of teachers, administrators and support staff do not support SQ 801, which calls for a vote of the people on the November ballot to amend the state constitution. If passed, SQ 801 would allow local school districts to use money from property taxes,…

Editorial: Vote for Ken Reddick for District 7

Tulsa Beacon

Conservatives don’t have much to cheer for in Tulsa’s municipal government. A few years ago, city leaders and their chamber overlords tricked Tulsa voters into making municipal elections “nonpartisan” – thus guaranteeing that voters would have less information about people running for mayor or city council. On November 6, voters will select four new councilors….

Vote for Judge Morrissey and not for the homosexual

Tulsa Beacon

What should conservative Christian voters look for in the November 6 election? Here are some insights. Christopher Uric Brecht-Smith is running against Judge Linda Morrissey for Tulsa County District Judge. His registered name on the ballot will be “Chris Brecht” because he doesn’t want unsuspecting voters to know he is “married” to another man. He…