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A group of parents, teachers and religious leaders want the OK Supreme Court to block new lessons featuring religion, false 2020 election claims
Filed Tuesday on behalf of more than 30 parents, students, teachers and faith leaders, a second lawsuit is challenging Oklahoma’s new social studies standards. #oklaed
A second lawsuit, this time appealing directly to the Oklahoma Supreme Court, aims to overturn the state’s new academic standards for social studies on religious freedom and
Oklahoma may need to cover $225 million in SNAP costs if a new spending bill passes, raising concerns among local food banks.
Oklahoma Supreme Court is hearing arguments on SQ 836, a proposal allowing open primary elections for all voters.
As an Oklahoma Supreme Court ruling looms on whether voters will have the chance to open state primary elections to all, the state Republican Party is working to convince its members that State Question 836 is a bad deal.
The State Republican Party claimed the state question violated their constitutional rights to associate one candidate of their party towards endorsement. They claimed open primaries would spur confusion among voters on who is a Republican candidate and who is the endorsed Republican candidate.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court listened to oral arguments from both sides of a legal fight over State Question 836 on Tuesday, a constitutional amendment to “open up” the state’s primary elections. The justices seemed reluctant to make a ruling.
State Question 836 proposes overhauling Oklahoma's primary election system, and is already facing a legal challenge.
Oklahoma Democrats adopted a new state platform over the weekend introducing a bold vision alongside electing new leaders at this years 2025 State convention.
Oklahoma lawmakers reflect on key 2025 legislation, preview interim studies on issues like childcare and sex trafficking, and prepare for the 2026 election cycle.
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