Oklahoma Runoff, Tulsa General Election 2024: BatesLine ballot card
On Tuesday, August 27, 2024, Oklahoma Republicans and Democrats have a partisan primary runoff election in a number of legislative and county races, and the City of Tulsa will conduct a non-partisan citywide general election, including races for Mayor, all nine City Council seats, as well as two charter-change propositions. There are a smattering of other school, municipal, and county propositions across Oklahoma. Here is the Oklahoma State Election Board's list of all races and propositions on the August 27, 2024, ballot.
In-person absentee voting will be available on Thursday, August 22, 2024, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., on Friday, August 23, 2024, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and (in most counties) on Saturday, August 24, 2024, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. For most counties, in-person absentee voting takes place at the county election board, but there are a few exceptions; click here for the full list of early-voting locations. Wagoner County will have a locations at NSU-BA and First Baptist Church in Wagoner. Polls will be open Tuesday, August 27, 2024, from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m.
NOTE: Precinct boundaries, voting locations, and district boundaries were changed, in some cases dramatically, in 2022. Enter your name and date of birth on the Oklahoma State Election Board's online voter portal and you will see where to vote and your sample ballot.
In response to popular demand, I have assembled the guidance detailed below into a downloadable, printable, single-page PDF.
Here are the candidates I'm recommending and (if in the district) voting for in the Oklahoma Republican runoff election and City of Tulsa general election on August 27, 2024. (This entry may change as I decide to add more detail, link previous articles, or discuss additional races between now and election day. The entry is post-dated to keep it at the top.)
Many readers have asked for a summary of my recommendations. My most enthusiastic choices are in bold. The hyperlink on the name of the office will take you to the article where I discuss that race.
Republican primary runoff:
The State Senate 33 runoff was a hard call: While I would be happy with either candidate (and have concerns about each), Christi Gillespie has earned the support of courageous conservative stalwarts like Sen. Dana Prieto, outgoing Sen. Nathan Dahm, and Tulsa school board member E'Lena Ashley, and I believe her experience as a member of the Broken Arrow City Council will help her be effective in navigating the legislative process. Shelley Gwartney was endorsed by primary opponent, Bill Bickerstaff, someone I greatly respect. That said, if I were Gillespie I wouldn't brag about Tulsa Regional Chamber and Oklahoma State Chamber endorsements, but I suspect they jumped aboard the bandwagon in light of her primary finish above 40%. (Please read my 2016 article "Chambers of Horrors" to understand why social and fiscal conservatives, opponents of cronyism, and supporters of historic preservation should find Chamber endorsements problematic.)
- Tulsa County Commissioner District 2: Melissa Myers
- State Senate 3: Julie McIntosh
- State Senate 15: Lisa Standridge
- State Senate 33: Christi Gillespie
- State Senate 47: Kelly Hines
- State House 20: Jonathan Wilk
- State House 32: Jim Shaw
- State House 50: Stacy Jo Adams
- State House 53: Nick Pokorny
- State House 60: Ron Lynch
- State House 98: Gabe Woolley
City of Tulsa general election:
For City of Tulsa races, if no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote, there will be a runoff coincident with the state/federal general election in November. All of the candidates listed are registered Republican voters, except Angela Chambers (a Democrat running against a Democrat incumbent) and Aaron Griffith (an independent running against a Democrat incumbent).
Tulsa Mayor: Brent VanNorman
- District 1: Angela Chambers
- District 2: Aaron Bisogno
- District 3: Susan Frederick
- District 4: Aaron Griffith
- District 5: Karen Gilbert (very reluctantly)
- District 6: Christian Bengel (unenthusiastically)
- District 7: Eddie Huff
- District 8: Chris Cone
- District 9: Jayme Fowler
- Proposition 1: YES
- Proposition 2: YES
MORE INFORMATION:
OFFICIAL INFORMATION:
- Oklahoma State Election Board
- Tulsa County Election Board
- Oklahoma Ethics Commission Guardian campaign finance database
OTHER CONSERVATIVE VOICES:
Here are some blogs, endorsement lists, candidate questionnaires, and sources of information for your consideration.
- Muskogee Politico news and analysis
- Oklahoma Constitution Index: Scores incumbent legislators on voting record
- iVoterGuide surveys of Oklahoma statewide, federal, and legislative candidates
- City Elders Tulsa speakers' videos, including candidate speeches
- Oklahomans for Life candidate surveys
- Oklahomans for the 2nd Amendment (OK2A) endorsements
- NRA-PVF endorsements (NOTE: NRA typically endorses an incumbent over a challenger, even if both have similar views
- Oklahomans for Health and Parental Rights (OKHPR) endorsements
If you appreciate the many hours of research that went into this guide and into the rest of my election coverage, and if you'd like to help keep this site online, you can contribute to BatesLine's upkeep via PayPal. In addition to keeping me caffeinated, donated funds pay for web hosting, subscriptions, and paid databases I use for research. Many thanks to those generous readers who have already contributed.
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