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2024 OK Legislative Scorecard

The following scorecard lists several key votes in the Oklahoma Legislature in 2024 and ranks state representatives and senators based on their fidelity to (U.S.) constitutional and limited-government principles.

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House Votes

 

SB1122 outlines the allocation and budgeting of $5.9 billion for the public school system for FY 2024-25.

The House passed SB1122 on May 30, 2024, by a vote of 70 to 24. We have assigned pluses to the nays because education is not the role of government—rather, it is the responsibility of a child’s parents or family. This bill only continues the government’s monopoly over K-12 education, which seeks to end traditional private schools and homeschooling in favor of universal state-sponsored schooling, and effectively turn every student into a government-school student. The best “school choice,” by far, is for parents to choose not to place their child’s education in the hands of the state. Educational and economic freedom cannot be achieved by forcing other citizens to furnish their hard-earned tax dollars to fund all that now entails a compulsory, failing, and government-run K-12 school system. 

May 30, 2024
Vote Date
View Bill Vote Text
No
Constitutional
House
Chamber

SB426 establishes that the World Health Organization, the United Nations, and the World Economic Forum have no jurisdiction in the state of Oklahoma.

The House passed SB426 on May 30, 2024, by a vote of 74 to 19. We have assigned pluses to the yeas because the United States should fully withdraw from the entire United Nations system, which is comprised of not only “specialized agencies,” such as the World Health Organization, but “strategic partners,” like the World Economic Forum. The UN poses one of the greatest threats to state and national sovereignty, not to mention the God-given rights of the American people. Since 1945, the UN Charter, which is completely antithetical to the U.S. Constitution, has established an international framework for expanding global governance, with the ultimate goal of building a totalitarian one-world state. Oklahomans must reject the “zeitgeist” of globalism and call on Congress and the President to pursue a sound, just, and traditional foreign policy of non-interventionism, based on U.S. interests and the original intent of the Founding Fathers. It’s time to Get US Out! of the UN.

May 30, 2024
Vote Date
View Bill Vote Text
Yes
Constitutional
House
Chamber

 

HB4156 makes illegal migration a state crime punishable by fine and/or imprisonment and requires any person convicted or released from custody to leave Oklahoma within 72 hours. 

The House passed HB4156 on April 18, 2024, by a vote of 77 to 20. We have assigned pluses to the yeas because persons who enter the United States illegally—which, by definition, is a crime under federal law—should not be permitted sanctuary in Oklahoma, let alone be aided and abetted by state or local law enforcement officials. Article I, Section 8, of the U.S. Constitution clearly gives Congress power to “establish a uniform Rule of Naturalization.” Rather than pursue blatantly unconstitutional and anti-American policies that undermine the rule of law and erode the value of citizenship, each of the several States should exercise its sovereign powers under the 10th Amendment to end the illegal-migrant invasion and provide for the public safety. 

Apr 18, 2024
Vote Date
View Bill Vote Text
Yes
Constitutional
House
Chamber

 

HB3323 would exclude a Central Bank Digital Currency from the definition of “money.”

The House passed HB3323 on March 12, 2024, by a vote of 55 to 41. We have assigned pluses to the yeas because a Central Bank Digital Currency would be an unconstitutional and intolerable expansion of tyranny under the Federal Reserve—presenting a significant danger to Americans’ civil liberties by decimating personal privacy and allowing for a full-fledged surveillance state. According to Article 1, Section 10, of the U.S. Constitution, “No State shall…make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts.” The States can and must act now to avow their adherence to constitutionally sound money.

Mar 12, 2024
Vote Date
View Bill Vote Text
Yes
Constitutional
House
Chamber

  HB2643 (House Committee Substitute) would have affirmed that firearms manufactured, sold, and purchased in Oklahoma are not subject to federal law or regulation. The House passed HB2643 on March 21, 2023, by a vote of 72 to 21. We have assigned pluses to the yeas because this bill would have prevented government entities from enforcing unconstitutional federal gun control edicts, helping to restore the rights of law-abiding citizens. The U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment expressly declares that to ensure the “security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” Whenever the federal government assumes power to impose firearms restrictions in blatant violation of the Bill of Rights and the 14th Amendment, nullification of such acts by the States is the proper remedy.

Mar 21, 2023
Vote Date
View Bill Vote Text
Yes
Constitutional
House
Chamber

How did your legislators vote?

Legend: [ + ] Constitutional vote [ − ] Unconstitutional vote [ · ] Did not vote
Name Party Score 123456
Arturo Alonso-Sandoval D 0%
Nick Archer R 50%
Rhonda Baker R 40%
Chris Banning R 100%
Steve Bashore R 83%
Forrest Bennett D 0%
Meloyde Blancett D 0%
Jeff Boatman R 40%
Brad Boles R 83%
Ty Burns R 50%
Chad Caldwell R 100%
Hurchel T. Caldwell R 50%
Josh Cantrell R 83%
Sherrie Conley R 100%
Rusty Cornwell R 60%
Denise Crosswhite Hader R 100%
Bob Ed Culver R 67%
Dean F. Davis R 67%
Jared Deck D 0%
Eddy Dempsey R 67%
Mike Dobrinski R 67%
Mickey Dollens D 0%
Collin Duel R 67%
Jon Echols R 83%
Scott Fetgatter R 67%
Ross Ford R 100%
Andy Fugate D 0%
Tom Gann R 100%
John George R 83%
Regina Goodwin D 0%
Jim Grego R 100%
David Hardin R 83%
Erick Harris R 60%
Toni Hasenbeck R 67%
Neil Hays R 100%
Ellyn Hefner D 0%
Kyle Hilbert R 67%
Brian Hill R 83%
Justin Jj Humphrey R 83%
Ronny Johns R 50%
John B. Kane R 100%
Chris Kannady R 40%
Gerrid Kendrix R 100%
Dell Kerbs R 67%
Mark Lawson R 67%
Mark Paul Lepak R 83%
Dick Lowe R 33%
Jason Lowe D 0%
Ken Luttrell R 50%
Robert Manger R 67%
Thomas Marti R 60%
Ryan Martinez R N/A
Stan May R 83%
Cody Maynard R 100%
Mark McBride R 50%
Charles A. McCall R 83%
Kevin McDugle R 100%
Marcus McEntire R 33%
Annie Menz D 0%
Nicole Miller R 60%
Anthony Moore R 50%
Cyndi Munson D 0%
Carl Newton R 67%
Monroe Nichols D 0%
Terry O'Donnell R 100%
Jim Olsen R 83%
Mike Osburn R 50%
Daniel Pae R 40%
Kenton Patzkowsky R 67%
John Pfeiffer R 80%
Ajay Pittman D 0%
Melissa Provenzano D 0%
Randy D. Randleman R 75%
Trish Ranson D 0%
Eric Van Roberts R 100%
Cynthia Jo Roe R 50%
Jacob Rosecrants D 0%
Suzanne E. Schreiber D 0%
Lonnie Sims R 75%
David Smith R 67%
Chris Sneed R 83%
Clay Staires R 100%
Marilyn Stark R 100%
Jay W. Steagall R 80%
Danny Sterling R 40%
Preston Stinson R 67%
Judd Strom R 60%
Amanda Swope D 0%
John Talley R 67%
Mark Tedford R 100%
Tammy Townley R 83%
Mauree Turner D 0%
Mark Vancuren R 50%
John Waldron D 0%
Kevin Wallace R 80%
Josh West R 50%
Kevin West R 100%
Rick West R 100%
Tammy West R 67%
Danny Williams R 100%
Max Wolfley R 83%
Rande Worthen R 67%

Average Freedom Score by Party

Party Score
Democrat 0%
Republican 73.5%
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