Monday, January 05, 2026

State Rep. Dempsey announces he will not seek reelection


Dempsey Announces He Will Not Seek Reelection

OKLAHOMA CITY (Dec. 31) – Rep. Eddy Dempsey, R-Valliant, announced today that he will not seek reelection in the upcoming election for House District 1.

Dempsey issued the following statement:

"Today I'm announcing that I will not seek reelection. I want to thank all my friends and supporters for electing me. Let me say that serving these past five years has been very rewarding, but it's time for me to come home.

Sen. Lankford Releases Statement on Arrest of Nicolás Maduro


Lankford Releases Statement on Arrest of Nicolás Maduro

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK (Jan. 3rd) — US Senator James Lankford (R-OK), Senate Republican Conference Vice Chair and member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, released the following statement following the arrest of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro.

“When you funnel drugs and chaos into American streets, you should face justice. Today the very long and powerful arm of justice grabbed Nicolás Maduro and will put him in front of an American court,” said Lankford. “Maduro was a dictator who ruled through fraud, repression, and corruption, and his regime enabled drug trafficking that sent deadly narcotics into the United States. The Venezuelan people deserve free and fair elections and a peaceful return to freedom and prosperity. Thank you, President Trump, for keeping your word to stop the flow of drugs and crime into our nation.”

Election calendar modernization law takes effect, limits election dates

This was a good idea, and long needed. Far too often, local jurisdictions would schedule important votes at odd times in an effort to sneak through tax and bond increases. Standardizing election dates may help with raising voter turnout in these types of elections.


Election Calendar Modernization Law to Take Effect

OKLAHOMA CITY (Dec. 31st) – A new law modernizing Oklahoma’s election calendar will affect elections beginning Jan. 1, 2026, bringing greater clarity, consistency and efficiency to when elections are held across the state.

Senate Bill 652 consolidates Oklahoma’s election dates into five standard election days each year, held in February, April, June, August and November. Previously, Oklahoma law allowed for up to 12 possible election dates in odd-numbered years and up to seven in even-numbered years. Frequent, low-profile elections often draw a small fraction of registered voters while requiring significant time and resources from county election boards and poll workers.