News

Gov. Kevin Stitt has used pocket vetoes on five bills passed during the final week of the Oklahoma Legislature's annual ...
June columnists have tackled topics ranging from federal funding cuts to Oklahoma Legislature to Gentner Drummond's call for ...
The Oklahoma Supreme Court decided Tuesday the state’s law banning certain discussions on race and sex does not apply to ...
Oklahoma approves $75 million for county road and bridge improvements, one of the state's largest investments in ...
The Oklahoma mental health department missed its first series of deadlines to provide improved competency restoration ...
Oklahoma is set to enhance medical services with a new Level I Trauma Center in Tulsa, as state legislation supports a public ...
Lawmakers in both parties clapped and cheered, and so did we, when a bill was approved to improve breast cancer detection. We ...
Those squabbles aside, the legislature does not serve the governor; they serve the people of Oklahoma. Despite some of the drama, each lawmaker had something to remember. Sen. Rader - “The ...
A judge has dismissed a lawsuit over State Superintendent Ryan Walters' controversial new social studies standards.
"What goes around comes around." "Time heals all wounds." The Oklahoma Legislature must be in a fog because they just keep punting state's problems into the future, writes columnist William C.
Gov. Kevin Stitt named an interim commissioner of the Oklahoma mental health department Tuesday, following the Legislature’s vote to fire the previous agency head last week.