Oklahoma lobbyists spent more than $220,000 on food and beverages for lawmakers during the 2025 legislative session. 

The $222,300 in spending, reported from January 1 to May 31, is a 13.6% increase from the first five months of 2024. Ten years ago in 2015, about $97,000 was spent over the same period, according to data from the Oklahoma Ethics Commission. 

The transactions range from $3 at McDonald’s to $207.71 at the upscale Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse in downtown Oklahoma City. You can view the full list, and sort by amount and recipient, using the Ethics Commissions’ Guardian System

Oklahoma Watch has often reported on the influence of lobbyists at the Capitol. While lobbyists are required to disclose how much they spent on which elected official, and can’t spend more than $500 per elected official each calendar year, they don’t have to disclose what issue or bill was discussed during the meal or meeting. 

Lobbyists maintain they’re needed at the Capitol to help educate a term-limited Legislature on a variety of issues. More than 300 are registered with the Ethics Commission, representing interests from oil and gas to healthcare to newspapers and news organizations. 

Two lawmakers, Reps. Tom Gann, R-Inola and Rick West, R-Heavener, don’t accept any gifts or meals from lobbyists. They say it’s to avoid the appearance that meals or gifts could influence their votes.

Have thoughts, questions or story ideas? Reach out to me at Kross@Oklahomawatch.org.

— Keaton Ross

Recommended Reading

  • Oklahoma Supreme Court Hears Challenge to Open Primary Initiative Petition: Supporters argue the reform would give independent voters more influence, while opponents claim the petition’s language is misleading and should be disqualified from the ballot. The court is expected to issue a ruling in a few months. [Oklahoma Voice]
  • Oklahoma Joins a Growing Number of States Cracking Down on Shoplifting Rings:  In response to pressure from national retailers, Oklahoma has enacted legislation targeting organized retail theft. The new law stiffens penalties for those involved in shoplifting rings and allows prosecutors to bundle smaller thefts into felony cases. Critics warn it could disproportionately affect low-income individuals. [The Frontier]
  • Meet the New Group in Charge of Millions in State Money to Help Pregnant Women After Oklahoma Banned Abortion: A new nonprofit tasked with distributing millions in taxpayer dollars to support pregnant women says it will provide housing, parenting classes and other services. Some reproductive health advocates are concerned about a lack of oversight and exclusion of medical providers. [StateImpact Oklahoma/The Frontier]

Help Us Make a Difference

Oklahoma needs high-quality investigative journalism. That is our mission at Oklahoma Watch. We produce stories that hold government and public officials accountable and that make transparent what some prefer to keep secret. We depend on financial support from readers like you to sustain our coverage. Help us make a difference.


Support our publication

Every day we strive to produce journalism that matters — stories that strengthen accountability and transparency, provide value and resonate with readers like you.

This work is essential to a better-informed community and a healthy democracy. But it isn’t possible without your support.

Creative Commons License

Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.