A proposal to end no-excuse absentee voting in Oklahoma narrowly advanced 4-3 through the House Elections and Ethics Committee last week. Critics fear the measure could discourage voter participation and fuel election fraud paranoia. 

House Bill 1515 by Rep. Molly Jenkins, R-Coyle, requires voters to certify why they’re unable to vote in-person on election day or during early voting. Acceptable excuses include being 75 or older, travel, work and military service.

Jenkins said she could not cite an example of someone abusing the absentee voting system. She said she did not foresee a need for election officials to deny an application or further investigate why someone wishes to vote absentee. 

“The goal of this is to strengthen the integrity of the election,” Jenkins told the committee. “When a person has to list a reason it gives them pause to think about what they’re doing.” 

Rep. Mickey Dollens, D-Oklahoma City, criticized the proposal, arguing that the state doesn’t survey residents on why they’d like to purchase a firearm or attend a religious institution. 

“No fundamental right in the U.S. requires citizens to justify why they’re exercising it,” Dollens wrote on X

Two Republicans, Reps. Denise Crosswhite Hader and Clay Staires, joined Dollens in voting no against the bill. It was tied 3-3 in committee, but Speaker Pro Tempore Anthony Moore voted yes to break the tie. It’s now eligible to be considered in a House oversight committee, where it faces a March 6 deadline to continue on in the legislative process.

Several other notable election bills have advanced during the first three weeks of the legislative session, including: 

  • House Bill 2106 by Mike Osburn, R-Edmond: Reduces the number of election dates, setting four to five dates in odd-numbered years and seven to eight dates in even-numbered years. Senate Pro Tem Lonnie Paxton, R-Tuttle, is running a similar bill in the upper chamber. 
  • House Bill 1151 by Chris Banning, R-Bixby: Aligns school board elections with general and primary election dates. 
  • Senate Bill 890 by Julie Daniels, R-Bartlesville: Requires local and municipal candidates to file campaign finance reports with the Ethics Commission. 

Have thoughts, questions or story ideas? Let me know at Kross@Oklahomawatch.org

— Keaton Ross

Recommended Reading

  • ‘Our fight is far from over’: Former Speaker Charles McCall announces bid for governor:
    McCall touted several conservative measures passed during his seven years as House Speaker and claimed Oklahoma is “under attack” from the left and outside forces. [NonDoc]
  • Criminal networks continue to thrive in Oklahoma’s marijuana industry as lawmakers weigh new measures: The tactic of charging bad actors with ownership fraud is becoming less effective, as many illegal operators have now met the two-year residency requirement and re-registered their licenses. [The Frontier]
  • David Boren, longtime Oklahoma statesman, dies at 83: The lifelong Democrat served as a state legislator, a U.S. senator, the governor of Oklahoma and the president of the University of Oklahoma, becoming the most prominent member of one of Oklahoma’s most influential political families. [KOSU]

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.