D’Licia Reyna, Oklahoma City

The Curtain Falls on Walters’ Wild Ride: Media Takes Stock

In a move that surprised few but delighted many, Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters announced his resignation this week, trading the state’s education helm for the CEO spot at the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a conservative outfit hell-bent on battling “woke” teachers’ unions. Local media pounced on the news with a mix of relief and scrutiny, painting Walters’ tenure as a chaotic blend of culture-war fireworks and administrative fumbles.

The Oklahoman dove into the unknowns, questioning what becomes of Walters’ edicts — such as his “anti-woke” teacher tests and funding threats over DEI policies — while noting Gov. Kevin Stitt’s looming appointment to fill the void. News9 echoed this, channeling Attorney General Drummond’s scathing rebuke of scandals, from mishandled pandemic funds (hello, taxpayer-funded Xboxes) to plummeting test scores that left Oklahoma scraping the bottom of national rankings. KFOR and KOCO highlighted the boardroom drama, with Walters defiantly leading his final meeting amid barbs over teacher discipline, underscoring a polarized legacy of bans on transgender athletes and Bible mandates.

Nationally, The New York Times framed it through a broader lens, spotlighting Walters’ push for Bibles in classrooms and Turning Point USA chapters as assaults on church-state lines, drawing bipartisan ire. Yet, the coverage converges on one truth: Walters’ exit marks the end of an era where education became a battlefield, leaving Oklahomans to wonder if the next chapter brings stability or more strife. In this red-state saga, the press didn’t mince words—Walters’ resignation reads less like a graceful bow and more like a hasty retreat from the spotlight he craved.

Here’s the coverage:

National Digital
[NOTUS] [NYT] [WSJ] [AP] [Guardian]

State Digital
[The Oklahoman ▲] [Tulsa World ▲] [Oklahoma Voice] [NonDoc]

State Radio
[KOSU]

OKC Television
[KWTV] [KFOR] [KOCO] [KOKH]

Tulsa Television
[KTUL] [KOTV] [KJRH] [KOKI]



More worth reading:

Exports Deal Stalls, Oil Prices Climb
Oil prices rose as a stalled deal to restart crude exports from Iraq’s Kurdistan region helped alleviate investor concerns about oversupply. [Oklahoma Energy Today]

Lankford’s Measured Approach Not Always Popular
In a time when many seem to consider moderation a betrayal and reason a weakness, U.S. Sen. James Lankford has probably felt the lash of public criticism from left and right more than any elected Oklahoma Republican. [Tulsa World ▲]

Tulsa Court Dodges and Delays on Records Requests
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press attorney Leslie Briggs sent a letter to the Tulsa Municipal Court on behalf of The Frontier and Oklahoma Watch, requesting that the court provide immediate access to citations and court filings. [The Frontier]

Stillwater Man Misidentified as Kirk Murder Suspect
An Oklahoma man who debated Charlie Kirk earlier this year has been wrongly identified online as the man suspected of fatally shooting the conservative influencer. Online posts after Kirk’s assassination on Sept. 10 at Utah Valley University compared an edited FBI image of the suspect with an image of a man holding a megaphone. [Reuters ▲]

▲=Possible paywall


The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity is the oldest fraternity on the Oklahoma State University campus.


Ciao for now,

Ted Streuli

Executive Director, Oklahoma Watch
tstreuli@oklahomawatch.org



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