EXCLUSIVE — Oklahoma is launching a pilot program to turn over illegal immigrants in prison to federal police to jump-start President-elect Donald Trump‘s mass deportation effort. Gov. Kevin Stitt (R-OK) shared with the Washington Examiner on Friday that he had a plan to expeditiously deport more than 500 convicted illegal immigrants in its prisons as soon as
Goodman repeatedly threatened his neighbors who supported Trump, telling one neighbor he was “on assignment” to shoot and kill people who were wearing red hats or Trump regalia if the former president won the election, according to an affidavit filed Nov. 14.
Emily Swenson and Rocky Campbell tell FOX Weather their harrowing tale of survival of how they had to ride out an EF-3 tornado in their bedroom closet.
The meme celebrates Oklahoma as the 'perfect state,' but does the map accurately reflect how Oklahomans voted? Were there other all-red states?
Iowa, a state with a similar number of people eligible to vote, had a turnout rate of 71% compared to Oklahoma's 53.4%. Iowa had a 20-day early voting window when voters in the state could vote at their county auditor's office or by mail.
Leisa Mitchell Haynes, a Republican candidate for governor, said she began 2026 campaign after visit from an angel.
More Oklahomans voted in the presidential election than in any previous election in state history, the State Election Board secretary says.
Despite a record vote count, Oklahoma's turnout and voter participation rates were actually lower than four years ago.
Oklahoma voted Republican for another election cycle and was one of two states where every county turned red in the presidential election.
Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt is asking the Commissioner of Public Safety to begin preparing for the mass deportation of illegal immigrants in Oklahoma prisons when President-elect Donald Trump takes office.
According to unofficial election results, Oklahomans cast 1,564,573 ballots for president this year. That's nearly 4,000 more votes than were cast in the previous presidential election. Registration also grew by 183,098 since 2020, reaching almost 2.5 million Oklahomans who were eligible to vote.