Top Headlines
A state judge has temporarily blocked Oklahoma from enforcing its ban on using so-called “woke banks” for state business.
Top Stories From NPR
- Biden will keep Trump's China tariffs, and add new ones on electric vehicles
- From pandemic to protests, the Class of 2024 has been through a lot
- U.S. medical volunteers in Rafah hospital say they've never seen a worse health crisis
- 5 takeaways from NPR's reporting on the purported Matamoros flyer
- Tax revenue jumps 22% in April, but U.S. deficit still looms large
Get up-to-date on the latest from the state capitol, as lawmakers work their way through thousands of bills concerning taxes, school funding, reproductive care and more.
The latest: extremism and misinformation
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Latest News
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Local headlines for Friday, May 10, 2024
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This Week in Oklahoma Politics panel discusses the public state budget negotiations, separate legal challenges to the new rules from the Biden Administration over Title IX rules and more.
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El Niño helped drive global average temperatures to new records over the last year. Forecasters say it's waning, but that 2024 may still be one for the record books.
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Local headlines for Thursday, May 9, 2024
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture is offering disaster assistance to farmers and ranchers affected by recent tornadoes.
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City and state officials held a town hall at a Barnsdall church to answer questions from residents about cleanup and restoring critical services.
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Two Oklahoma tribal nation leaders were on Capitol Hill this week to stress the importance of public safety funding almost four years after the McGirt v. Oklahoma ruling.
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Oklahoma Department of Corrections Director Steven Harpe on Tuesday told a legislative panel his agency was no longer pursuing an $8.3 million appropriation this session to restart the prison rodeo at Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester.
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The State Department of Education and Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond are separately suing the Biden Administration for changes to Title IX.
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State budget discussions in the Oklahoma legislature are lagging. As lawmakers discuss the line-item minutiae in their subcommittees and the big-picture priorities alongside the governor, disagreements remain on a handful of key issues and the end of session draws near.
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Local headlines for Wednesday, May 8, 2024
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Pearl Jackson Crosstimbers Preserve surveys, public access planning underway.
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