We’re keeping our eyes wide open. Election integrity is on the line, and the battleground may be in Pennsylvania, but Oklahoma isn’t waiting around.
- Oklahoma removed over 453,000 ineligible voters to secure its elections.
- Governor Stitt’s Election Threats Task Force is enforcing new rules like post-election audits and banning ranked choice voting.
- While Oklahoma leads, Pennsylvania is still expected to be the key battleground for election integrity.
Governor Kevin Stitt just delivered an update on Oklahoma’s push to secure the vote. The state’s been busy, removing over 453,000 ineligible voters from its rolls. Dead people, felons, those who’ve skipped town—gone. All since 2021. That’s not just routine. That’s how you lock down an election.
“We’re taking action,” Stitt said. “Every Oklahoman wants to know their vote counts. We’re making sure of it.”
It’s not just talk. Oklahoma’s leading by example. Hand-marked ballots, e-scan tabulators that never touch the internet, and aggressive audits. They’ve even outlawed ballot harvesting. That’s the kind of approach we need nationwide.
The numbers speak for themselves. Since January 2021, Oklahoma has:
- Removed nearly 100,000 deceased voters.
- Scrubbed over 143,000 voters who’ve moved out of state.
- Eliminated thousands of felons and duplicate registrations.
Governor Stitt’s Election Threats Task Force is hammering out new rules to keep foreign money out of campaigns, banning ranked choice voting, and setting strict post-election audits. It’s a game-changer.
Paul Ziriax, the guy in charge of the Election Board, isn’t messing around either. Oklahoma’s system, he says, stands up to scrutiny. Audits prove it. Recounts back it up. It’s solid.
But let’s be real. As solid as Oklahoma looks, we all know where the real fight is brewing. Pennsylvania. That’s where the gloves will come off. It’s where we’ll see if America can truly safeguard its elections. Our eyes are on it.
Freedom Financial News