Articles
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Economy
SQ 832 would increase costs for cities, counties, and schools, local officials warn
Local government officials and state lawmakers with experience in city and county leadership are warning that State Question 832 could have consequences far beyond private-sector payrolls, increasing costs for municipalities, counties, and public schools across Oklahoma.Ray Carter | June 9, 2026
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Economy
SQ 832-style law increases California bankruptcies
As Oklahoma voters consider State Question 832, opponents of the measure are pointing to a growing number of restaurant bankruptcies in California as evidence of the risks associated with large government-mandated wage increases.Ray Carter | June 8, 2026
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Agriculture, Economy
SQ 832 would strip FFA students of opportunity
State Question 832 could have an unexpected consequence for Oklahoma's FFA students by effectively ending longstanding arrangements that allow teenagers to earn cattle through work performed for local ranchers.Ray Carter | June 8, 2026
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Economy
The affordability crisis has a common cause: Government
The affordability challenges facing American households today are rooted not in market failure but in government intervention.Jonathan Small | June 6, 2026
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Agriculture, Economy
Oklahoma cattlemen: SQ 832 could upend the way farms and ranches operate
The Oklahoma Cattlemen's Association is warning that State Question 832 would fundamentally change how many farms and ranches operate by eliminating longstanding agricultural exemptions and requiring compensation to be structured around documented hourly wages.Ray Carter | June 4, 2026
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Culture & the Family
Created to work: A Christian consideration of work, human dignity, and the consequences of SQ 832
Work is one of the primary ways human beings bear God's image through responsibility, creativity, stewardship, and service to others. Christians should evaluate SQ 832 not merely as a wage policy, but as a policy that creates barriers to work itself and the opportunities work provides.Matt Oberdick | June 3, 2026
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Education
New players reshape education policy as Oklahoma teacher unions rank 50th nationally
A new report finds that teacher unions are no longer the dominant force in education policy debates they once were, as school-choice advocates, reform groups, and others have gained influence nationwide. The study ranks Oklahoma's teacher unions among the weakest in the country—ahead of only Arkansas.Ray Carter | June 3, 2026
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Economy
As Oklahomans cut back on dining out, poll suggests restaurants could face additional pressure under SQ 832
A new survey finds that more than 70 percent of Oklahomans have cut back on restaurant dining or takeout purchases because of rising prices, prompting warnings that State Question 832 could place additional strain on both consumers and restaurants.Ray Carter | June 3, 2026
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Education
Oklahoma Blaine amendment debate highlights contested history of religious liberty and education
Is Oklahoma's constitutional prohibition on public funding of religious institutions a "Blaine amendment" rooted in the anti-Catholic politics of the late nineteenth century?Ray Carter | June 3, 2026
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Economy
Would SQ 832 cost consumers more than the grocery tax repeal saved?
Customer savings from Oklahoma’s recent repeal of the state sales tax on groceries could be wiped out, nearly twice over, by the negative effects of SQ 832.Ray Carter | June 2, 2026