GOP favored to maintain all 5 US House seats in Oklahoma
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Republicans in Oklahoma are heavily favored to retain all five of the state’s U.S. House seats on Election Day, but the GOP will welcome a new face to the delegation after U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe’s plan to retire shook up the political scene.
Only one of the five districts — the sprawling 2nd Congressional District in eastern Oklahoma — is an open seat, with five-term GOP incumbent Rep. Markwayne Mullin vacating the post in a bid to replace Inhofe in the Senate.
Former state Sen. Josh Brecheen, a citizen of the Choctaw Nation and the owner of a Coal County excavation company, won that seat on Tuesday over Democrat Naomi Andrews, a political newcomer who lives outside of the district in Tulsa. A protege of and former field worker for the late U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, an influential figure in state GOP politics, Brecheen promised to serve no more than eight years in the U.S. House. Mullin made a similar pledge when he first ran in 2012, saying he would only serve six years, but then broke it when he ran for a fourth term in 2018.
GOP candidates in each of Oklahoma’s five districts enjoying massive fundraising advantages over their Democratic opponents.