OKLAHOMA 7 Electoral Votes 
link to clickable map
Population 
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Oklahoma State Election Board) 
Total Resident Population, July 1, 2012 est.
3,814,820
Total Registration, Nov. 1, 2012
2,114,713 >

Dem. 964,874 (45.63%)   Rep. 895,625 (42.35%)   Ind. 254,223 (12.02%)  AmEl. 18 +
Oklahoma has: 77 counties.
Largest counties (five over 100,000): Oklahoma, Tulsa, Cleveland, Comache, Canadian. >
Largest cities (four over 100,000): Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, Broken Arrow. >

Government
Governor: Mary Fallin (R) elected 2010. 
State Legislature: Oklahoma Legislature  House: 101 seats  Senate: 48 seats
Local: Counties  NACO Counties, Cities, Tribes
U.S. House: 4R, 1D - 1. J.Sullivan (R) | 2. D.Boren (D) | 3. F.Lucas (R) | 4. T.Cole  (R) | 5. J.Lankford (R)
U.S. Senate: James Inhofe (R) re-elected in 2008, Tom Coburn (R) re-elected in 2010.
2012
U.S. House: In the 1st CD, Rep. John Sullivan (R), first elected Jan. 8, 2002 special election, lost to Jim Bridenstine (R) in the June 26 primary; Bridenstine easily won in the general election.  In the 2nd CD, Rep. Dan Boren (D), first elected in 2004, announced on June 7, 2011 that he would not seek re-election.  Businessman and rancher Markwayne Mullin (R) defeated prosecutor Rob Wallace (D) by 57.3% to 38.3% and 4.3% to the Independedent Michael Fulks.  The balance of the delegation goes from 4R, 1D to 5R, 0D.
State Legislature: Republicans added on to already strong majorities in both chambers; the House went from 66R, 31D to 72R, 29D and the Senate from 32R, 16D to 36R, 12D.
Ballot Measures: Voters decided on six statewide ballot questions, approving all of them by sizable margins.

State of Oklahoma
State Election Board

Green Party of OK
Libertarian Party of OK
OK Democratic Party
OK Republican Party
Constitution Party of OK

Daily Oklahoman, p
Newsp, Radio, TV
Newspapers
TV, Radio

The McCarville Report
The Okie

Politics1-OK
Ballotpedia-OK


The Sooner State
General Election -- Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Voting Eligible Population*: 2,619,121.
VEP Highest Office Turnout Rate: 55.8%.

Of 1,334,872 votes tallied in the presidential race:
  64,007 (4.79%) were absentee mail; and
  112,156 (8.40%) were early vote

Official Results >


Obama/Biden (Dem.)
443,547
(33.23)
+Romney/Ryan (Rep.)
891,325
(66.77)
Total........1,334,872



Overview: Oklahoma's restrictive ballot access laws again gave voters just two choices.  (51,739 valid signatures were required to petition.  See: Johnson press release, Oklahomans for Ballot Access Reform).  Romney/Ryan won with a plurality of 447,778 votes (33.54 percentage points).  Turnout as a percentage of voting eligible population was fifth lowest of any state, after HI, WV, AR and TX.  Mitt Romney (May 9) and Ann Romney (Sept. 10) visited to do fundraisers.
Obama  |  (Romney)
BALLOT [PDF]
[State Primary: June 26]
Presidential Preference Primary -- Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Democrats

Official Results  1,961 of 1,961 precincts
+Barack Obama
65,389 57.10%
Jim Rogers
15,546
13.79%
Bob Ely
5,323
4.72%
Darcy G. Richardson
7,201
6.39%
Randall Terry
20,312
18.01%

112,771

Randall Terry won in 12 counties and Jim Rogers won in three counties.

Republicans
43 Delegates: 3 RNC; 25 at-large; 15 by CD (3 x 5 CDs). 
1.88% of the 2,286 Delegates.

Official Results  1,961 of 1,961 precincts
Ron Paul
27,596
9.63%
Rick Perry
1,291
0.45%
+Rick Santorum
96,849
33.80%
Mitt Romney
80,356
28.05%
Michelle Bachmann
951
0.33%
Newt Gingrich
78,730
27.48%
Jon Huntsman
750
0.26%
Total 286,523



General Election -- Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Voting Eligible Population*: 2,578,351.
VEP Highest Office Turnout Rate: 56.7%.

43,913 valid signatures from registered Oklahoma voters by July 15th required to place a candidate on the ballot as an Independent.

Registration: Dem. 1,079,373 (49.42%)   Rep. 859,872 (39.37%)   Ind. 244,847 (11.21%)...  Total: 2,184,092 
                           Official Results >


+McCain/Palin (Rep.)
960,165
(65.65)
Obama/Biden (Dem.)
502,496
(34.35)
Total........1,462,661


2008 Overview
Despite the continued efforts of Oklahomans for Ballot Access Reform, Oklahomans again had just two choices on the presidential ballot in the general election.  The outcome was very similar to 2004; McCain-Palin achieved a plurality of 457,699 votes (31.30 percentage points).  Oklahoma provided their highest share of the vote and second biggest margin of any state. +
Obama/Allies  |  McCain/Allies  |  Nader  |  Barr

General Election -- Tuesday, November 2, 2004
Every other state had at least three candidates to choose from.  Oklahoma requires 51,781 signatures to secure full party ballot access and 37,027 signatures to place a presidential candidate on the ballot.  The state does not allow write-ins.  The Oklahoma Green, Libertarian, and Constitution parties organized a None of the Above campaign to protest the exclusion of third party and independent candidates.  They encouraged Oklahoma voters to vote in state and local races but leave the presidential ballot line blank.
Note: Oklahomans for Ballot Access Reform continued their efforts after the election; early in 2005 Rep. Marian Cooksey (R-Edmond) introduced a bill (HB1429) to lower the number of signatures required but the effort subsequently stalled.
Official Results 

Kerry/Edwards (Dem.)
503,966
(34.43)
+Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
959,792
(65.57)
Total.......1,463,758

 

2004 Overview
Oklahoma was the second best state for the  Bush/Cheney ticket as it improved on its 2000 showing, amassing a plurality of 455,826 votes over Kerry/Edwards (a margin of 31.14 percentage points). 

-The Oklahoman, Tulsa World, Enid News & Eagle, and The Shawnee News-Star endorsed President Bush.

-The Muskogee Daily Phoenix & Times-Democrat endorsed Senator Kerry. 


General Election -- Tuesday, November 7, 2000
For ballot access as an independent, Oklahoma requires signatures of 36,202 registered voters, the highest signature requirement, per capita, of any state in the country,   Further, Oklahoma’s signature deadline of July 15 is one of the earliest in the country (only 8 states are earlier).  Additionally, Oklahoma is one of only 7 states that don’t allow write-in votes for U.S. President.  The Nader campaign made a strong effort to achieve the required number of signatures in Oklahoma, but came up a bit short.  On Aug. 11, 2000 the campaign filed suit against the Oklahoma State Election Board in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma citing harassment in its signature gathering effort and seeking to extend the deadline to Sept. 1, 2000 (Nader v Ward, cv-00-1340-R).  Judge David Russell ruled against Nader on Aug. 30.
Official Results 


+Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
744,337
(60.31)
Buchanan/Foster (Ref.)
9,014
(0.73)
Gore/Lieberman (Dem.)
474,276
(38.43)
Browne/Olivier (Lib.)
6,602
(0.53)
Total........1,234,229

2000 Overview
Gov. Bush had no trouble winning his neighboring state's eight electoral votes, gaining a plurality of 270,061 votes (21.88 percentage points).

1992 and 1996 General Elections
Archive Pages: 2008 | 2004 | 2000 1992
Bush (Rep.)............592,929 (42.64)
Clinton (Dem.)........473,066 (34.02)
Perot (Ind.).............319,878
 (23.01)
Marrou (Lib.)..............4,486 
(0.32)
Total........1,390,395

1996
Dole (Rep.)..............582,315 (48.26)
Clinton (Dem.).........488,105 (40.45)
Perot (Ref.).............130,788
 (10.84)
Browne (Lib.)..............5,505
(0.46)
Total........1,206,713