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Mazzei, Drummond advance to runoff election for Oklahoma governor

Republican candidates Mike Mazzei (left) and Gentner Drummond will compete in a runoff election in August. The winner will face Democratic candidate Cyndi Munson and three independent challengers.
KOSU
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Campaign websites for Mike Mazzei and Gentner Drummond
Republican candidates Mike Mazzei (left) and Gentner Drummond will compete in a runoff election in August. The winner will face Democratic candidate Cyndi Munson and three independent challengers.

Come January 2027, Oklahoma will have a new governor. On Tuesday, Oklahomans narrowed a field of 15 hopefuls to six.

Democrats advanced State Rep. Cyndi Munson, and Republicans will head back to the polls in August for a runoff primary between former state lawmaker Mike Mazzei and Attorney General Gentner Drummond. Three independent candidates will be waiting for them in November.

Republican primary

Drummond and Mazzei each captured just over a quarter of the Republican votes in the nine-candidate GOP race. Their next closest rival, Chip Keating, received less than 20%.

Source: AP (as of 9:39 a.m. CT on June 17, 2026)
AP
Source: AP (as of 9:39 a.m. CT on June 17, 2026)

Drummond was the first Republican to announce his candidacy in January 2025 and was long seen as the frontrunner in the race. He narrowly finished ahead of Mazzei by less than one percentage point of the vote.

As Oklahoma’s Attorney General since 2023, Drummond has targeted illegal marijuana operations, pushed for better open records compliance and distributed millions of dollars in opioid settlement funds.

The Oklahoma State University alumnus and U.S. Air Force veteran has frequently found himself at loggerheads with Gov. Kevin Stitt. Drummond has criticized Stitt’s adversarial relationships with Oklahoma-based tribes, Stitt’s support for a public Catholic charter school and Stitt’s “weaponization” of audits.

Attorney General Gentner Drumond speaks to a crowd of supporters during his watch party for the Oklahoma primary race Tuesday, June 16.
Photo by Anna Pope
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KOSU
Attorney General Gentner Drumond speaks to a crowd of supporters during his watch party for the Oklahoma primary race Tuesday, June 16.

At a watch party in Tulsa on Tuesday night, Drummond said his platform is about honesty. He asked voters who supported his opponents to back him in August.

“This runoff is not about finding a candidate you agree with 100% of the time. It's about choosing a leader you can trust 100% of the time,” Drummond said. “Oklahoma cannot afford another weak politician like Mike Mazzei, a politician who changes with the political winds. Our state needs proven leadership, steady conviction, and a governor who will stand his ground when Oklahoma's future is on the line.”

Supporters gather in Bixby to hear Oklahoma governor Republican candidate Mike Mazzei speak as election results are collected Tuesday, June 16. Mazzei recieved an endorsement from President Donald Trump.
Photo by Sarah Liese
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KOSU
Supporters gather in Bixby to hear Oklahoma governor Republican candidate Mike Mazzei speak as election results are collected Tuesday, June 16. Mazzei recieved an endorsement from President Donald Trump.

Mazzei received an endorsement from President Donald Trump weeks before the primary, who commended his track record as a “MAGA warrior” and his “America First” platform in a post on social media.

He credited that endorsement for his strong performance and thanked the president in a speech to supporters in Bixby. And he credited the endorsement to “that praying wife of mine, Noel.”

Oklahoma governor Republican candidate Mike Mazzei delivers a speech to his supporters after Tuesday nights primary election results were called. Mazzei will go against fellow Republican Attorney General Getner Drummond in a runoff Aug.
Photo by Angel Ford
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KWGS | Public Radio Tulsa
Oklahoma governor Republican candidate Mike Mazzei delivers a speech to his supporters after Tuesday nights primary election results were called. Mazzei will go against fellow Republican Attorney General Gentner Drummond in a runoff Aug. 25.

Mazzei said that leading up to his birthday on May 30, his wife had prayed for the endorsement as a birthday present. And though Mazzei spoke to Trump and was endorsed on Truth Social the day before, on his actual birthday, he picked up the local newspaper, “and it says May 30, 2026, which is my birthday. And on the other side of the front page, it says, President Trump endorses Mike Mazzei.”

Mazzei said Oklahoma has “unlimited potential for growth and prosperity.” He said the millions he contributed to his own campaign are an investment in the state’s future.

Cyndi Munson claims Democratic nomination

Cyndi Munson will face the winner of the Republican runoff election this November. Munson garnered 75.1% of the vote, outpacing two other Democratic candidates.

Source: AP (as of 9:39 a.m. CT on June 17, 2026)
AP
Source: AP (as of 9:39 a.m. CT on June 17, 2026)

Munson, who grew up in Lawton, was the first Asian American woman elected to the state legislature, where she currently serves as the House’s minority leader. If elected, Munson said she wants to increase public school investments, lower health care costs and repeal Oklahoma’s total abortion ban. She said she would work to repeal the parental choice tax credit, which offsets costs for parents who wish to transfer their students out of public schools.

A faithful crowd of Munson’s supporters filled the taproom at Lively Beerworks on Tuesday night to watch the votes roll in. Many people wore bright green, which has become synonymous with Munson’s campaign in Oklahoma. Kids also showed their support, with one handing Munson a homemade fidget toy.

Prior to her time at the Capitol, Munson worked at multiple nonprofits serving children, including Girl Scouts of Western Oklahoma.

Rep. Cyndi Munson, left, poses for photos with her family shortly after announcing her gubernatorial race on April 15, 2025, outside of the Oklahoma State Capitol. Munson will face the Republican winner of the August runoff election, along with three independent candidates.
Photo by Lionel Ramos
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KOSU
Rep. Cyndi Munson, left, poses for photos with her family shortly after announcing her gubernatorial race on April 15, 2025, outside of the Oklahoma State Capitol. Munson will face the Republican winner of the August runoff election, along with three independent candidates.

Dana Carter, 51, said she has been a long-time supporter of Munson. Carter said she believes Munson will stand up for the rights of all Oklahomans, no matter their political party. Still, Carter said she knows it will be an uphill battle for Munson to beat her Republican competitors.

“She’s going to have to mobilize the people that already support her and expand her reach,” Carter said. “It's going to take every single one of her supporters to get out, drag their friends and family to the polls and make it happen.”

In an interview at her watch party, Munson said she thinks authenticity matters more to Oklahomans than party affiliation. She criticized what she described as “dysfunction” and “infighting” among the state’s Republican leadership.

“I would just encourage Oklahomans to look back on what's happened over the last couple of decades, where we're ranked in things that are most important, like education and healthcare,” Munson said. “And what does your day-to-day life look like? Republicans have had an opportunity to make things different, and they haven't. And I think Oklahomans are going to respond to that in this upcoming election come November.”

Independent candidates for governor Jerry Griffin, Orlando Lynn Bush and Robert Brooks will also appear on the general election ballot in November.

Angel Ford is the Morning Edition host and a news reporter at KWGS. She holds a master’s from Northeastern State University in Tahlequah. Before joining the team, Ford worked as a freelance reporter and layout designer for several local newspapers across Oklahoma. Along with her work as a journalist, Ford has experience working in libraries, retail, construction, and beauty. A proud California native, she enjoys hiking, gaming, photography and reading in her off time. Email her at anf1077@utulsa.edu.
Anna Pope is a multimedia journalist covering agriculture and rural affairs for KOSU and Harvest Public Media.
Sarah Liese reports on Indigenous Affairs for KOSU.
Thomas Pablo is a part-time student reporter for KOSU.
Sierra Pfeifer is a reporter covering mental health and addiction at KOSU. She joined KOSU in July 2024 as a corps member with Report for America, a GroundTruth initiative that places emerging journalists in newsrooms across the country.
Graycen Wheeler is a reporter covering water issues at KOSU.
Robby Korth joined KOSU as its news director in November 2022.
Sabrina Thaler is a summer 2026 intern at KOSU through the Scripps Howard Fund’s Nonprofit Newsrooms Internship Program.