© 2024 Public Radio Tulsa
800 South Tucker Drive
Tulsa, OK 74104
(918) 631-2577

A listener-supported service of The University of Tulsa
classical 88.7 | public radio 89.5
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Stitt Wins GOP Nomination for Governor

Matt Trotter
/
KWGS

Tulsa mortgage company owner Kevin Stitt, who criticized his opponent as being inadequately supportive of President Trump, won the Republican nomination Tuesday in the race to become Oklahoma's next governor.

  The 45-year-old owner of Gateway Mortgage Group defeated former Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett and advanced to face Democrat Drew Edmondson and Libertarian Chris Powell in November.

"Let's celebrate this victory tonight, because tomorrow we get back to work," Stitt told supporters at a watch party at his company headquarters.

Two-term Republican Gov. Mary Fallin couldn't run again because of term limits.

In mailers and television ads, Stitt hammered Cornett for not being supportive enough of Trump or his immigration policies.

In a televised debate last week, Cornett shot back, criticizing Stitt as a Johnny-come-lately to Oklahoma's Republican political scene.

"Where have you been over the last 14 years?" Cornett said during the debate on Oklahoma City's KOCO-TV. "You haven't been on the front lines fighting for conservative principles."

Stitt, though, fully embraced his standing as a businessman and political outsider.

"I've been in the private sector, in the real world creating jobs," Stitt responded. "I haven't been cashing a government check."

Republican candidates who try to align themselves more closely with Trump have seen success in a number of other states, including neighboring Kansas, said GOP political consultant Trebor Worthen.

"The Republican Party is President Trump's party, and any politician that you see across the country who has not been adequately supportive of President Trump has paid a price for that," Worthen said.

Phil Workman, a 66-year-old retiree from Norman, said he liked the fact that Stitt was a political newcomer.

"One thing that led me to Stitt was that he's out of the norm for politics in that he's not an insider, he's an outsider," Workman said.

The two men's performance in the 10-candidate field in the primary broke along geographical lines, with Cornett winning big in Oklahoma City and central Oklahoma, and Stitt taking counties in Tulsa and eastern Oklahoma. Lt. Gov. Todd Lamb, who finished a close third in the race and performed well in many rural counties, hasn't endorsed either candidate.

Those geographical differences separate the two candidates more than political ideology, said Republican political consultant Pat McFerron, who worked on Lamb's campaign.

"There might be a slight ideological difference, but it's very minor," McFerron said of Cornett and Stitt.

Both men touted their opposition to abortion and support of Trump, but differed on their support of a tax increase this year narrowly approved by the Legislature to help pay for the first teacher pay hike in a decade. Cornett said he supported Fallin's signing of the bill, while Stitt has said he wouldn't have signed it.

Stitt outpaced Cornett in fundraising mainly by bolstering his campaign with personal loans totaling more than $3.2 million so far, bringing his total raised to more than $6.5 million. Cornett raised more than $3.2 million, but his campaign was aided by two outside groups that have spent nearly $1 million on pro-Cornett ads.

Republicans running for statewide office in Oklahoma have enjoyed dominating success at the ballot box in the last decade, but Democrats are pinning their hopes on Edmondson, a 71-year-old Vietnam veteran and four-term attorney general. Edmondson hopes to tap into voter frustration with the GOP Legislature exacerbated by this spring's statewide teacher walkout and an anti-Trump sentiment that has energized Democratic voters. Edmondson met frequently with some of the tens of thousands of teachers who thronged the Capitol during the two-week walkout and talks on the stump about his experience as a young high school teacher in his hometown of Muskogee.