Sunday, April 12, 2026

OKLAHOMANS OVERPAYING THEIR TAX BILL!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


by Steve Fair

 

This week, the Oklahoma legislature passed a nearly $13 billion dollar state budget for fiscal year 2027- SB#1177.  The budget is slightly more than last year.   SB#1177 passed the House 76-18 (7 members didn't vote) and the Senate 28-17 (3 members didn't vote).  It barely got the votes it needed in the Senate (25).  Seven of the eight Democrats in the Senate voted no, joined by ten GOP state senators.

Oklahoma has a 'balanced budget' amendment in the state constitution, but the real goal of a state budget should be reduced government spending, rather than a balanced budget.

SB#1177 sets aside $200 million to create a permanent investment fund.  Similar to the state's rainy-day fund, the fund's stated goal is to generate a reliable revenue stream to safeguard essential services during down economic trends.  

House Speaker Kyle Hilbert, (R-Bristow) said: "This budget reflects our commitment to investing in Oklahoma’s future while remaining responsible stewards of taxpayer dollars.” The budget includes teacher pay raises, increased funding for the Department of Mental Health and the Oklahoma Healthcare Authority. 

First, Oklahomans are clearly overpaying their tax bill.  Government never adjusts its budget down, like citizens have to. 

Oklahoma taxpayers are struggling in these challenging economic times- higher prices on gas and food, but no increase in wages.  Taxpayers have to live on less, but government never takes a hit, no matter the economic climate. 

Instead of putting $200 million into an investment fund, return that money to the people it belongs to- the taxpayer who worked and earned it.  Legislative leaders and the governor constantly talk about eliminating the state income tax.  They devise clever schemes, hold marathon meetings, but no stratagem includes ever simply sending the money back to the taxpayer.  When government holds in escrow the overpayment of tax dollars to avoid cuts during the 'hard times,' it's telling taxpayers government knows how to manage taxpayer money better than those who toiled for it.  Refund the overpayment.

Second, politics makes for strange bedfellows.  The Democrats who opposed the budget did so because they wanted the state to spend more money.  The Republicans who voted no claim the budget is too big.  An ancient proverb suggests two parties can work together against a common enemy- "the enemy of my enemy is my friend." 

The GOP senators who voted no on the budget proposed a -4% cut across the board to all agencies, except education, mental health and health care, but were rebuffed by leadership.  It is significant that 25% of GOP state senators opposed the budget.  If those of like opinion are elected in November, they could partner with the Ds and make life difficult for senate leadership.

Third, passage of the state budget this early is unprecedented.  It is the single most important thing the legislature does, but the budget has historically been the last thing done in a session.  It is commendable Oklahoma Republicans (legislative and executive) have shown they can govern with a super majority.  Perhaps they are embracing negotiated compromise. Negotiated compromise is when both sides want something, and they work together to find common ground, with each side giving up something to get to the desired result.  Nah, they aren't going to change and work together, but citizens can always hope.

Passage of the budget sets up a possible scenario where Oklahoma lawmakers could end the legislative session before the 5 p.m. May 29 deadline.  2026 is an election year, and many GOP lawmakers would be thrilled to hit the campaign trail early.  They can't wait to tell us how fiscally conservative they are.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

BUY A BIGGER MAILBOX!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


Caveat Sentio!


by Steve Fair

 

The 2026 candidate filings ended on Friday.  611 candidates filed for state, federal, legislative, and judicial offices.  That is the highest number of filings since 2018, when almost 800 filed for office.  The biggest surprise was when term-limited State Auditor Cindy Byrd flip flopped from the Lieutenant Governor race to the State Treasurer race.

Last week, President Trump endorsed former Oklahoma Speaker of the House T.W. Shannon for the Lt. Governor's race, catapulting him to front runner status.  Apparently Byrd saw the handwriting on the wall and exited stage right. 

Congressman Kevin Hern, (R-Tulsa) filed to fill the U.S. Senate seat left open by now-DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin.  Hern will have 3 GOP opponents, but is expected to easily run the race.  12 Republicans and 1 Democrat are running for Hern's 1st Congressional District seat. In the gubernatorial race, there are 9 Republicans, 3 Democrats, and 3 Independents. Current Deputy State Auditor Melissa Capps won the State Auditor race because she did not draw an opponent and won by default.  7 Republicans are running for State Superintendent of Public Instruction, 4 Republicans each filed for Labor Commissioner and Insurance Commissioner. 

A fourth of state legislators up for election drew no opposition- 7 senators, 26 representatives.   23 of Oklahoma's 27 district attorney (DA) positions were filled by default because only one candidate filed for each race, resulting in no opposition.  All but 8 District Judge and Associate District Judge races were not challenged.  Three observations:

First, let the voter beware.  The primary is Tuesday June 16th- 70 days.  Candidates have a short window to 'get their message' out, so every GOP primary candidate will going to tell you how conservative they are.  They will try to 'out hard scrabble' their opponent.  It's amazing how they all have poverty, relentless toll, barrenness and struggle in their past.  But because of their hard work, determination, character, values, and faith, they are where they are today.  They are now selfless, sacrificial, generous, component, wise and most of all humble. public servants.  Cutting through the rhetoric can be exhausting, but entertaining.  Voters need to be skeptics and ask candidates hard questions.  Caveat Sentio (Latin for Let the Voter Beware) must be the battle cry the next two months.

Second, Oklahoma has an apathy issue.  Many races had only one person file.  Many elected officials drew no opposition.  Some of those folk translate to they are doing a stellar job, but that is often not the case.  No one filed against them because sadly Oklahomans don't care!  Voter turnout in the state is the lowest in the country.  Citizen engagement requires vigilant attentiveness.  Paying attention once every two years feeds a cannibalistic political system that simply tells the voter what they want to hear.

Third, candidates need to pay attention to their message.  In his book, The Fallacy of the Rational Voter, Jay Shepard writes: "Politics is not a contest of information.  It is a contest of interpretation.  Voters who decide elections are not spreadsheets waiting to be filled with data; they are human beings navigating uncertainty, loyalty, fear, hope and belonging,” Campaign consultants craft a candidate's message out of cream cheese that will appeal to the public, ignore the truth, but win the election.  They have the advantage of not being incumbered with the truth.

Three things’ voters should remember the next 60 days: (1) There is no perfect candidate.  They are all flawed. (2) No one is indispensable or irreplaceable, (3) When you ask a question, don't give the candidate the answer.  Be wise in how you craft your quiz of a candidate. 

By the way- get a bigger mailbox- you are going to need it.

Monday, March 30, 2026

GOP leaders need to embrace MESSAGE DOCTRINE!

 BOOK REVIEW


Throughout this 23-chapter, 203 page read, Shepard touts the Message Doctrine and points out the rational voter is a myth.  His example of irrational voter behavior is when voters elect a liberal followed by a conservative in the same district, which appears to make no sense.  Shepard blames the voter’s interpretation of reality.  The laziness of GOP political candidates and operatives to not ‘develop a message,’ has led to campaigns based on sensationalism, exaggeration, and drama.

Jay writes, “Republicans win when they operate at a higher strategic level- one grounded in behavioral reality rather than national assumptions.  It does not call for manipulation.  It calls for literacy.”   

This read is insightful and practical.  It challenges the traditional cookie-cutter campaign strategy by what Shepard describes as the Consultant Industrial Complex (Chapter 13), which ‘thrives in confusion and struggles in clarity.’ 

There is a chapter on dealing with the press that will prove to be invaluable to a candidate and their campaign team.  Another chapter on crisis, scandal and recovery is a must read. 

It's refreshing when a political insider like Jay Shepard has the courage to say the emperor has no clothes.  Shepard served on the Republican National Committee for several years and is a highly respected political operative in his home state of Vermont. 

The final chapter of the book sums up Shepard’s Message Doctrine.  “Politics is not a contest of information.  It is a contest of interpretation.  Voters who decide elections are not spreadsheets waiting to be filled with data; they are human beings navigating uncertainty, loyalty, fear, hope and belonging,” Shepard writes.  Every political candidate, operative, consultant, and activist should read this book!  It rightly challenges conventional ideas on campaign messaging.

Here is a link on where to buy the book: 

https://us.amazon.com/Fallacy-Rational-Voter-Republicans-Behavioral/dp/B0GT6PFT62


Sunday, March 29, 2026

SLEEPER CELLS MAY BE WAKING UP!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


by Steve Fair

 

Albrecht Dittrich was born in 1949 in Russia.  His father was a schoolteacher and a committed Marxist/Leninist.  In 1969, while a senior in college, Dittrich was approached by the Committee for State Security (KGB) and asked to join the agency.  He moved to East Berlin, where he was taught Morse code, cryptography and English.  In October 1978, he moved to New York City, taking the name of a dead ten-year-old- Jack Philip Barsky.   

Dittrich's mission was to insert himself into American society, make contact with foreign policy think tanks and try to befriend President Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski.  That proved harder than the KGB anticipated due partly to Dittrich's abrasive, confrontational personality.  He was a sleeper agent for the KGB in the U.S. for ten years- 1978-1988.  After the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, his name was revealed to American spy agencies and they monitored his activity for 8 years.  In 1997, Dittrich/Barsky was arrested for espionage, but never charged.  Dittrich has appeared on cable news networks as an expert on espionage.  He is a frequent commentor on the Russian interference in U.S. elections.  His autobiography, Deep Undercover, was published in 2017. 

Intelligence experts have raised alarms about potential Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) or Hezbollah-linked sleeper cells being activated in the U.S. and Europe. 

Sleeper cells are dormant, undercover agents or terrorist operatives embedded within a population, waiting for orders to activate and conduct attacks. These networks exist to disrupt, spy, or commit violence, often established well in advance to avoid detection. Concerns currently focus on Iran-linked proxy networks potentially activating across Europe and North America.

During the Biden administration, about 1,500 Iranians were intercepted at the southern border, but who knows the number who got through.  At least 700 were released into the United States.  "We have no idea how many people got around obviously. The numbers are deeply concerning,” Senator. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, says.  Three observations:

First, illegal immigration is a national security issue.   A cornerstone of America's identity is that it is a land of immigrants.  But immigration is a contentious issue. The vast majority of illegal immigrants crossing the southern border are coming to America for jobs, but not all.  Some want to destroy the U.S. and our way of life. Detecting and screening out the bad actors is the challenge. 

Second, they live among us.  It's not if sleeper cells exist in the U.S.- it's how many.  Sleeper cell operatives often live as ordinary citizens for years, sometimes acting with support from within the country or from abroad.  Dittrich married, had a daughter, held a job, and interacted with Americans undetected for years.  He was exposed only after the USSR fell.  Moles are hard to detect because, by nature, they are good at hiding. 

Third, Americans are not defenseless.  Thank God for the Second Amendment.  The United States is the most armed country in the world, with over 120 guns per 100 residents.   When the sleeper cells raise their ugly head, they will face significant civilian opposition in the U.S.

The public acts as the 'eyes and ears' for potential threats.  All Americans should be aware of unusual, out of the ordinary behavior- even from those people they think they know.  Report suspicious activity like individuals conducting surveillance on infrastructure, attempting to gain access to restricted areas, or displaying unusual behavior that raises a red flag.  It's better to be safe than sorry.

If Iran yells 'Olly olly oxen free,' Americans should be locked and loaded!


 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

TAKE THE STAGE & SELL THE IDEA TO CHEAT!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial

by Steve Fair

House Resolution #7296 (HR#7296) aka the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act is legislation establishing new federal requirements for voter registration and identification. HR#7296 proposes to amend the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 requiring documented proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote in federal elections.  It passed the U.S. House, along Party lines, 218-213, but faces strong Democratic opposition in the Senate.  Republicans currently lack the 60 votes needed in the Senate to invoke cloture, overcome a traditional filibuster, and bring HR#7296 to a floor vote.

Some Republicans have urged Senate Majority Leader John Thune, (R-SD), to force the D's to physically hold the floor to sustain their obstruction- a 'talking filibuster.'   Remember "Mr. Smith goes to Washington?"  Thune and others believe doing that could backfire and delay other legislation.  Three observations:

First, the U.S. Constitution gives joint power of elections to states and the federal government.  By its terms, Article I, Section 4, Clause 1, referred to as the Elections Clause, says state legislatures will establish the times, places, and manner of holding elections for the House of Representatives and the Senate, subject to Congress making or altering such state regulations. 

State authority to regulate the times, places, and manner of holding congressional elections has been described by the Supreme Court as the ability to enact the numerous requirements as to procedure and safeguards to ensure elections for federal offices are fair and honest and orderly.   Therein lies the problem- some states don't want fair, honest and orderly elections.  All of those states are governed by Democrats. 

Second, Democrats should be forced to physically filibuster.  They have done it before to block important legislation.  In 1964, a group of Democrat Senators blocked the Civil Rights Act of 1964 for 60 days. During that debate, Senator Robert Byrd, (D-WV) spoke for 14 hours and 13 minutes.  But that's not the record for one person holding the Senate floor.  In 1957, Senator Strom Thurmond, (D-SC) spoke against the Civil Rights Act of 1957 in an attempt to prevent its passage for 24 hours and 18 minutes. To sustain his speech, he read the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, and Washington’s Farewell Address.  If the American people are made aware of the absurdity of letting non-citizens vote in elections, they will rise in mass against the practice.  Let the Ds take the stage.

Third, HR#7296 is just common sense.  Requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote is not unreasonable.  Only cheaters oppose making sure those who vote are Americans.  Requiring voters present a valid government-issued ID to cast a ballot is not obstructive.  Only tricksters oppose confirming a voter is who they say they are. Requiring state election officials to regularly purge their voter rolls is not being difficult.  Only thugs oppose making sure voter rolls are current and correct.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, (D-NY) said HR#7296 would force Americans to register to vote in person- something he claims only about 5% of Americans do today.  He's wrong- it's about 11%, but the truth is voters should be required to register in person. When Schumer was a member of the House back in 1996, he supported voter ID.  He said requiring IDs was just 'common sense.' 

What happened in the last 30 years?  Democrats became dependent on non-citizen votes.  The Ds can't win without cheating, so Schumer flip flopped. 

Let the Democrats take the stage!  GOP Senate leaders should make them physically hold the Senate floor.  Make them sell Americans on their plan to have non-citizens vote to elect our leaders.

     

Sunday, March 15, 2026

SQ#832 would hurt the very ones it claims it would help!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial 


by Steve Fair

A group called Raise the Wage Oklahoma (RWO) gathered enough signatures to get State Question #832 (SQ#832) on the June 16th primary election ballot.  If SQ#832 were approved by voters, the measure would increase the minimum wage in Oklahoma to $9 immediately and to $15 by 2029.  The current minimum wage in the Sooner state is the same as the federal rate- $7.25 hourly.  Thirty U.S. states have raised the minimum wage above the federal rate the past three years.   

The United States federal minimum wage, was established by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) in 1938, during the Great Depression, at two bits ($.25) an hour.  The objective was to ensure workers got a fair wage that would stimulate economic recovery.  FLSA also instituted a 44-hour work week and protected children from prematurely entering the workforce.  The minimum wage has been increased 22 times since its inception- the last time in 2009.   

Legislation is regularly proposed regarding raising the federal minimum wage- the latest was introduced in 2023. Three observations: 

First, one size does not fit all.  All employees are not the same.  Some are more productive than others.  When employers are mandated/required to pay all workers a minimum wage, it hurts their most productive workers.  When 'slugs' have to paid the same as 'eager beavers,' it's not fair to hard workers, resulting in an unfair division of labor.  Conscientious and dedicated workers have options and when not treated fairly by employers will leave.  Cream rises to the top.      

Second, everyone works for themselves.  Even enter level employees drawing minimum wage are ultimately responsible for their own career development, skills acquisition, and income generation.  Each worker is a solo entrepreneur of their career.  Loyalty in today’s labor marketplace is virtually non-existent.  The most productive workers have options and often go the highest bidder.  Today's employers treat their employees as expendable, resulting in high turnover and poor morale.  Employees should remember they are "solo entrepreneurs" of their own lives and allegiance is not valued as much as in the past. 

Third, consumers, not businesses pay the higher rate.  Businesses will pass the higher labor cost on in the form of price increases.  A higher minimum wage is not absorbed by businesses, because businesses are not sponges.  If they don't pass on their costs, then they go broke. 

Studies show increases in the minimum wage hurt small business more than large business.  Faced with the choice of reducing staff, increasing prices or accepting less profit, many small entities simply can't survive. 

A minimum wage hurts those workers just entering the workplace.  Most businesses track their labor costs as a percent of revenue.  Labor costs can account for as much as 70% of total business costs according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Labor costs, like any other commodity, should be set by supply and demand.  Creating an artificial, government mandated price floor goes against America's capitalist economic system. 

Oklahoma voters should vote no on SQ#832.  It will hurt the very ones it claims it would help.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Who will be the 'placeholder' in the U.S. Senate?

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


MUSICAL CHAIRS!


by Steve Fair

 

U.S. Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., was nominated to lead the U.S. Department of Homeland Security this week after President Donald Trump removed Secretary Kristi Noem.   The move follows bipartisan criticism of Noem’s leadership, including contentious congressional hearings and scrutiny over departmental spending and media campaigns.

Mullin accepted the nomination shortly after the president’s formal offer and now awaits U.S. Senate confirmation.  “I am super excited about this opportunity. It came — not as a complete surprise — but it came at a little bit of a surprise for us,” Mullin said on the steps of the Capitol shortly after Trump announced Noem’s ouster Thursday afternoon.

Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt has 30 days after receiving Mullin's resignation to appoint a registered Republican to temporarily fill the seat after the senator leaves his post, but the appointee must sign an affidavit pledging to not run for a full term in November.   Many believe the restriction to prevent the appointee from running for a full term is illegal and would never stand up in court.  Oilman Harold Hamm has supposedly asked to fill the placeholder seat.  It remains to be seen who Stitt will appoint.   Three observations:

First, Mullin will follow Trump's orders.  Secretary Noem's poor judgment in policy and her personal life became a major distraction to Homeland's mission.  Removing her from the cabinet was a wise move.  Senator Mullin agrees with Trump's immigration policy and will carry out his directives without a hitch.  Mullin faces a Senate confirmation hearing, but it appears there is no organized effort to derail the nomination.  Senator Lindsey Graham, (R-SC) said about Mullin's nomination: "President Trump could not have chosen a better candidate to be Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security than Senator Markwayne Mullin."  With the GOP in control of the Senate, he should sail through the confirmation.

Second, the timeline for senate candidates is short.  Filing for federal, state and county offices is April 1-3.  The primary election is June 16th and the primary runoff August 25th.  Some claim a tight campaign schedule favors a grassroots candidate.  Others believe it favors a candidate who can self fund a high visibility advertising campaign.  Oklahoma 1st district Congressman Kevin Hern, (R-Tulsa) has indicated he is going to run for the full term.  Other potential candidates include Governor Kevin Stitt, Congressman Stephanie Brice, (R-OKC) and former State Senator and OKGOP Chair Nathan Dahm.  There is just 90 days until the primary.  Whomever decides to run will have to hit the ground running.  The race will be won in the GOP primary in June.  No Democrat has represented Oklahoma in the U.S. Senate in 30 plus years.

Third, Mullin's appointment creates a domino effect in Oklahoma.  If Congressman Hern or Brice run for the senate, a scramble to replace them in the House will draw multiple candidates.  Most likely state legislators would be among the aspirants for the Congressional seats, creating openings in their districts.  County elected officials would likely pitch their hat into the ring, creating openings for their offices. 

Musical chairs is a classic fast-paced game of elimination that tests reaction time and listening skills. Players march around a circle of chairs- numbering one less than the participants- while music plays.  When the music stops, everyone rushes to sit; the person left standing is eliminated, a chair is removed, and the game continues until one winner remains.  That is what is happening in Oklahoma politics. 

Cue The Laughing Policeman

Sunday, March 1, 2026

ONLY THE DEAD HAVE SEEN THE END OF WAR!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


WAR!


by Steve Fair

 

The United States and Israel, launched a major, two-day military operation against Iran on Saturday February 28th.  The operation targeted nuclear and missile facilities.  Iran retaliated by launching missile attacks on U.S. military installations throughout the Middle East.  Three U.S. service members were reportedly killed and five others seriously wounded in the attacks.  Dubbed Operation Epic Fury by President Donald Trump , the stated objective is to eliminate remaining nuclear and missile capabilities.  The action comes after Iran has rejected several good-faith U.S. diplomatic negotiations and the regime's massacres of thousands of its own citizens during recent protests. 

Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 86, was killed in the attacks.  The Iranian government confirmed the supreme leader's death and announced 40 days of mourning.  Approximately 40 plus top Iranian leaders and officials were also killed.  During his 36-year rule, Khamenei was unwavering in his steadfast opposition to the U.S. and Israel and to any efforts to reform and bring Iran into the 21st century.  President Trump called Khamenei’s death “the single greatest chance for the Iranian people to take back their Country,” and urged Iranian citizens to seize the opportunity and take back their country.  Three observations:

First, the attacks are inconsistent with Trump's MAGA mantra.  Republicans largely rallied around the White House in the hours after the attack — insisting the time for debating U.S. intervention in Iran had passed and the GOP must unify behind the president. But many of the president’s “America First” allies questioned the wisdom of intervening in global conflicts.  One of the fundamental planks in Trump's campaign platform has been a non-interventionist stance against 'forever wars,' from previous administrations.  Some Trump supporters are criticizing for practicing what he pummels. 

Second, the strikes were launched without prior congressional authorization.  Article 1- Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress, not the president, the power to declare war.  Throughout America's history, presidents have frequently circumvented the formal Article I by invoking their Article II authority as Commander in Chief to engage in military actions. While the Constitution explicitly grants Congress the power to declare war, historical practice has shifted significant control over initiating armed conflict to the executive branch.  Following World War II, nearly all large-scale military conflicts—including Korea, Vietnam, and the second Iraq War—were conducted without a formal declaration of war.   

Top Congressional Democrats and Republicans that make up a group known as the Gang of Eight — party leaders from both chambers, as well as the Intelligence committees' leadership — were notified by Secretary of State Marco Rubio shortly before the attack.

Third, it remains to be seen if the attacks were a wise choice.  If the 92 million Iranian citizens embrace the opportunity and take control of their country, they could throw off the current political system and bring about reform.  But Iran's political system is built around the concept of a 'Marja al-Taqlid.'  That is a senior cleric who citizens turn to for religious guidance and legal rulings.  Until a replacement cleric is chosen, a 3-member council is in charge.  President Trump says that council is willing to talk with him.  Time will tell if they will dial down the extremism and allow for reform. 

U.S. consumers are already seeing the impact of the attacks at the pump.  Some predict gas prices could get to over $3 a gallon in the coming months.  Because of underinvestment and sanctions, Iran, which has 12% of the world's oil reserves, only accounts for 4% of global oil supply.  But it's not Iran's oil supply driving the price up- it's the instability in the Middle East.  Instability in the Strait of Hormuz, where 20% of the world's oil travels through, is what could disrupt supply.

Since the 1930s, over half of the conflicts in the world have been disputes involving untapped oil reserves.  Oil-importing nations (the US is second behind China) tend to get involved to protect energy interests.  No matter the stated reason, countries go to war to protect their economic interests.

Philosopher George Santayana said, "Only the dead have seen the end of war."  

Saturday, February 21, 2026

COURTS AND PRESIDENTS ARE NOT ALWAYS RIGHT!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


TARIFF RULING!


by Steve Fair

 

The U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) delivered a major blow to President Donald Trump last week by ruling (6-3) many of the tariffs Trump has imposed based on a 1977 emergency economic powers law were unconstitutional.  To say Trump was disappointed in the ruling is an understatement.  At a hastily called news conference after the ruling, he denounced the SCOTUS justices who ruled against him as a “disgrace” and announced wide-ranging new tariffs.  Trump used a different law to impose a 10 percent across-the-board tariff.  Three observations:

First, courts don't always get it right.  Courts and judges, at all levels, are made up of people and people are fallible.  They filter all their decisions through their worldview and political philosophy.  Often judges legislate from the bench and use their power to overturn laws and twist the original intent of lawmakers.  The SCOTUS is part of balance of power in America, but it is far from perfect and many of the high court's past decisions have been wrong.

Second, presidents don't always get it right.  No one gets it right all the time, including President Trump.  He could be right about the SCOTUS getting it wrong, but that remains to be seen.  Trump is correct the executive branch has the authority to Impose tariffs.  Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 and Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 allow the president to act regarding tariffs under specific, limited, and legally defined conditions.  

In the majority opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts said: “we claim no special competence in matters of economics or foreign affairs. We claim only, as we must, the limited role assigned to us by Article III of the Constitution. Fulfilling that role, we hold that IEEPA does not authorize the President to impose tariffs.”

Third, the law is subject to interpretation.  There are two types of judicial philosophy: judicial activism, where judges are more willing to overturn laws, precedents and policies to shape social and political change.  Those who subscribe to judicial activism interpret the Constitution as a 'living' document.  That is normally the liberal view.

The second philosophy is judicial restraint.  Judges who subscribe to judicial restraint rule more often on the original meaning of the Constitution and defer to the legislative branch to make the laws.  This is normally the conservative view.  Neither philosophy is perfect, because even in its best day, human judgment is flawed. 

Trump's response to the SCOTUS ruling on the tariffs could impact future cases.  Insulting and degrading people who in the future will likely be ruling on cases you are involved in is probably not a wise strategy. 

Two of the three of the SCOTUS justices Trump appointed to the high court voted with the three liberals on the court and Chief Justice Roberts against Trump's tariff decrees.  Only Justice Brett Kavanaugh (appointed by Trump in 2018) sided with the president.    

It remains to be seem who got this ruling right, but Trump is not be the first president to be surprised by how a justice they appointed ruled.

When tariffs are put in place, they have to comply with the law.  If the law is wrong, then Congress needs to fix it.  Circumventing and dodging the law is illegal, no matter who does it. 

Court rulings are often frustrating and create roadblocks.  Routinely, the legislative and executive branches of government are at odds with the judiciary.  None of the three branches are always right. They all make mistakes. 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

THOSE CALLING CONSERVATIVES RINOS MAY BE THE REAL RINOS!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


NOSE HORN!


by Steve Fair

 

President Trump uses the term, "RINO,' on a regular basis.  RINO is an acronym for Republican-In-Name-Only.  It's a derogatory label to describe politicians and activists who allegedly do not hold to true Republican values.  It is often used to disparage politicians who are viewed as too moderate.  Some moderate Democrats are branded DINOs by their Party, but you seldom hear that term.

Name calling and branding political opponents with a label is nothing new.  Two-time presidential candidate Thomas Dewey, who ran against FDR and Truman, did not oppose FDR's New Deal programs, but just promised that Republicans would run them more efficiently.  Dewey and his allies were branded 'Me Too' Republicans, because they agreed with the Democrats.  'Me Too' Republicans were the majority among GOP elected officials and won the Party's presidential nomination up until 1980, when Ronald Reagan upset the applecart. 

This week, President Trump posted on Truth Social Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt is a RINO.  Stitt, who is Chairman of the National Governor's Association (NGA) had released a press release regarding an upcoming governor's weekend in Washington that President Trump said was inaccurate.  Trump had disinvited two Democrat governors and Stitt released a presser saying that Trump had agreed to invite all the governors.  Trump posted: “We will soon have a Governor in Oklahoma who knows how to accurately write a Press Release to the Public, in this case, to state that I invited, not happily, almost all Democrat Governors to the Governor’s Dinner at the White House.  Stitt, a wise guy, knew this, but tried to get some cheap publicity by stating otherwise.” Immediately, two candidates for Oklahoma governor in 2026 (Keating and Drummond) jumped on Trump's bandwagon, saying they agreed Stitt is a RINO.  Three observations:

First, everyone who disagrees with Trump is not a RINO.  Blind loyalty is a dangerous thing.  The president demands blind loyalty.  In today's toxic political environment, anyone who expresses a differing view from Trump is branded a nose horn.  Each citizen has the right to place their registration with which ever political Party they desire.  They don't have to agree with any or all of the tenets of a Party.   Some in the GOP want the Party to impose excommunication, like churches, for the RINOs.  If an elected official doesn't pass a litmus test regarding the platform, they would be booted out of the Party.  Exclusion, not inclusion.  In today's GOP, disagreement with Trump's views are considered heretical and worthy of banishment and shunning.  Group think rules!

Second, much of the RINO talk is political theatre.  Stitt, who is term limited, shrugged off Trump's comments, saying Trump doesn't really mean it.  To the uninformed, who believe everything they see on the news, grandstanding politicians sway public opinion by caricaturing another's position.  That seems the be the case with Trump and Stitt.  Sensationalism and exaggeration rule!

Third, graciousness is dead in politics.  You can make the case it never existed in the world's second oldest profession.  Clearly humility, patience, kindness, gentleness, steadiness and self-control are now considered traits of cowards, and yellow bellies, aka RINOs.  The inability of the GOP to agree to disagree has hurt America.  Instead of working together, the Republicans fight more internally than against the Democrats, resulting in nothing getting done. Name calling and insults rule! 

Today's definition of a RINO seems to be: "anyone who disagrees with Trump." The fact is, many branded RINO are principled people who care about the direction of American and the GOP.  Many have been active in politics before Trump entered the arena and will be around after he is gone.  These nose horns are pro-life, pro second amendment, fiscal conservative, traditional Republicans who don't blindly follow any man.  They aren't 'Me Too' or RINOs.  Those calling them RINO are likely the real RINOs.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

IS OKLAHOMA'S DESTINY GROUNDHOG DAY?

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


by Steve Fair

 

On Monday February 2nd (Groundhog Day), Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt delivered his last State of the State address to a joint session of the Oklahoma legislature.  Stitt proposed sending four issues to a vote of the people: (1) a state question to put an annual 3% cap on state spending growth, (2) a state question that would freeze property tax, (3) a state question making the Superintendent of Public Instruction (State School Superintendent) an appointed position, (4) a state question reversing legalized marijuana in Oklahoma.

Stitt also called for the elimination of the Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Association (OSSAA), which drew criticism from the Oklahoma Officials Association (OOA) and others.  The OSSAA is a member driven organization, governed by the 482 school districts that join voluntarily, like a co-op.  Stitt's issue with the OSSAA appears to be their transfer policy for athletics. 

In a clear swipe at Attorney General Drummond, who is running for governor in 2026, Stitt said the McGirt ruling by the US Supreme Court was divisive and created a double standard for citizens in the state.  AG Drummond supports the McGirt decision, while Stitt has been at odds with the tribes over the ruling.    "I challenge Oklahomans to elect people who are committed to these values and protect these simple truths.” Stitt said. 

Three observations:

First, why do Oklahoma voters always have to do the heavy lifting?   Two of Stitt's proposed state question issues could be done by the state legislature without a state question.  Granted, their action wouldn't amend the state constitution, but it would accomplish the same thing.  If every important issue has to go to a vote of people, why have a legislature? 

Has Oklahoma really progressed?  Back in the early 1990s, a rag tag bunch of citizens got fed up with annual tax increases from the Oklahoma legislature and ran a grassroots initiative petition campaign.  Approved by voters in 1992, SQ #640 became a part of the state constitution.  It requires a 75% super majority in both chambers to raise taxes and that has only happened once since 1992.  The legislature hates 640, but it has saved Oklahomans millions of dollars.  Now the governor wants citizens to do what the GOP led legislature won't do- exercise restraint and disciple. 

Second, taking away the right to vote on a statewide elected official is a hard sell.  Oklahoma elects eleven statewide elected executive officials, third highest in the country.  Only Mississippi and North Dakota elect more statewides.  Making some of Oklahoma's statewide offices appointed positions might be efficient, but it transfers power from the people to the governor.   All eleven officials are currently accountable directly to the people.  Consolidation of power is not usually a good idea.

Third, monkeying with property tax is a risky strategy.  Local school districts and county government rely on property tax.  No one likes to pay taxes, but taxes are necessary to provide funding for those entities.  If property tax is frozen or eliminated, that funding has to be made up somewhere else or cuts have to be made.   You can't get blood out of a turnip.  Property tax is the devil we know.  While it might not be the best vehicle to fund schools and county government, it is one we know.  What is the alternative plan to make up the funding property tax provide?  No one seems to know. 

Stitt closed his address by quoting President Reagan's "A Time for Choosing," speech. We have a rendezvous with destiny," the governor concluded.  The truth is Oklahoma is more like the Groundhog Day movie- the more things change the more they remain the same.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

OKLAHOMA LAWMAKERS TEND TO MAJOR ON THE MINORS!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial


by Steve Fair

 

According to Article V, Section 26 of the Oklahoma Constitution, the state legislature convenes in regular session annually at noon on the first Monday in February. Sessions must adjourn sine die no later than 5 p.m. on the last Friday in May.  A total of 1,578  House bills and 50 House Joint Resolutions were filed before the deadline.  Coupled with the Senate bills, Oklahoma legislators will be considering around 2,500 total bills between now and May. 

Dozens of bills filed this session would expand cooperation with federal immigration authorities, restrict access to public assistance, driver’s licenses and higher education, and limit foreign land ownership for non-citizens.  Five bills were filed that would ban illegal immigrants from receiving in-state tuition at Oklahoma colleges and universities.

Lawmakers also introduced a number of bills that would require Oklahoma employers to verify the citizenship of immigrant employees. Federal law requires employers to complete I-9 forms for all workers, but private businesses in Oklahoma aren’t currently required to use E-Verify to compare those forms to government records. 

House Speaker Kyle Hilbert, (R-Bristow), filed HB#4422, which would require the Oklahoma Department of Human Services to verify the immigration status of applicants for public assistance programs. 

There are at least two bills that address President Trump's recent announcement of the retirement of the penny.  Senate Appropriations Chair Sen. Chuck Hall (R-Perry) is running a bill requiring state agencies that accept cash from an individual to round the amount of the transaction down to the nearest cent that is a multiple of five. Hopefully the unintended consequences for Hall's bill doesn't mirror Michael Bolton's mistake in Office Space.  Three observations:

First, lawmakers file far too many bills.  The number of bills filed has risen steadily in recent years.  Granted many of the bills have little to no chance of becoming law and often the legislator that crafted them know that.  They file those bills to self-promote, grandstand and appeal to their base. The duplication of bills is out of control.  Republican legislative leadership should address the 'throw it on the wall and see if it will stick' practice.  It's a waste of taxpayer dollars.

Second, lawmakers major on the minors.  Fiscal responsibility, the state budget, tax cuts take a back seat to 'policy' bills, that create more government bureaucracy in the name of conservatism.  Spending less tax dollars and delivering more efficient government should be top priority, not symbolic resolutions or measures addressing issues already covered by existing laws.  Some lawmakers introduce bills purely for political posturing and personal attention.  Neglecting the most important high-impact budget tasks exposes misaligned priorities and leads to mediocre results. 

Consider this- since the GOP took the majority in the Oklahoma state legislature back in 2006, Republican leadership has overseen a significant, consistent increase in state spending.  The 2026 state budget is a record $12.59 billion.  

Third, lawmakers need feedback.  Constituents should hold their elected officials accountable.  They should ask hard questions.  They should pay attention to what the legislature is doing.  Good representatives solicit input from their constituents and not just their donors.  Great representatives do it regularly and listen to wise counsel.  Poor representatives ignore those they represent and only pay attention to them on an election year.  The weak rep don't want their views or votes to be questioned and only listen to positive feedback on their performance. 

Will Rogers said when the Oklahoma legislature was in session, 'neither man nor beast, nor property is safe."  Be on guard Oklahoma!

Sunday, January 25, 2026

PEACEFUL PROTEST IS A PROTECTED RIGHT!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial

OBEY THE LAW!


by Steve Fair

 

 

On Saturday, a Minneapolis VA nurse, Alex Pretti who was carrying a licensed handgun was fatally shot by a U.S. Border Patrol agent.  Authorities said Pretti resisted arrest after trying to intervene in the ICE operation.  Vice President JD Vance called the protests in Minnesota "engineered chaos" in the wake of the shooting.  Three observations:

First, the Constitution guarantees peaceful protest. The First Amendment protects the right to peaceably assemble.  It also guarantees freedom of religion, speech, the press, and the right to petition the government or redress of grievances.  Assembly is the only right in the First Amendment that requires more than a lone individual for its exercise. One can speak alone, but one cannot assemble alone. Moreover, while some assemblies occur spontaneously, most do not. For this reason, the right to assembly right extends to preparing to assembly activity, aka 'right of association,' by the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS).  The right to peaceably assembly is extended to all citizens and all political ideologies and the government is not to impede that right.

Second, the Constitution does not guarantee hostile assembly.  The protests in Minnesota- and in other states- against the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have been characterized by conflict, unrest, and confrontational conduct toward authorities.  Violent protest is not a guaranteed constitutional right.  Protestors must abide by the law when assembling.   Physically confronting law enforcement officers is usually not going to end well, and that has been the case in the two Minnesota shootings. 

Third, let the facts determine what happened.  The predictability of how elected officials on both ends of the political spectrum would react is a foregone conclusion. Immediately after the shooting, supporters and critics of ICE had formed a verdict about the situation and were espousing judgment or vindication.    Sadly, most elected officials are on auto-pilot, blindly following a predictable pattern. 

It is very possible the ICE agents in Minnesota overreacted and were in the wrong.  It is also very possible Pretti presented a threat to the agents.  The public would be wise to allow independent investigators, with no political agenda, conduct a through investigation and let the facts speak for themselves.  If the agents overreacted and are in the wrong, they should pay the price. 

One of the fundamental rights Americans have is the right to disagree with their government without fear of being punished or retaliated against.  It should concern every American when federal law enforcement officers shoot protestors.  An independent, unbiased investigation should be done and the chips fall where they may.

For years, Republicans referred to federal law enforcement as 'jackbooted federal agents.'  Conservative Republicans regularly criticized federal agents as acting too authoritarian, using heavy handed tactics and government overreach.  Ironically, many of those same people are now supporting the storm troopers in this battle. 

In May 1970, four unarmed college students were killed and nine wounded by the Ohio National Guard on the Kent State University campus, while protesting the expanding involvement in the Vietnam War.  It was an avoidable tragedy and while there was bad behavior on both sides, the unwillingness of the protestors to simply obey the law was the problem. 

Americans have a right to engage in 'organized chaos,' but they should remember what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said: "Nonviolence is the answer to the crucial political and moral questions of our time; the need for mankind to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to oppression and violence."