Election Name: | 2022 Tulsa elections |
Country: | Oklahoma |
Type: | legislative |
Ongoing: | yes |
Election Date: | August 23, 2022 |
Previous Election: | 2020 Tulsa elections |
Previous Year: | 2020 |
Next Election: | 2024 Tulsa municipal elections |
Next Year: | 2024 |
The 2022 Tulsa municipal elections were held on August 23, 2022. A top two runoff election was scheduled for November 8 if no candidate received a majority vote. All nine city council seats and the city auditor are elected to two year terms.[1] The filing period was June 13–15.[2] Incumbent Mayor G.T. Bynum would not be up for reelection until 2024. All nine city council seats will have contested elections. City Auditor Cathy Carter was re-elected without opposition.[3]
Incumbent City Councilors Vanessa Hall-Harper, Jeannie Cue, Crista Patrick, Lori Decter Wright, Phil Lakin, and Jayme Fowler were reelected for another term. Laura Bellis won the open city council race in district four to succeed retiring City Councilor Kara Joy McKee. Incumbents Mykey Arthrelli and Connie Dodson lost to challengers Grant Miller and Christian Bengel respectively.
Incumbent Councilwoman Vanessa Hall-Harper faced two challengers in the nonpartisan primary: David Harris and Francetta Mays. Hall-Harper won reelection with over 60% of the vote in the first round of the election.
Winner
Eliminated in primary
Incumbent Councilwoman Jeannie Cue defeated challenger Aaron Bisogno in the August election.
Winner
Eliminated in primary
Incumbent Councilwoman Crista Patrick defeated challenger Daniel Joseph Grove in the August election.
Winner
Eliminated in primary
Incumbent city councillor Kara Joy McKee retired and did not seeking reelection. Laura Bellis earned just over 50% of the vote, winning the August election outright.
Winner
Eliminated in primary
Incumbent city councilor Mykey Arthrelli lost re-election Grant Miller. Upon his election Miller became the sole city councillor registered with the Libertarian Party of Oklahoma.[19]
Winner
Eliminated in runoff
Eliminated in primary
Winner
Eliminated in runoff
Eliminated in primary
Winner
Eliminated in runoff
Eliminated in primary
Incumbent Councilman Phil Lakin defeated challenger Scott Houston in the August election.
Winner
Eliminated in primary
Incumbent Councilman Jayme Fowler faced two challengers in the nonpartisan primary: Lee Ann Crosby and Chad Hotvedt. Fowler won reelection with over 50% of the vote in the first round of the election.
Winner
Eliminated in primary
Cathy Carter was re-elected without opposition to another two-year term. She was first elected in 2013 and has not faced an election opponent since.
There were three proposed city charter amendments on the ballot in the August election.[27] The Tulsa World endorsed all three of the proposed city charter amendments. All three amendments were approved by voters in the August 23 election.[28]
This charter amendment involves the pay for the Mayor of Tulsa. A 1990 addition to the city charter refers to mayors pay as $70,000 when the mayor of Tulsa's salary is actually $105,000 in 2022. The amendment would remove the set dollar amount of $70,000 from the city charter.
The plain language description of the amendment from the city describes the measure as:
"This Charter amendment is a housekeeping measure. In 2001, the Mayor’s salary was set by ordinance at $105,000, but our Charter has language dating back to 1990 that still refers to the first Mayor’s annual salary of $70,000. Because this old language has created confusion as to what the Mayor’s salary actually is, this amendment simply removes this outdated and conflicting reference to the first Mayor’s salary being $70,000. If this amendment is approved, it will not change the Mayor’s salary."[29]
This charter amendment involves setting the residency requirement for running for city office to 365 days. In order to file for mayor, city auditor, or city councillor the candidate must live in Tulsa or the city council district for 365 days prior to filing. Currently the residency requirement only requires the mayor and city auditor live in the city, while city councillors must live in their district for 90 days before running for office. An exception is included in the amendment for candidates whose residency is interrupted by redistricting.
The plain language description of the amendment from the city describes the measure as:
"Currently our Charter provides that the Mayor and City Auditor must be Tulsa residents at the time they announce that they are running for office, but it does not require residency for any specific length of time. A candidate for City Council must be a resident in the district in which they are running for at least 90 days. This amendment would add a 365-day City of Tulsa residency requirement to run for Mayor or City Auditor and increase a Council candidates Council district residency requirement from 90 days to 365 days. This amendment also clarifies that, should a candidate’s Council district be changed when district boundaries are adjusted every 10 years due to a population shift, a candidate can still run for City Council in their new Council district."
This charter amendment involves increasing the city auditor's term length from 2 years to 4 years and staggering the elections with the 4-year mayoral terms. If passed, the 2026 city auditor election would be the first election using the new 4-year term.
The plain language description of the amendment from the city describes the measure as:
"The City Auditor is elected city-wide and currently serves a 2-year term of office, the same as City Councilors. The Mayor is the only other office holder elected city-wide and serves a 4-year term. This Charter amendment would change the City Auditor’s term in office to 4 years beginning in December 2026 and would stagger the Auditor’s term so that the Mayor’s and Auditor’s elections and terms are offset by 2 years."