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This Week in Oklahoma Politics discuss the chairman of the Statewide Virtual Charter School Board refusing to sign a contract to create a Catholic charter school, an announcement by State Superintendent Ryan Walters that he has paid $7.5M in signing bonuses to teachers and another resignation from the State Board of Education.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt has recently faced criticism for his use of state money in his legal fights with Oklahoma tribes.
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The letter was signed by 24 tribal nation leaders, asking to come back to the table and negotiate on the issue of tribal-state compacts with Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt.
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The legal saga surrounding Gov. Kevin Stitt's gaming compacts with two tribal nations continues.
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Oklahoma’s Attorney General says the payments to outside law firms are a waste of public funds and have damaged state relations with tribes.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt is suing state legislative leaders over their handling of financial agreements with tribal governments. KOSU took a deep dive into some of the statements Stitt made when he announced that lawsuit.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt’s vetoes of a pair of compacts with the state’s tribal nations by Oklahoma’s legislature will not stand.
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Attorney General Gentner Drummond says he’s taking over gaming compact negotiations with tribal nations from Gov. Kevin Stitt for the state of Oklahoma.
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After months of failed negotiations, the Senate voted to approve two compacts that were once seen as a routine renewal but now have become a bargaining chip in Gov. Kevin Stitt's feud with the tribes.
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Senate Pro Tem Greg Treat has formally asked state Attorney General Gentner Drummond to intervene in an ongoing dispute over tribal gaming compacts.