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January 14, 2010

Brogdon “Encouraged” by Poll Results Showing Him Trailing Fallin

Excerpt from an email Sen. Brogdon sent to his supporters yesterday. We admire Mr. Brogdon’s optimism!

Dear friends,

I know many of you saw the recent polls in the Tulsa World, and I am encouraged about the results! Now, you may be asking how polling 19% (within the margin of error) against my opponent is a “good thing?” Well, what the newspapers aren’t telling you is what was buried deep inside the polling data.

First, we have catapulted to almost 20% in a very short period of time on a limited budget. The simple truth is our numbers keep going up and my opponent’s keep going down.

Second, there were close to 19% of people in the poll who said “not for Mary.” Since we have yet to spend any money on television and radio, they simply don’t know that there is another option. Once Oklahomans hear about my pro-growth, pro-freedom campaign I believe the vast majority of them will become Brogdon supporters!

Do the math; 19% for Randy Brogdon plus 19% for anyone but Mary Fallin places us at 38%. All we need is 50.1% to win the primary this July!

Finally, in a head to head match-up against the democrat challengers, my name wasn’t included, only my opponent’s. She barely beat the Liberal Democrat candidate with a narrow margin of 51%.

Related:

Okie Pundit: Non-Race of the Day: Mary Fallin vs. Randy Brogdon

Filed under: Mary Fallin, Senator Randy Brogden — Posted at 6:08 am by Editor Email This Post Email This Post
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January 11, 2010

Okie Pundit: Non-Race of the Day: Mary Fallin vs. Randy Brogdon

Okie Pundit dissects the Fallin/Brogdon race for the Republican nomination for governor. News 9’s Scott Mitchell gives his analysis of the overall race for governor.

After receiving positive feedback for our last examination of a race that was over before it began, we’re placing the spotlight on another primary destined to end up heavily lopsided.

Congresswoman Mary Fallin vs. State Senator Randy Brogdon for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Fallin is serving her second term as the Congressional Representative for Oklahoma’s 5th District, prior to which she served three terms as Lieutenant Governor. Brogdon has represented the Owasso area in the State Senate since 2002.

As always, money is a very important factor in a campaign, especially on a statewide level. A successful candidate must be able to purchase enough media points to generate name identification, win supporters, and motivate them to vote. Here are the rounded fundraising figures through the last filing period in October. Read more…

Related:

Video: The Race to be Oklahoma’s Next Governor

Filed under: Mary Fallin, Scott Mitchell, Senator Randy Brogden, Your Vote Counts — Posted at 9:40 am by Editor Email This Post Email This Post
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May 11, 2009

Video: Sen. Randy Brogdon on Alex Jones TV Discussing State Rights


Sen. Randy Brogdon on Alex Jones Tv with Jason Bermas (HD) F
Uploaded by alexjonesnowondailymotionUp-to-the minute news videos.
Filed under: Senator Randy Brogden — Posted at 10:31 am by C. W. McBlackville Email This Post Email This Post
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February 26, 2009

Video: Alex Jones Show Live (pt 1/8)

Austin, TX radio host Alex Jones continues his coverage of the Tenth Amendment issue. He welcomed to his show Oklahoma Senator Randy Brogdon, who has sponsored SJR 10, legislation asserting state sovereignty.

Hat tip:savillatube

Related:

Rep. Murphey: “Standing Up for States’ Rights”

Filed under: Senator Randy Brogden — Posted at 2:19 pm by C. W. McBlackville Email This Post Email This Post
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April 10, 2007

Letting You See How Government Spends Money

This week the House of Representatives approved what I believe to be one of the most exciting pieces of government reform legislation this year.

Indications are that a strong number of House District 31 residents believe that government is too big. They feel the scope of citizens’ freedoms are reduced the more government grows and usurps power.

Thus, as your State Representative, I am committed to fulfilling the charge of working to reduce the size of government. The biggest issues we face in trying to downsize government are finding inefficiencies, inappropriate spending and corruption. Once these are exposed it will be hard for elected officials to refuse to take action.

The problem we are forced to deal with is that state government spending (almost $7,000,000,000 in state appropriations alone) is not readily exposed to the scrutiny of the people. Even many legislators rarely have direct access to the items on which taxpayer money is spent. Most of the information presented to legislators only concerns requests for new spending, with little oversight over current and past agency spending. You can only imagine the temptation for abuse of public dollars when taxpayers and their elected representatives do not have easy access to how and where money is spent. A 2006 August poll found that 64 percent of Oklahoma voters believe state government wastes between 10 cents and 59 cents of every dollar it collects.

This is about to change. SB 1, which already won approval in the Senate, cleared the House on Tuesday and should now be its way to the Governor. If the Governor approves the bill, state agencies will be required by law to post their expenditures. The website OKOpenBook.gov will be online by the end of the year and will allow taxpayers to search government expenditures. As the website evolves, it should include easy to use tools which allow taxpayers to track exactly how and where government money is spent. This will offer the average citizen much more oversight than legislators currently have.

Some of the items to be included online include grants, contracts, subcontracts, tax credits, payments to businesses under the various business incentive laws, and expenditures from the Rainy Day Fund.

This idea was proposed by state Senator Randy Brogden and State Representative Paul Wesselhoft after a similar concept was put forward by Oklahoma U.S. Senator Tom Coburn and approved at the federal level. Coburn’s vision of a website where citizens can google government spending has caught on at the state level with 17 states across the nation considering or enacting similar proposals.

I believe this will be a vitally important tool as we begin the process of working to reduce the size of government in Oklahoma and I would encourage everyone to note web address www.OKOpenBook.gov for future reference.

As always, please feel free to contact me if I can be of assistance. I can be reached at 557-7350 or on the web at HouseDistrict31.com.

Filed under: Representative Paul Wesselhoft, Senator Randy Brogden, sb1 — Posted at 9:09 pm by Editor Email This Post Email This Post
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