Oklahoma City Mayor: Open Primaries Are How We Get the Crazy Out of Politics

hands holding ballots
Photo by Philip Oroni on Unsplash. Unplash+ license obtained by IVN Editor Shawn Griffiths.
Published: 23 Sep, 2025
2 min read

OKLAHOMA CITYOklahoma City Mayor David Holt is in a rare position in Oklahoma. He is a popular Republican mayor in a deep red, closed primary state that is making the case for primaries open to all voters and candidates, despite his party’s opposition to reform.

Holt wants to see state elections mirror elections in his city – specifically by using nonpartisan primaries open to all candidates and voters, regardless of party, and the top vote-getters move on to a guaranteed general election.

He believes it is a critical step to steering Oklahoma politics away from the ideological extremes and candidates who focus on, in his words, “the strangest priorities” on both sides of the political aisle.

Holt says the common misconception is that primary elections are like a NCAA basketball tournament, especially when they result in runoffs. There is the first round and then a candidate earns their spot in the next round like it's the "Sweet Sixteen."

“No, it’s two different sports,” he remarked. “You're not proving yourself in the primary. You are proving you’re a lunatic is what you’re doing in the primary.”

And then you get to go to the general where we are presented with two lunatics, and the 70% of us in the middle just try to hold our nose and vote for the least crazy person we can find. This is no way to run a country.”

Under Oklahoma’s closed primary system, only voters registered with the Republican and Democratic Parties can participate in the first round of taxpayer-funded elections. This ultimately denies them a meaningful say in who represents them.

It also ensures candidates only have to appeal to a small group of voters to win elections, since few electoral contests are competitive in Oklahoma. Primaries then become contests of ideological purity among a very enthusiastic minority of voters.

Thus, the situation not only leads to an increasing divide between Republicans and Democrats – but a focus on extreme ideological positions to make these voters happy.

IVP Donate

Holt made his comments talking about State Question (SQ) 836, which is a nonpartisan Top Two measure that could appear on the November 2026 ballot if the initiative’s campaign gathers enough signatures for it to qualify.

SQ 836 was recently cleared by the Oklahoma Supreme Court to gather petition signatures. If approved by voters, it will replace the state’s closed primary system with a nonpartisan model in which all voters and candidates participate on a single ballot.

Candidates will then be forced to appeal to a broader segment of the electorate to stand out. Similar systems are in place in California and Washington. Alaska uses a nonpartisan model that advances four candidates to the general election.

In this article

You Might Also Like

Woman putting ballot in ballot box.
3 Things Independent Voters Have to Be Thankful For – Reform Roundup
The number of independent voters continues to grow at a historic rate nationwide. It is becoming inc...
26 Nov, 2025
-
9 min read
Cour blocks Texas redistricting
Did A Texas Court Just End the Gerrymandering War? (Reform Roundup)
Earlier this week, a three-judge panel blocked a mid-decade gerrymander by the Texas Legislature designed to bolster the Republican Party’s razor-thin majority in the U.S. House, setting the stage for what could become a complex legal matter....
21 Nov, 2025
-
12 min read
Alaska
Alaska Supreme Court Scrutinizes Church-Funded Effort to Undermine Open Primaries and RCV
The Alaska Supreme Court is considering whether opponents of open primaries and ranked-choice voting broke state law when they funneled money through a Washington-based church to support a repeal campaign....
03 Nov, 2025
-
2 min read
“Cartoon illustration of Americans facing the U.S. Capitol as light pierces through red and blue partisan cracks, representing independent voters and hope for political reform.”
New Poll: Voters Want New Leadership – and They’re Turning to Independents
A new poll from the Independent Center highlights a clear message from the public: Americans are fed up with the current political leadership, and they’re ready for change....
12 Nov, 2025
-
2 min read
Massachusetts voters.
Ranked Choice Voting Momentum Surges in Massachusetts as Cities Push for Local Control
Ranked choice voting (RCV) continues to see a surge in momentum across the U.S. However, the state that has seen the largest reform growth in the last 5 years -- Massachusetts -- has received little attention. This is because the 10 cities that have approved RCV have not been able to implement it due to state law....
14 Nov, 2025
-
5 min read
Caution tape with US Capitol building in the background.
Did the Republicans or Democrats Start the Gerrymandering Fight?
The 2026 midterm election cycle is quickly approaching. However, there is a lingering question mark over what congressional maps will look like when voters start to cast their ballots, especially as Republicans and Democrats fight to obtain any electoral advantage possible. ...
11 Nov, 2025
-
8 min read