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Oklahoma State Question 836, Top-Two Primary Elections Initiative (2026)

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Oklahoma State Question 836
Flag of Oklahoma.png
Election date
November 3, 2026
Topic
Electoral systems
Status
Pending judicial review
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens

Oklahoma State Question 836, the Top-Two Primary Elections Initiative, may appear on the ballot in Oklahoma as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 3, 2026.

Overview

What would the initiative do?

See also: Text of measure

The initiative would establish open primaries for statewide and county offices, district attorney, state legislators, and congressional candidates, where candidates for an office appear on one ballot regardless of party with top-two vote-getters moving forward to the general election.[1]

What states use top-two primaries?

See also: Top-two primary

As of 2024, three states used a top-two primary for some elections: California, Nebraska, and Washington. In 2004, Washington became the first state to adopt a top-two primary system for congressional and state-level elections after the passage of Washington Initiative 872. California adopted a top-two primary system in 2010 after the passage of California Proposition 14. In Nebraska, a top-two primary system was utilized for state legislative elections. Because Nebraska's state legislature was nonpartisan, partisan affiliation labels were not listed alongside the names of state legislative candidates.

As of 2024, Alaska used a top-four primary, which is a variation of the top-two primary, for state executive, state legislative, and congressional elections. Voters approved this in 2020 with Ballot Measure 2. The initiative also established ranked-choice voting for general elections for the aforementioned offices and the presidency.

Text of measure

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Background

Top-two primary

A top-two primary is a type of primary election where all candidates are listed on the same ballot. The top two vote-getters advance to the general election, regardless of their partisan affiliations, Consequently, it is possible for two candidates belonging to the same political party to win in a top-two primary and face off in the general election.[2][3]

Top-two primaries should not be confused with blanket primaries. In both types of primaries, all candidates are listed on the same ballot and voters choose one candidate per office regardless of party affiliation. However, in a blanket primary, the top vote-getter from each party advances to the general election. This ensures that candidates from the same party will not compete against each other in the general election.[4][5]

As of June 2024, three states used a top-two primary for some elections:

  • In Nebraska, a top-two primary system is utilized for state legislative elections. Because Nebraska's state legislature is nonpartisan, partisan affiliation labels are not listed alongside the names of state legislative candidates.

Alaska also used some variation of top-two primaries for their elections:

  • In 2020, Alaska voters approved Alaska Ballot Measure 2 establishing a top-four primary, which is a variation of the top-two primary, for state executive, state legislative, and congressional elections. The initiative also established ranked-choice voting for general elections for the aforementioned offices and the presidency.

Top-two primaries in the United States

The map below identifies states that utilize top-two primary elections or a variation. Hover over a state for additional details.

Path to the ballot

Process in Oklahoma

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Oklahoma

An initiated constitutional amendment is a citizen-initiated ballot measure that amends a state's constitution. Eighteen (18) states allow citizens to initiate constitutional amendments.

In Oklahoma, the number of signatures required for an initiated constitutional amendment is equal to 15% of the votes cast in the last gubernatorial election. A simple majority vote is required for voter approval.

The requirements to get an initiated constitutional amendment certified for the 2026 ballot:

  • Signatures: 172,993 valid signatures
  • Deadline: Each initiative has its own deadline that is 90 days after it was approved to circulate.

Stages of this ballot initiative

The following is the timeline of the initiative:[6]

  • January 3, 2025: The initiative was filed with the Oklahoma Secretary of State by Robert G. McCampbell and Melanie Wilson Rughani.
  • January 9, 2025: The Secretary of State published the initiative and set the 90-day challenge period to run from January 9 through April 9, 2025.
  • April 9, 2025: The Oklahoma Republican Party filed a petition with the court system claiming the initiative is unconstitutional (Supreme Court Case No. O-123007), and the initiative was placed on hold.[7]
  • June 11, 2025: Supporters of the initiative filed a lawsuit with the Oklahoma State Supreme Court, challenging the constitutionality of Senate Bill 1027, which was signed into law in May of 2025. The law prohibits initiative petitions from gathering more signatures than 11.5% of votes cast in the last gubernatorial election from any one county. Dr. Ken Setter, a plaintiff in the lawsuit, said, "Politicians should not be attempting to stop this measure by sabotaging it with unconstitutional laws. They should let the voters decide."[8]
  • July 8, 2025: Two Oklahoma citizens filed a separate legal challenge to SB 1027, which they say unconstitutionally targets State Question 836. Their argument is that SB 1027 violates the constitution by applying retroactively to SQ 836 which violates Article V, Section 54 of the state constitution. That section prohibits laws from altering proceedings already in motion.[9]



BP-Initials-UPDATED.png This article contains a developing news story. Ballotpedia staff are checking for updates regularly. To inform us of new developments, email us at editor@ballotpedia.org.



  
Lawsuit overview
Issue: Does the ballot initiative violate the U.S. Constitution?
Court: Oklahoma Supreme Court
Plaintiff(s): Oklahoma Republican PartyDefendant(s): Kenneth Setter, Yvonne Galvan, and Anthony Stobbe
Plaintiff argument:
The ballot initiative strips political parties of their ability to associate with candidates they choose, which violates the U.S. Constitution.
Defendant argument:
A top-two primary system does not infringe on the rights of smaller political parties as it does not change how political parties can support candidates.

  Source: Fox 25

On April 9, 2025, the Oklahoma Republican Party filed a petition with the Oklahoma Supreme Court under the claim that the initiative petition violates the United States Constitution. The process of approving the initiative to gather signatures was placed on an administrative hold.[7]

On June 24, oral arguments were held in court for the lawsuit. Ben Sisney, the representative of the Oklahoma Republican Party stated, "IP 448 unconstitutionally burdens petitions, First Amendment associational rights, it lacks a compelling justification, it’s not narrowly tailored, it’s not the least restrictive means, and we respectfully ask this court to strike it from the ballot."[10] He also said that the US. Supreme Court has a precedent of protecting the associational rights of political parties.[11] In contrast, Robert McCampbell, who represents the defendants, stated that the U.S. Supreme Court has a precedent of stating that a top-two primary system does not infringe on the rights of smaller political parties. He cited their 2008 decision in Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party.[10]

Anthony Stobbe, a petitioner of the initiative, gave a statement on the court proceedings. He said, "Let the people vote. That’s all we’re asking. The only reason party insiders are trying to block SQ 836 in court is because they know it has real momentum. Oklahomans are ready for a system where every voter gets to vote in every election, and the political elites are clearly scared of that.”[11]

See also

  • Ballot measure lawsuits
  • Ballot measure readability
  • Ballot measure polls
  • Ballot measure signature costs

External links

Footnotes