House approves bill requiring party selection on voter-registration forms after prolonged debate

Oklahoma House of Representatives · March 10, 2026

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Summary

The Oklahoma House on March 9 passed House Bill 3722, which would require applicants to select a party or mark none when registering to vote; supporters said it clarifies voters' intent while opponents warned it could unintentionally remove registrations and urged administrative fixes instead. The bill passed on final reading, 75-18.

Representative Cross White Hader urged passage of House Bill 3722 on the House floor, saying the measure clarifies whether a registration applicant intended to select a political party or intended to be unaffiliated. "What we're trying to do is know that we are clear as a state what they selected, not saying you didn't pick a box, so let me fill it in for you," Cross White Hader said.

Opponents warned the change could create a new barrier to voting. Representative Munson said the bill could make thousands of people who thought they had registered effectively ineligible at the polls: "Would you share my concern that that would be 4,000 U.S. citizens, Oklahoma residents who could be voting, who then now are we could potentially be ineligible to vote with the change of your bill?" she asked. Cross White Hader replied that the policy reflects a difference of philosophy about who should bear responsibility for completing the form.

Several lawmakers suggested the problem could be fixed without legislation by improving the online form. Representative Dollidge pointed out an interface issue on the online registration portal and urged an administrative solution: adding a clearer option for "unaffiliated" rather than changing the law. Dollidge said the paper form already indicates that leaving party blank registers a voter as an independent.

Supporters said the bill protects the integrity of the signed registration. Cross White Hader told colleagues that the registration document is a legal statement and should be complete: "With this application, you sign it saying that this information is correct ... we're not going to send it back incomplete." He also said the change prevents the state from guessing a registrant's intent.

After floor debate that included multiple members on both sides of the issue, the House voted to pass the measure on final reading. The roll call recorded 75 "aye" and 18 "nay." The bill moves to the next required steps in the legislative process.