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State Question 832
State Question 832
Oklahoma · November 3, 2026
What this measure does
Increase the minimum wage to $15.00 per hour
A yes vote means
The state minimum wage becomes $15 per hour.
A no vote means
The state minimum wage stays at its current level.
Simple explanation
Right now, the lowest amount employers can legally pay workers is set by the state. This measure would raise that floor to $15 per hour. Think of it like raising the minimum price a store can charge for something — it affects everyone working at that lowest wage level.
Who's for it, who's against it
Support
- Amber England, spokesperson for Raise the Wage Oklahoma
- Cherokee Nation Business
- Commissioner of Labor Leslie Osborn (R)
- Democratic Party of Oklahoma
- Economic Policy Institute
- National Education Association
- Oklahoma AFL-CIO
- Oklahoma Appleseed Center for Law and Justice
- Oklahoma City Democratic Socialists of America
- Oklahoma Commissioner of Labor Leslie Osborn (R)
- Oklahoma Decides Inc.
- Oklahomans for a Prosperous Future, Inc.
- Oklahoma Policy Institute
- Raise The Wage Oklahoma
- Raise the Wage Oklahoma spokesperson Amber England
- State Rep. Amanda Clinton (D)
- The Fairness Project
- This Land Research & Communications Collaborative
- Tulsa Community Foundation
Opposition
- Adam Maxey, VP of Government Affairs, State Chamber of Commerce
- Curtis Shelton, Policy Director of the Oklahoma Council for Public Affairs
- Employment Policies Institute research director Rebekah Paxton
- Gov. Kevin Stitt (R)
- National Federation of Independent Business
- Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs
- Oklahoma Farm Bureau
- Oklahoma Restaurant Association
- Oklahoma State Chamber of Commerce
- Ray Carter, Director of the OCPA Center for Independent Journalism
- Republican Party of Oklahoma
- Senate President Pro Tempore Lonnie Paxton (R)
- Speaker of the House Kyle Hilbert (R)
- State Rep. Anthony Moore (R)
- State Rep. Bob Ed Culver (R)
- State Rep. Brad Boles (R)
- State Rep. Brian Hill (R)
- State Rep. Carl Newton (R)
- State Rep. Chad Caldwell (R)
- State Rep. Chris Banning (R)
- State Rep. Chris Sneed (R)
- State Rep. Clay Staires (R)
- State Rep. Cody Maynard (R)
- State Rep. Collin Duel (R)
- State Rep. Cynthia Roe (R)
- State Rep. Danny Sterling (R)
- State Rep. Danny Williams (R)
- State Rep. David Hardin (R)
- State Rep. David Smith (R)
- State Rep. Dell Kerbs (R)
- State Rep. Denise Hader (R)
- State Rep. Derrick Hildebrant (R)
- State Rep. Dick Lowe (R)
- State Rep. Eddy Dempsey (R)
- State Rep. Emily Gise (R)
- State Rep. Erick Harris (R)
- State Rep. Eric Roberts (R)
- State Rep. Gabe Woolley (R)
- State Rep. Gerrid Kendrix (R)
- State Rep. Hurchel Caldwell (R)
- State Rep. Jason Blair (R)
- State Rep. Jay Steagall (R)
- State Rep. Jim Grego (R)
- State Rep. Jim Olsen (R)
- State Rep. Jim Shaw (R)
- State Rep. John George (R)
- State Rep. John Kane (R)
- State Rep. John Pfeiffer
- State Rep. Jonathan Wilk (R)
- State Rep. Josh Cantrell (R)
- State Rep. Josh West (R)
- State Rep. Justin Humphrey (R)
- State Rep. Ken Luttrell (R)
- State Rep. Kenton Patzkowsky (R)
- State Rep. Kevin Norwood (R)
- State Rep. Kevin West (R)
- State Rep. Marilyn Stark (R)
- State Rep. Mark Chapman (R)
- State Rep. Mark Lawson (R)
- State Rep. Mark Lepak (R)
- State Rep. Mark Tedford (R)
- State Rep. Max Wolfley (R)
- State Rep. Mike Dobrinski (R)
- State Rep. Mike Kelley (R)
- State Rep. Mike Lay (R)
- State Rep. Mike Osburn (R)
- State Rep. Molly Jenkins (R)
- State Rep. Neil Hays (R)
- State Rep. Nick Archer (R)
- State Rep. Nicole Miller (R)
- State Rep. Preston Stinson (R)
- State Rep. Robert Manger (R)
- State Rep. Rob Hall (R)
- State Rep. Ronny Johns (R)
- State Rep. Ross Ford (R)
- State Rep. Rusty Cornwell (R)
- State Rep. Ryan Eaves (R)
- State Rep. Scott Fetgatter (R)
- State Rep. Stacy Adams (R)
- State Rep. Stan May (R)
- State Rep. Steve Bashore (R)
- State Rep. Tammy Townley (R)
- State Rep. Tammy West (R)
- State Rep. Tim Turner (R)
- State Rep. T. Marti (R)
- State Rep. Toni Hasenbeck (R)
- State Sen. Aaron Reinhardt (R)
- State Sen. Adam Pugh (R)
- State Sen. Ally Seifried (R)
- State Sen. Avery Carl Frix (R)
- State Sen. Bill Coleman (R)
- State Sen. Brenda Stanley (R)
- State Sen. Brent Howard (R)
- State Sen. Brian Guthrie (R)
- State Sen. Bryan Logan (R)
- State Sen. Casey Murdock (R)
- State Sen. Christi Gillespie (R)
- State Sen. Chuck Hall (R)
- State Sen. Dana Prieto (R)
- State Sen. Darrell Weaver (R)
- State Sen. Dave Rader (R)
- State Sen. David Bullard
- State Sen. Dusty Deevers (R)
- State Sen. George Burns (R)
- State Sen. Grant Green (R)
- State Sen. Jack Stewart (R)
- State Sen. Jerry Alvord (R)
- State Sen. John Haste (R)
- State Sen. Jonathan Wingard (R)
- State Sen. Julie Daniels (R)
- State Sen. Julie McIntosh (R)
- State Sen. Kelly Hines (R)
- State Sen. Kendal Sacchieri (R)
- State Sen. Kristen Thompson (R)
- State Sen. Lisa Standridge (R)
- State Sen. Micheal Bergstrom (R)
- State Sen. Paul Rosino (R)
- State Sen. Randy Grellner (R)
- State Sen. Roland Pederson (R)
- State Sen. Shane Jett (R)
- State Sen. Spencer Kern (R)
- State Sen. Todd Gollihare (R)
- State Sen. Tom Woods (R)
- State Sen. Warren Hamilton (R)
Source: Ballotpedia