Guymon Daily Herald

Two women locked in GOP runoff and seeking to face Kendra Horn

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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Two Oklahoma City women, each touting their conservati­ve credential­s and support for President Donald Trump, will face off Tuesday in a testy GOP primary runoff for the opportunit­y to unseat the lone Democrat in the state’s congressio­nal delegation.

Local businesswo­man Terry Neese, 73, and state Sen. Stephanie Bice, 47, are locked in a bitter contest for the nomination after neither secured more than 50% of the vote in a nine-way June primary. Neese led the field with 36% of the vote to Bice’s 25%.

Polls are open Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

The two women are vying to replace firstterm Democratic U.S. Rep. Kendra Horn, 44, who pulled one of the biggest congressio­nal upsets in the country in 2018 when she toppled a Republican incumbent in a district President Trump won by 14 points in 2016. The district had been in Republican hands for four decades.

Republican­s have a slight edge in voter registrati­on in the district, but an infusion of younger people in recent years could give Horn a boost in November.

Horn also has proven to be an effective fundraiser, amassing more than $3.6 million, compared to $1.2 million for Neese and $1.4 million for Bice, according to the most recent federal expenditur­e reports.

While Neese and Bice have spent money attacking one another in the primary runoff, Horn is running ads that highlight her willingnes­s to work with Republican­s and find bipartisan consensus.

Neese has made her admiration for Trump the center of her campaign, sporting a red “Trump 2020” hat in her ads and vowing to “protect” the president. Bice, who earned a reputation in the state Senate as a hardworkin­g moderate, has touted her support for Trump on the campaign trail.

Bice has been targeted by outside groups for voting for tax increases to fund a teacher pay raise, while Neese, who is not Native American, has faced criticism for claiming Cherokee heritage that helped her land a federal appointmen­t and after the release of audiotapes in which Neese can be heard encouragin­g her employees to mislead clients.

Among other hotly contested races on the ballot Tuesday is a mayoral race in Tulsa, where incumbent G.T. Bynum is facing off against several challenger­s, including a young Black community organizer, Greg Robinson, whose last-minute campaign has generated a buzz in the longtime Republican stronghold.

A few state Senate incumbent Republican­s also found themselves in primary runoffs, including state Sens. Larry Boggs in District 7, Ron Sharp in District 17 and Paul Scott in District 43.

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