The Oklahoman

Education Committee chair to depart office

Key figure in House says she won’t seek reelection

- Murray Evans

Rep. Rhonda Baker, a key figure in Oklahoma education as chair of the state House of Representa­tives’ Education Committee, has announced she doesn’t plan to seek reelection this year.

The 55-year-old Baker, R-Yukon, could serve two more two-year terms under Oklahoma’s term-limits law that allows legislator­s to serve for 12 years. A former classroom teacher, she’s served as the education committee chair since 2016, when she began her first term in the House. She was elected after her predecesso­r from House District 60, Dan Fisher, also left the House before being term-limited.

In 2016, she beat her Democratic challenger easily, receiving 67.4% of the vote. In 2018, 2020 and 2022, she retained her seat with no Democratic opponent on the general election ballot, but in 2022, she had to survive a tight Republican primary race, winning with 50.8% of the vote against challenger Ron Lynch.

“It has been an extraordin­ary honor to serve the people of House District 60 for the past eight years,” Baker said in a statement. “I have been blessed to work with some of the most dedicated and talented leaders in the communitie­s in my district and across Oklahoma. I have seen firsthand the challenges facing our state, and yet I remain optimistic that determined and capable Oklahomans will take the opportunit­ies afforded them to make our state the best it can be.

“I recognize there is still much to be done, and I promise to continue advancing the cause of public education throughout my life.”

In recent years, Baker has worked closely with Rep. Mark McBride, R-Moore — who chairs the House Appropriat­ions and Budget Education Subcommitt­ee — on education-related legislatio­n, including bills that helped provide Oklahoma teachers with pay raises.

She proposed a bill that became law in 2020 that attempted to address inequities between urban and rural school districts in the number of Advanced Placement classes offered.

This past December, she joined McBride and House Speaker Charles McCall in signing a rare legislativ­e subpoena sent to state schools Superinten­dent Ryan Walters. The subpoena ordered Walters to hand over informatio­n about operations within the Oklahoma State Department of Education that legislator­s had been requesting for months. Walters complied with the subpoena.

“Rep. Baker has been devoted to making education better in Oklahoma from the time she was elected,” McBride said. “Over her eight years in office, we have worked together on numerous issues (including) the largest appropriat­ion increases in state history to public education. It will be hard for anyone to fill her shoes. She has become much more than a colleague — she’s one of my dearest friends.”

In addition to her work on the education committee, Baker also has served on the education budget subcommitt­ee and on the House Higher Education and CareerTech Committee. The Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education presented Baker with that agency’s Distinguis­hed Service Award for her work on the Concurrent Education Task Force.

Baker also serves with a number of extra legislativ­e groups

Outside the Legislatur­e, Baker serves as chairwoman of the education committee of the Southern Legislativ­e Conference and vice chair of the Southern Regional Education Board’s advisory council. In 2023, she was appointed as a fellow for the Hunt-Kean Leadership Institute, an intense leadership training program for government and business leaders nationwide.

Baker was one of 11 legislator­s chosen within the southern region of the United States to attend the Center for the Advancemen­t of Leadership Skills and one of two legislator­s chosen as Early Learning Fellows from the National Conference of State Legislator­s. She also serves as a commission­er on the Commission of the Status of Women.

Baker said her proudest legislativ­e accomplish­ments include negotiatin­g the education appropriat­ions increases “while also advocating for more school choice than at any time in Oklahoma’s history.”

 ?? DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Rep. Rhonda Baker asks a question of Oklahoma schools Superinten­dent Ryan Walters at the state Capitol in January.
DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN Rep. Rhonda Baker asks a question of Oklahoma schools Superinten­dent Ryan Walters at the state Capitol in January.

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