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Governor’s Oklahoma budget calls for $1.4 billion less spending, removal of education funding cap
news
February 25, 2025
Governor’s Oklahoma budget calls for $1.4 billion less spending, removal of education funding cap
By BARBARA HOBEROCK OKLAHOMA VOICE

OKLAHOMA CITY – Gov. Kevin Stitt on Monday called on Oklahoma lawmakers to spend nearly $1.4 billion less in the upcoming budget while cutting two key funding streams.

The Republican governor’s executive fiscal year 2026 budget unveiled Monday proposes slightly more than $11 billion in spending, and includes a 0.5% cut in the state’s personal and corporate income taxes as well as an amnesty program that gives Oklahomans the opportunity to pay past-due taxes without penalty.

Reducing the state’s 4.75% income tax rate would cost $202.6 million, while an identical cut to the corporate income tax rate would cost $34.7 million in fiscal year 2026, the Governor’s Office projected.

The budget, which serves as a starting point for lawmakers, proposed a tax amnesty program to generate an additional $75 million.

The last such program was in 2015 and brought in $139 million.

Stitt’s budget also includes:

• $2 million to fund a business court system and hire judges that “will be specially equipped to understand corporate and complex litigation.

• The removal of the $250 million cap for the Parental Choice Tax Credit for tax year 2027 and beyond. The program, which provides up to $7,500 to help families cover private school expenses, is capped at $250 million in budget year 2026 and all subsequent years.

• A slight increase for the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education;

• And, flat budgets for the State Department of Education; the Governor’s Office; the House and Senate; the Oklahoma Department of Corrections; District Attorneys Council; Attorney General; Oklahoma Indigent Defense System; and Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board.

Oklahoma Voice (oklahomavoice.com) is an affiliate of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization, supported by grants and donations. Oklahoma Voice provides nonpartisan reporting, and retains full editorial independence.

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