logo
Login Subscribe
ePaper
google_play
app_store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Public Notices
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Public Notices
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
news
September 2, 2025
Brecheen hails ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ at strife-free town hall meeting
By LYNN ADAMS STAFF WRITER

Social media is rampant with posts documenting blowbackagainst Rep. Josh Brecheen that occurred at town hall meetings early last week in Bartlesville, Muskogee, Pryor and Tahlequah, contentious confrontations that devolved into a shouting match in Cherokee County.

Brecheen came to Sallisaw last Wednesday evening to promote President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB), but with a conspicuous law enforcement presence — four Sallisaw police officers and four Sequoyah County deputies as well as Sheriff Larry Lane — the only protests consisted of restrained mutterings, rolled eyes and shaken heads from a smattering of Sequoyah County voters.

Before returning to Oklahoma’s 2nd Congressional District to conduct 20 town hall meetings in four days, Brecheen on Saturday posted on social media a claim that the Oklahoma Democratic Party “is launching a coordinated effort to instigate their base into co-opting our town halls with inorganic protests.” He then warned attendees that “if you attend our town halls to ‘get angry’ and ‘make noise,’ you will be asked to leave and subsequently removed by law enforcement should disruptive behavior continue.”

“I have no desire to engage in strife with anybody,” Brecheen said Wednesday, laying out his guidelines for the town hall, “and so if anyone in the room decides to get in strife and becomes uncivil and we can’t dialog and rationally talk to one another, then I’ll just stop and we just won’t go forward.”

Brecheen told the more than 50 attendees that at his Tahlequah town hall meeting earlier in the day, “people decided to just scream and yell, and I just said, ‘I’m not going to do that.’

“I hope what’s been happening the last couple of days is not people from Oklahoma, because I have a greater expectation of the standard that we set the way we treat each other,” the congressman said.

Brecheen then acknowledged that town hall meetings often utilize the 10-80-10 principle. “It’s that 10% of the people are going to hate you; they don’t know why,” he explained. “10% of people like you; they don’t know why. And then you get a chance to impact 80% of the people who haven’t decided if they like you or not.”

Strife before Sallisaw When in Bartlesville to begin the week, Brecheen was asked if he agreed with the executive order the president recently signed making it illegal for Americans’ to exercise their First Amendment rights by destroying the U.S. flag in protest. The military veteran asking the question then proceeded to stand up and destroy an American flag, prompting calls from audience members for him to be expelled from the town hall meeting. Brecheen was also asked about healthcare fraud and reductions in services and healthcare provider reimbursements, a concern he talked around and did not answer.

In Pryor, Brecheen was booed, heckled and confronted throughout the meeting, and a voter hounded the congressman about $500 million in American assistance paid to Israel, as well as an instance where an Israeli official in Las Vegas “was trying to rape a kid.” The official was jailed, but then returned to Israel the next day without being arraigned. The voter then charged that Brecheen is getting paid by Israel to ignore transgressions, at which time Brecheen ended the question-andanswer session.

In Nowata and Muskogee, tensions ran high, particularly because Brecheen engaged in a filibuster- style monologue about everything from Israeli defense systems to OBBB, which limited the time available for questions to which constituents wanted answers. Attendees complained that Brecheen “wasn’t truly answering the questions asked,” instead “talking around the questions and around our concerns, and not really pinpointing the issues.” At one point, a man was expelled from the meeting when he challenged Brecheen about National Guardsmen being deployed to Washington, D.C.

In Checotah, Brecheen devoted the first 44 minutes to ballyhooing the OBBB. He then allowed each constituent 90 seconds per question. When asked why the top 1% of Americans aren’t paying their fair share of taxes, Brecheen invoked Scripture regarding tithing. Another voter expressed his frustration about not being able to talk directly to a legislator, and that calls from constituents are screened and calls are not returned.

The contentious meetings came in the wake of U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson — “the speaker is my friend,” Brecheen crowed — recommending representatives avoid conducting town hall meetings, which most of Brecheen’s colleagues have done.

Ballyhooing the BBB For those who came to Wednesday’s town hall not knowing — or not caring — about tax accounting, Brecheen conducted a crash course in the U.S. tax code, at least as he claims it pertains to the OBBB, assuring his audience that they will reap the rewards of permanent tax benefits. In addition, he claimed that American taxpayers will pay zero taxes on Social Security benefits, in particular, and will realize the largest tax cuts in history for the middle class and small businesses.

Utilizing 30 giant posters, Brecheen campaigned that the OBBB “is the principal legislative vehicle for the America First agenda” by:

• Reining in Washington’s out-of-control spending

• Rooting out waste, fraud and abuse

• Unleashing economic growth

• Taking a meaningful first step to restore the fiscal health of our country, helping our make America safe, strong and prosperous again Brecheen emphasized that “the largest tax increase in history” was set to occur on Jan. 1, 2026, which “was not an option.”

The OBBB claims to result in “more money in your pocket” through:

• No tax on tips, overtime or car loan interest for new American-made cars, as well as additional relief for seniors

• Effectively eliminates taxes paid on Social Security for 88% of seniors

• Permanently extends the standard tax deduction • Permanently extends small business deductions for family-owned farms and 30 million other small businesses

• Enhances tax relief for families, primarily through expansion of tax credits

• Expands health savings accounts

• Eliminates fraud and waste in Obamacare, and blocks access to taxpayerfunded health benefits for illegal immigrants Brecheen’s oversized posters then compared mandatory versus discretionary spending from 1965 to 2024, pie charts that showed mandatory spending increasing from 34% to 74% for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, military and federal civilian pensions, veterans benefits, required interest payments on the nation’s $37 trillion deficit, SNAP, TANF, unemployment insurance, Supplemental Security Income and salaries for federal officials, including members of Congress and the President.

Conversely, discretionary spending that is decided annually by Congress has decreased from 66% of the U.S. budget in 1965 to 26% in 2024. Discretionary budget spending includes defense, education, transportation and scientific research. The Trump Administration has targeted the Department of Education, Department of Transportation and scientific research funding for elimination, which increases funding for the Department of Defense and the Department of Homeland Security, which includes the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Benefits for Oklahomans

Brecheen’s presentation further claimed that, for Oklahomans, the OBBB will:

• Increase wages by an inflation-adjusted range of $3,100 to $5,600

• Allow families with two children to realize higher take-home pay of $6,700 to $9,300

• Benefit 600,000 seniors with increased tax protections

• Benefit 67% of workers with no-tax on overtime • Extension of passthrough tax deductions for small businesses Brecheen then claimed that the “OBBB reverses the reckless Biden spending spree” associated with Medicaid, and that the OBBB “does not cut Medicaid,” and protects Medicaid for “truly needy Americans.”

Lowder: Taking time to do what is asked and needed
A: Main, news
Lowder: Taking time to do what is asked and needed
Liberty Public School secretary is an advocate, volunteer for children with cancer
By JADE PHILLIPS SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER 
October 28, 2025
Tra Lowder, 48, has lived in Sequoyah County since she was 8-years-old. For the time that she has been here, she has made a name for herself at Liberty Public Schools as school secretary, where she is...
A: Main, news
SNAP benefits to be suspended Nov. 1
Due to federal government shutdown
October 28, 2025
Oklahoma Human Services (OKDHS) has been notified by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) that federal funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) will be suspended ...
A: Main, news
Town of Muldrow announces free cleanup week, November 3-7
Residents invited to dispose of household waste
By AMIE CATO-REMER EDITOR 
October 28, 2025
The Town of Muldrow will hold a town-wide cleanup from Monday, Nov. 3 through Friday, Nov. 7, offering residents a chance to dispose of unwanted household items free of charge. The cleanup will run da...
Roland man charged with burglary, threatening neighbors with knife
A: Main, news
Roland man charged with burglary, threatening neighbors with knife
By AMIE CATO-REMER EDITOR 
October 28, 2025
A Roland man accused of allegedly breaking into his neighbors’ apartment and threatening to kill them with a knife has been formally charged in Sequoyah County District Court. Jimmy L. Foster, 55, of ...
Trick or Treat
A: Main, news
Trick or Treat
Saturday, Nov. 1
October 28, 2025
Gans Public School Trunk-or-treat, front parking lot, 6 to 8 p.m. Halloween on Elm with the Sallisaw Police Department, 5 to 7 p.m. Halloween Costume Contest, Muldrow VFW, registration begins at 8 p.m...
Pet wellness clinic to open
news
Pet wellness clinic to open
By LYNN ADAMS SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER 
October 28, 2025
Pets are important to so many people, but possibly none more than Dr. Paula Haraway. That’s why Haraway is opening Sequoyah Animal Advocates Wellness Clinic, “a new veterinary wellness clinic created ...
ePaper
google_play
app_store
Editor Picks
Muldrow Library offering free genealogy class
news
Muldrow Library offering free genealogy class
October 28, 2025
Muldrow Public Library offers a free First Thursday Genealogy class at 1 p.m., the first Thursday of every month at the library. Topics include ancestry photo and face recognition, creative ways to sh...
news
Cherokee Nation accepting Angel Project applications
October 28, 2025
The Cherokee Nation Angel Project is now accepting applications online through the Gadugi Portal until October 30. Eligible Cherokee Nation citizens must be registered on the tribe’s online Gadugi Por...
news
Free educational Medicare seminars scheduled in Sallisaw
October 28, 2025
Three free educational Medicare seminars have been scheduled for anyone needing information for Medicare for 2026. The seminars will be held on the following dates at the Sallisaw Chamber of Commerce,...
Moffett School fall carnival held
Lifestyle
Moffett School fall carnival held
October 28, 2025
It was a beautiful night for a fall carnival at Moffett Public School. The school wishes to thank students, parents and the community for coming out to support the carnival.
news
Upcoming event scheduled at Sallie Byrd Sevenstar Community Building
October 28, 2025
The Sallie Byrd Sevenstar Community Building is inviting everyone to join them for a series of cultural wellness gatherings. The event, which is supported by Restored Access Cherokee Nation Behavioral...
Facebook
Twitter
Tweets
Twitter
Tweets

EASTERN TIMES-REGISTER
603 W. Schley
Vian, OK
74962

(918) 427-3636

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 Eastern Times-Register

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy