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Payne County’s Elections Take Shape

Payne County 2026 Primary Elections: Key Races and Candidates
2026 Primary Elections

Payne County’s Political Landscape Takes Shape

Key races, unopposed victories, and familiar faces set the stage for June primaries and November general election

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Two Payne County commissioners drew Republican primary challengers, Aaron Means filed for a third run at House District 34 after losing to incumbent Rep. Trish Ranson in 2018 and 2020, and positions for Judicial District 9 district attorney and judgeships — covering Payne and Logan counties — will be decided without a primary or general election after candidate filing closed April 3.

District Attorney
Unopposed victory for Jeremiah Gregory

Jeremiah Gregory, 41, is the only candidate to file for Judicial District 9 District Attorney in Payne County and will take the seat without opposition. He filed after Laura Austin Thomas, who has served as DA for Payne and Logan counties since 2014, did not seek re-election. Thomas plans to retire, according to the Guthrie News Page.

Jeremiah Gregory

Republican

Age: 41

Residence: Stillwater

Background: Stillwater attorney and former prosecutor who served in both the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office and the District 9 DA’s office.

Status: Unopposed, will assume office without election

Payne County Board of Commissioners — District 1
Three-way Republican primary for eastern Payne County

Republican incumbent Zach Cavett, 47, of Glencoe will face two challengers in the June 16 Republican primary: Ray Harper, 66, of Glencoe, and Jacob Presuhn, 31, of Ripley.

No Democrat or independent filed, so the primary winner will take the seat. Cavett has served as District 1 commissioner since 2012, the longest-tenured member of the current board, and serves as board chairman. District 1 covers road and bridge maintenance for the eastern half of Payne County.

Zach Cavett (Incumbent)

Republican

Age: 47

Residence: Glencoe

Experience: District 1 commissioner since 2012, current board chairman

Ray Harper

Republican

Age: 66

Residence: Glencoe

Jacob Presuhn

Republican

Age: 31

Residence: Ripley

Payne County Board of Commissioners — District 3
Republican primary for western Payne County

Republican incumbent Rhonda Markum, 63, of Stillwater will face Clayton Estus, 32, of Mulhall in the June Republican primary. No Democrat or independent filed.

Markum was elected in 2022 after eight years as the District 3 administrative assistant. Her district covers the western half of Payne County.

Rhonda Markum (Incumbent)

Republican

Age: 63

Residence: Stillwater

Experience: District 3 commissioner since 2022, former District 3 administrative assistant for 8 years

Clayton Estus

Republican

Age: 32

Residence: Mulhall

District 9 Judgeships
Most judicial seats decided without election

Three District 9 judicial seats are on the 2026 ballot, but only one — in Logan County — drew more than a single candidate.

Katherine Thomas, 56, of Stillwater, is the sole candidate for district judge, a nonpartisan elected seat she will win by default. Thomas has served as a Payne County special judge since 2011 and was passed over by Gov. Kevin Stitt for the same seat in December 2024 when Stitt appointed his former general counsel, Jason Reese, instead. Reese did not file for election.

Katherine Thomas

Nonpartisan

Age: 56

Residence: Stillwater

Position: District Judge

Experience: Payne County special judge since 2011

Status: Unopposed, will assume office without election

Michael Kulling, 58, of Stillwater, is the sole candidate for Payne County associate district judge and will retain his seat by default after no challenger filed.

Michael Kulling

Nonpartisan

Age: 58

Residence: Stillwater

Position: Associate District Judge

Status: Unopposed, will retain seat without election

In Logan County, appointed Associate District Judge Diane Vaughan will face Sierra Pfeiffer, a former assistant district attorney and current Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation deputy general counsel, in the district’s only contested judicial race.

Diane Vaughan (Incumbent)

Nonpartisan

Position: Associate District Judge (Appointed)

County: Logan

Sierra Pfeiffer

Nonpartisan

Background: Former assistant district attorney, current OSBI deputy general counsel

County: Logan

Oklahoma Senate District 20
Republican primary to decide five-county district

Republican incumbent Chuck Hall, 59, of Perry will face Mark LeMarr, 63, of Crescent in the June Republican primary. No Democrat or independent filed, making the primary the decisive contest.

Hall, who has represented the district since 2018, is seeking his third and final term under state term limits and currently chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee. He is CEO and board chairman of Exchange Bank in Perry.

LeMarr has pastored CrossPointe Assembly Church in Crescent since 1989 and previously served as mayor of Cimarron City. Senate District 20 covers Payne, Noble, Pawnee, Logan, and Kingfisher counties.

Chuck Hall (Incumbent)

Republican

Age: 59

Residence: Perry

Experience: Senate District 20 representative since 2018, current Senate Appropriations Committee chairman

Background: CEO and board chairman of Exchange Bank in Perry

Mark LeMarr

Republican

Age: 63

Residence: Crescent

Background: Pastor of CrossPointe Assembly Church since 1989, former mayor of Cimarron City

House District 33
Three-way race for Coyle-based district

Republican incumbent Rep. Molly Jenkins, 61, of Coyle will face B.J. Roberson, 46, of Cushing in the Republican primary. Jenkins won the seat June 18, 2024, defeating then-incumbent John Talley in the Republican primary and running unopposed in the general election.

Max E. Burchett Jr., 49, of Guthrie, filed as the sole Democrat and will face the primary winner in November.

Molly Jenkins (Incumbent)

Republican

Age: 61

Residence: Coyle

Experience: House District 33 representative since 2024

B.J. Roberson

Republican

Age: 46

Residence: Cushing

Max E. Burchett Jr.

Democrat

Age: 49

Residence: Guthrie

House District 34
Ranson faces familiar challenger in Stillwater’s most consequential race

The legislative race most consequential for Stillwater voters is in House District 34, where Democratic incumbent Rep. Trish Ranson, 56, of Stillwater will face a Republican challenger in the November general election — either Aaron Means, 67, of Stillwater, or Ted Riley, 57, of Stillwater, who must first settle the Republican primary in June.

Ranson has won four consecutive general elections in the district. In her first two, she defeated Means — winning 57.4 percent to 42.6 percent in 2018 and 52.5 percent to 47.5 percent in 2020, her closest race against him. She then defeated Michael Baughman in 2022 with 61.6 percent of the vote and Andrew Muchmore in 2024 with 58.5 percent.

Rachel Dillin Elected for Stillwater School Board

Riley, a Stillwater resident, is the general manager of The House FM, a Christian radio network based in Oklahoma City, according to his Facebook page. He previously worked at KOSU, the public radio station based at Oklahoma State University.

Trish Ranson (Incumbent)

Democrat

Age: 56

Residence: Stillwater

Experience: House District 34 representative since 2018, four-term incumbent

Election History: Defeated Aaron Means in 2018 (57.4%) and 2020 (52.5%), Michael Baughman in 2022 (61.6%), and Andrew Muchmore in 2024 (58.5%)

Aaron Means

Republican

Age: 67

Residence: Stillwater

Background: Third run for House District 34, lost to Ranson in 2018 and 2020

Ted Riley

Republican

Age: 57

Residence: Stillwater

Background: General manager of The House FM Christian radio network, former KOSU employee

House District 35
Rematch in Maramec-based district

Rep. Dillon Travis, 33, of Maramec will face Kevin Wright, 58, of Jennings in a Republican primary rematch.

Travis won the House District 35 seat in February’s special election with 64 percent of the vote over Democrat Luke Kruse, having won the Republican nomination in January with 78 percent of the vote.

Wright, who was eliminated in the December special primary, filed again for a second chance at the nomination. Kruse did not file. No Democrat or independent filed for the November general election, so the Republican primary winner will take the seat and serve a full two-year term beginning in January 2027.

Dillon Travis (Incumbent)

Republican

Age: 33

Residence: Maramec

Experience: House District 35 representative since 2026 special election

Election History: Won 2026 special election with 64% of the vote, won Republican nomination with 78%

Kevin Wright

Republican

Age: 58

Residence: Jennings

Background: Ran in 2026 special primary, seeking rematch

Election Timeline

April 3, 2026
Filing Deadline
Candidate filing closed, finalizing the ballot for primary and general elections.
June 16, 2026
Republican Primary
Voters will decide contested Republican primaries for county, state House, and Senate races.
August 2026
Runoff Primaries (if needed)
Potential runoff elections for races where no candidate receives a majority.
November 4, 2026
General Election
Final election day for contested races, including House District 34 and 33.
January 2027
New Terms Begin
Elected officials take office for their new terms.

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