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Does The Mayor Of Oklahoma City Represent A Post-Trump Roadmap For The Republican Party?

OKLAHOMA CITY — Many politicians have iconic moments that remain associated with them through their careers. Not many of those are a literal mic drop, though.

In September 2019, as part of an opening concert for Oklahoma City’s new centerpiece Scissortail Park, Mayor David Holt, in jeans and an untucked shirt, led a crowd of 26,000 in a raucous chant of “OKC! OKC! OKC!”

Then he turned, in 2020 for the first time since 2012. It also saw an increase in college graduates moving in who were under 25.

“When you want absolute success and absolute dominance of your worldview, that actually is impossible.”

– Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt

That evolution helped make Oklahoma County the closest thing to a blue county in Oklahoma. It provided the biggest margins of any county in a 2020 vote to expand Medicaid and in the 2022 governor’s race for a moderate Democratic candidate.

In 2018, it provided one of the biggest upsets of the congressional midterms, as Democrat Kendra Horn defeated a Republican incumbent in a district that at the time was made up of most of Oklahoma City and its northern suburb of Edmond. (Oklahoma Republicans redrew the district to split Oklahoma City and added a swath of rural Lincoln County for this year’s midterms.)

Holt points out that while Oklahoma remains deep red politically, Trump carried Oklahoma County, which includes much of the city that stretches into four counties, by only a single percentage point.

“It’s not blue, yeah. But it certainly is purple,” Holt said. The county’s voter registration bears that out. While Republicans outnumber Democrats by a 42% to 36% margin, the fastest-growing group in the last four years has been independents.

‘Good Enough’

Holt is proudly Republican. Oklahoma City has a nonpartisan council-manager form of city government where the mayor is more of a civic cheerleader than the guy called to fix potholes, but that hasn’t kept Holt from advertising his party affiliation.

He was a GOP staffer on Capitol Hill in the early 2000s, then worked in George W. Bush’s White House on its legislative affairs team. He was a state senator for seven years. During the 2016 GOP presidential primary, he served as Marco Rubio’s state chair.

Even with that lineage, Holt finds himself out of step with many in the Republican Party who favor Trump’s all-or-nothing approach.

Instead, Holt said, people have to meet somewhere in the middle.

“‘Good enough’ is basically what American democracy produces and that’s hard for some people,” he said. “I think it’s basic to how we used to do things in America and I also think it’s how we learned to do things in kindergarten. And that is, you compromise.”

Many Democrats say he is a Republican they can work with.

Joshua Harris-Till, a Democrat who unsuccessfully ran for an Oklahoma City-area House seat in November and is also on a city policing reform board, said Holt’s a good listener. During the nationwide protests following the murder of George Floyd, the mayor asked if it would help if he met with the protesters — and did.

The 2008 arrival of the Oklahoma City Thunder NBA franchise was seen as the culmination of years of effort to develop Oklahoma City's downtown entertainment options.
The 2008 arrival of the Oklahoma City Thunder NBA franchise was seen as the culmination of years of effort to develop Oklahoma City’s downtown entertainment options.

via Associated Press

“That is the reason that Mayor Holt is actually so well-liked,” Harris-Till said. “He doesn’t understand everybody’s experience. He doesn’t come from a struggle of life and have a story that’s super relatable to everybody.

“But he has a willingness to listen and that makes him relatable to so many people.”

But how does a Republican mayor square a $1.1 billion extension of a sales tax — which would be described as a tax hike in most GOP circles — with being Republican?

“Republicans are for limited government, not no government,” he said. “First of all, you have to acknowledge government does do some things, and I believe that.”

Holt said he sees his reelection win as an endorsement of his anti-Trump stance. It’s not a position he intends to change soon.

“I am not going to run for any office that requires me to join a cult,” he said.

“I am not going to run for any office that requires me to join a cult.”

– Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt

“So I’m going to represent the people’s best interests and focus on the issues that matter, and if that means that Trumpism and I will never align, then yes,” he added.

Pat McFerron, a Republican pollster and friend of Holt’s, joked that the mayor has decades to decide if he wants to try moving up the political ladder, given his age. But he said he didn’t think Holt would trim his anti-Trump sails to do so.

“I think he’s going to say, ‘If the Republican Party comes to me, that’s great.’” McFerron said.

Holt’s love of social media has led some to wonder if he’s more interested in promoting himself than the city. (A local blog dubbed him “Mayor McSelfie.”)

McFerron noted that Holt “has a joyful exuberance about being mayor of Oklahoma City,” which can come across as being a bit cringe-inducing at times.

“But it’s authentic,” McFerron said. “It’s who he is. And people embrace it.”

‘A Strategic Reason’ To Move On

November’s elections did little to move the needle on Holt’s future and see if his brand could succeed statewide. Nationally, Republicans underperformed historical midterm patterns, but in Oklahoma, Trump-supporting governor Kevin Stitt was reelected handily.

Holt and Stitt clashed over the initial handling of the pandemic, with Stitt urging an early lockdown end Holt only grudgingly went along with. But that fight underscored what an ideological rarity Holt would be if he ran for higher office in the state as someone who refuses to say Trump won. With no Senate or governor’s elections until 2026, the issue may be moot.

Holt said if Republicans nominate Trump for president again, it will confirm the party is still a “cult of personality.” But with a third straight lackluster performance with Trump as the party’s leader, he said Republicans should move on.

“I thought it was time to move on from Trump since 2015,” the mayor said. “I think that my belief was more moral over the last several years, but now you have a strategic reason to move on.”

Holt said his “good enough” brand of compromise politics only seems rare now, in a polarized era, but would be less so if the state party primaries were changed to allow more moderates to compete. He cited California and Alaska, states where the top vote-getters, regardless of party, advance to the runoff.

“I thought it was time to move on from Trump since 2015.”

– Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt

Asked if it’s unrealistic to hope states change their elections, Holt said, “Why can’t it be changed? It was changed in California 10 years ago.” In states where the petition process exists, he said, voters could make the change instead of waiting for their state legislators.

Until then, though, Holt said he’s happy to be mayor of his hometown.

“Conveniently, Trumpism has arrived for me at a time when I am doing other things,” he joked. But he also left the door slightly ajar if, as he expects, the political environment changes.

“I think I have the best of all worlds — a lot of fun things to do in the near term and always the hope that, you know, I’ll have new adventures in the future.”

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