Walters, Grace advance to Republican primary runoff election for state schools superintendent

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A crowded Republican primary for state schools superintendent will send two candidates to a runoff.

GOP voters will decide in the Aug. 23 whether Oklahoma Education Secretary Ryan Walters or Shawnee Public Schools Superintendent April Grace will become their nominee.

No one in the four-candidate primary earned more than 50% of the vote, thus advancing the top two vote earners to a runoff.

Walters led the way with 41% of the vote while Grace earned 31%.

John Cox and William Crozier were eliminated from contention, collecting 24% and 4% respectively.

The runoff winner will face Democrat Jena Nelson, the only non-Republican in the race, in the Nov. 8 general election.

More coverage: What do Oklahoma schools superintendent candidates have to say about student mental health?

In a state with almost twice as many registered Republicans as Democrats, the GOP nominee is the likely favorite to succeed state schools Superintendent Joy Hofmeister, who is term limited this year.

State superintendent is Oklahoma's top education official, who leads the Oklahoma State Department of Education and acts as chairperson of the Oklahoma State Board of Education.

State schools superintendent candidate Ryan Walters speaks  during an election watch party inside the First National Center in Oklahoma City, Tuesday, June 28, 2022.
State schools superintendent candidate Ryan Walters speaks during an election watch party inside the First National Center in Oklahoma City, Tuesday, June 28, 2022.

Gov. Kevin Stitt tapped Walters, 37, as his education secretary in 2020. Originally of McAlester, Walters is a high school history teacher and executive director of the school-choice-friendly organization Every Kid Counts Oklahoma.

“Our schools will not be an experiment of the radical woke left,” Walters told a crowd at a campaign watch party in Oklahoma City. “Our schools will carry conservative values and value each individual child.”

Walters was a finalist for Oklahoma Teacher of the Year in 2016.

The Shawnee school district hired Grace, 56, as superintendent in 2016. She spent the past 30 years as a teacher, coach and school administrator.

“I think that’s the biggest difference between Ryan and I is the practical, everyday experience and the ability to get this job done,” she said.

Grace, the 2021 school administrator of the year, was favored among the education establishment.

She received campaign donations from multiple educators, several school district superintendents, and leaders of the Oklahoma State School Boards Association and the state school administrator organization, campaign finance reports show.

She also faced questions about a former Shawnee boys basketball coach and assistant athletic director charged with a felony for sexting with a teenager. Ronald Gene Arthur resigned from Shawnee on Sept. 3 after coming under investigation.

Grace raised the most money of any candidate in the primary, surpassing $300,000 in campaign contributions.

Shawnee Public Schools Superintendent April Grace will continue to an Aug. 23 Republican runoff for state schools superintendent.
Shawnee Public Schools Superintendent April Grace will continue to an Aug. 23 Republican runoff for state schools superintendent.

Walters came under fire last month after news outlets Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier uncovered recipients of the Bridge the Gap Digital Wallet, a program under his watch, spent nearly half a million dollars of federal relief money intended for educational needs on TVs, gaming consoles and other personal items.

Walters said a third-party vendor, ClassWallet, violated its contract and allowed the improper spending to happen, which the company denies.

Despite the controversy, Walters raked in the second-most campaign contributions of the four Republicans with $285,500, much of it coming from donors in the business community.

Former U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos gave Walters’ campaign the maximum individual contribution of $2,900, as did former state Superintendent Janet Barresi and Jonathan Small, president of the conservative think tank Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs.

Two Stitt appointees to the state Board of Education, Brian Bobek and Jennifer Monies, also donated to Walters.

Cox, 59, has been superintendent of Peggs Public Schools for 28 years. The school district serves about 200 students 50 miles east of Tulsa.

This is Cox’s third bid for state superintendent. He ran as a Democrat against Hofmeister in 2014 and 2018.

Cox said he doesn't intend to run a fourth time.

John Cox
John Cox

This isn’t Crozier’s first time running for the position, either. Crozier, 75, unsuccessfully challenged former state Superintendent Sandy Garrett in 2006, a race in which he gained national notoriety for suggesting students use textbooks to shield from bullets in school shootings.

Walters pushed conservative talking points to the forefront of his campaign. He claimed far-left extremists have influence in Oklahoma schools.

Walters was a leading voice against allowing transgender students to use the school restroom that matches their gender identity. Stitt signed a bill into law on May 25 banning that practice from public schools.

The education secretary also railed against critical race theory, an academic concept that's become a political buzzword.

State schools superintendent candidate Ryan Walters speaks with supporters during an election watch party for the Republican party primary in Oklahoma City, Tuesday, June 28, 2022.
State schools superintendent candidate Ryan Walters speaks with supporters during an election watch party for the Republican party primary in Oklahoma City, Tuesday, June 28, 2022.

In her online platform, Grace said critical race theory has no place in K-12 classrooms, but the Shawnee superintendent rarely focused on the topic.

The issue of school vouchers drew a line of distinction between Walters and the two district superintendents in the race.

Walters, along with Stitt, openly supported Senate Bill 1647, which proposed spending $128.5 million to pay for students’ private-school tuition and costs. The bill failed March 23 in a Senate floor vote.

Grace and Cox opposed the bill, citing concerns for a lack of accountability for how families spend voucher money.

The two school district leaders touted their years of experience in school administration. Grace noted she is the only candidate in the race in charge of a large school system.

This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Walters, Grace advance to Republican runoff for state superintendent