JUDD STROM HOUSE REP DIST 10 - podcast episode cover

JUDD STROM HOUSE REP DIST 10

Jun 17, 202419 min
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Good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome. It's time for our community connection right here on K one. The one you trust and judge, Strum is with it. He is the incumbent in District ten. Tomorrow is a big day. It's election day and a lot of people who've already cast their ballots for early balloting. He find good on you, but I'm kind of a traditionalist. I do it on election Tuesday. That's kind of im important. Even though this is a primary, it's

a big day for a lot of races. It's a huge day. It's a big day in this area, big day in my district, big day. You know, when you get up here, most of these elections, most of these seats will be chosen in the Republican primary. You know, there are two Republicans in my race. There's no Democrats. So tomorrow, tomorrow's the end. People will say, you know, I don't have a voice in government, or I didn't you know, I didn't didn't have a

chance to to get someone that represents me in there. Well, tomorrow's tomorrow. You're picking your your state senator, You're picking your corporation commissioner, you're picking your state representative, you're picking in you O Sage County, you're picking a sheriff, you're picking your county clerk. Uh, these all these races are being decided tomorrow and there's yeah, there's commissioners in each county too,

county commissioners in both counties. That's right. Uh. People keep asking about this thing called dark money that appears in campaigns, And first of all, what is it for the layman who's not too familiar with that term, you know, really dark money. When we talk about that, we're really talking about out of state money that comes in. And it gets confused. People will say, once you hear all the time, is I'm not taking any

lobbyist money or I'm not taking any pack money. Well, first of all, lobbyists don't really you know, they're just an employee of a pack. They don't really write checks. But when it comes to packs, they're political action committees. They're the political arm of organization to reach out and say we want to help this candidate. You know, to me, it sounds great when you read it on paper, but when the ag pack, when Farm Bureau's agpack reaches out and says we support you, and what you're doing and

we want to help in your campaign. They represent over one hundred and seventy five thousand farmers and ranchers in the state of Oklahoma, and that that organization say and we appreciate what you've done and we want to help you is great.

You know, I drew a lot of support from the State Chamber, from the Tulsa Chamber, from the Oklahoma City Chamber, you know, and the chambers represent three hundred and over three hundred and fifty thousand small businesses in the state of Oklahoma, and they said, you know, we really appreciate

what you've done to help those businesses grow and thrive. You know, we've done a lot in this state to help individuals or you know, small groups of people start businesses, to lend to you know, a more entrepreneurial spirit in this state, give people the opportunity to go out there and start their

own business and run it successfully. And so, you know, I appreciate when those organizations reach out and say we want to help, we appreciate what you've done, we want to see you continue to do the work that you've done. And like I say, I if they support me, you know, I'm glad. I think you're doing something right. And we you know,

like even here we have the Barbsville Firefighters. You know, I've done a lot of work here to make sure our fire departments and our police departments are well equipped and well trained, and you know, going so far as helping to build the burn tower out here so that our guys didn't have to spend the money and the time and the effort to go to Ada or Oklahoma

City or Burns Flat all the way out western Oklahoma. Those organizations can train right here in Bartlesville, and that's been great for the entire northeast region of Oklahoma because those different departments and the different organizations, your emergency management, your fire departments, or police departments can come right here and train at home. And I just I think that's a great deal. I've been glad to work on that kind of deal. Well, you kind of know that one at

I level. You've been a firefighter for a long time I have, you know, I tell people I was a certified firefighter before I had my driver's license, and it was one of those kind of loopholes, but they said back then you had to go kind of get certified to drive the brush trucks and and we were I think it was about a week before my sixteenth birthday, and they said, well, there's really nothing on here that that said you have to do that. You know, that was back in the day.

I guess. I won't say how long ago that was, but but you know, and I tell people too, it's important, and I'll take the moment, take a plug. Get involved with your local fire department, your local volunteer fire department. I hear people say all the time like, well I don't know anything about that. Well, nobody did when they started. And it takes a village to run those volunteer fire departments and so and there's so many out here and they do so much good. And I tell

people too, you can help a volunteer fire department. You don't have to be on a truck or on a hose, you know. Come we're out there in those departments changing out a master cylinder, you know, or fixing a pump or fixing a motor. And you got guys that will build hot rods in their garage and say I can't help. No, No, you can help, because we've got to replace a carburetor a on a pump Motor and there's yeah. So I love being a part of those organizations and helping

those because they really do. I mean, they helped the community so much. Now when people see you back home, they know you as Judd Strum, they know you as the District ten representative. They know that you're going to represent their their views, their issues, their concerns in Oklahoma City. What else do you do in Oklahoma City? You've got a committee that you're a part of. So do I serve on several committees, and I inject

myself into many many committees. I try to go to as many committee meetings as possible to watch what's coming through the capital. But you know, when I went to Oklahoma City, good friend of mine set the most important thing that you do in that building is as you decide as a representative, especially as representative working on the budget, how you spend Oklahoma's tax dollars. You want the service to create the service people expect from their government. You want

to do it effectively and efficiently. And I took that to heart in just my second term. I mean I work so hard and injected myself into so many of those things that it's very rare, but in just my second term, I was named the Chairman of General Government for the work that i'd done there on the budget and on on taxation and on spending and on you know,

working in those agencies to help create a better service. And I've served there for four years now and we have we've been able to make you know, we've improved how your government finds and what we get out of that dollar just just leaps and bounds. And so I'm proud to have been a part of that. And you know, there's still so much more work to do.

And one of the things we say in the Capitol were on the in session, you know, four days a week for four months, and I think this year it was sixty seven days we were actually in the capitol and we considered over three thousand, five hundred bills in that time in sixty four days. And we build it almost thirteen twelve and a half billion dollar budget from scratch. So we're busy. But at the same time, if you make it your goal to be an advocate for your people, there are so

many other things that you want to get involved in. You know, when someone calls me and says, hey, the tax Commission is not answering their phone. You can bet I'm going to be over at the taximission figuring out why and trying to fix it. When when we got word that, you know, a young person would graduate from Career Tech and it would take almost one hundred and twenty days to get your license to go and cut hair, you know, or provide the service you've just learned to get your license from

the state. I mean on Monday, I was in the cosmetology building down there, trying to figure out why this is taken so long, what can we do to fix it? And within a week you have that shortened down to i'd say a more acceptable span of time. But really, I've told people, by the end of this next year, I want that down to where you can graduate, get on the internet, give them your credentials, print off a temporary file or a temporary certification, and go to work the

next day. And that's the kind of thing we need to be working on down there. And one of the things I appreciate about this position is being able to advocate for my people and be be able to advocate for you know, not just the people of District ten, which is the job, but you really affect the whole state, and I think we're moving the state forward in that. Digitization has been a big thing. You know, the entire

state government used to revolve around file cabinets and file clerks. You went to Oklahoma City and you stood in line and someone will go get your file and you get it out and you'd work on it. We can do that all digitally now and to have the opportunity to change the way the government works. Now, hopefully within the next year, you'll be able to go into service Oklahoma and stand and talk to a person right here in Bartlesville and get any

of your issues handled right there. And we all thought, you know, oh great, this will be on the internet, and this will be so much easier. I don't like doing things on the internet. A lot of times I want to go talk to a person and I might have two or three issues and I want to get them handled. So I'm glad to have been able to handle those kind of things. Very good, Very good. Now with your role as the chairman on the government General government, you get

to really look over the budget quite carefully. You're one of the first people that gets to all that. I always said it was one of the most important things to me to have a seat at the big table. Yep, and I do, and I try to contribute as much as possible. I think that you know, some of your budget directors, especially your chairman, probably probably think sometimes I might even get a little bit annoying in there,

but it is important. Somebody's got to say no. Well, somebody's got to say no, and always say and I've got to quit saying it.

But somebody's got to call the baby ugly on some of those things. And it doesn't doesn't, you know, hurt my feelings to get up and do that, because these the decisions that are made down there really affect every every family in the state of Oklahoma. And so having a having a seat at that table, you know, especially a rural representative from District ten, having a seat at that table is really a big deal because you're you're you're more

i say, influential representatives or legislators you know, tend to come a lot of times from your your big cities, your Oklahoma City, your Tulsa, you're Latin, and they get a lot of the attention. And so my being welcomed into that group and then and really trying my best to do the job and do it right. Is is really a big deal? Well, one of the things that people will sometimes say is that, wow, here's a big bill with a big name. Oh red meat bills. Yeah,

And sometimes the devil's in the details. Can you explain that very much? So speaking of calling the baby ug, you know, it's hard when you walk when we walk into that building, like I said in in in February, there's there's three thy five hundred bills waiting for you this year, and

it's just you can't cover everything there. There are a group of us that trial hardest to read every single bill and and look and one of the things that I try to find all the time are the unintended consequences and and so many bills that run are the result of of someone saying, well, I want to write a big bill that'll that'll sound great at home. You know, my people really want this, and so they rush in the final hours to put a bill up. And it's got a great title that people love.

And but when when it comes down to it, you look through that bill in there, it's either poorly written or all the unintended consequences of that bill that that you just you have to go around and you have to you have to either try to fix it or fight it or kill it. You know, I've caught a lot of a mailer come out against me that said, you know, we don't like Strong because he killed the drag queen bill.

Well, the reality was, you know, that was a big topic here in Bartlesville going on where the drag shows, and so someone rushes down there and says, I want to write a bill that's about drag queens, because really it's a big hot topic right now. But what they wrote was actually an adult cabaret bill, which an adult cabaret is a strip club, which it's already very illegal to take a kid to a strip club. We

have very strong indecency laws in the state of Oklahoma. You take a kid to a strip club, you're going to jail, the strippers going to jail, you know whatever. But one of the problems I saw in that bill was the language of the bill set out as something harmful to children was men or women dressed in masculine or feminine costumes. So you had men or women

dressed up masculine or feminine. So ultimately the language of the law would have been a man couldn't dress like a man and a woman couldn't dress like a woman. And when I asked, you know, I was hit for asking questions and debating. I asked, would make a Dolly Parton concert illegal in the state of Oklahoma? You know that's a woman dressed up feminine costume. So well, I don't think so, I don't think they'd prosecute that.

Well, I don't want to make everything illegal and then pick who we prosecute based on what we like or don't. You know, it's just not a great way to write statute. And then when you get farther down into that, that bill would have crippled our film industry because when you look at Killers of the Flower Moon, that was hundreds and hundreds of people dressed up in costume and then given it in our rating, you could easily argue that that

would be harmful for children. So it would have, by the letter of the law in the state of Oklahoma, made it illegal to film Killers of the Flower Moon in Oklahoma. It would have made it illegal to film Tulsa King. It would have made it illegal to film twisters here, you know, And so you say these are the unintended consequences, and this is no good. Can we fix it? Can we make it better? Yeah? I don't think so this is good, This is what people want. But

it's a red meat bill. You know. Always, I've said before on our Friday show that you always run into those save the puppies bills, you know, and everybody wants to save the puppies. And then you read it and you're like, now, wait a minute. You know this says that we have to you know, shut down I, you know, or I thirty five for three hours a day so that these puppies can go play in that pond across the room. You know, You're like, well, that's

ridiculous. But it's got a great title. And so then people get mad, how dare you vote against that? Well, it's a bad bill, it's bad legislation, it's a bad statue to put forth in the state of Oklahoma. And so out of thirty five hundred bills, though, those are the ones that get the attention, and those are the ones that you see on Facebook or read about in the paper. So nobody, nobody gets real excited about bills that you know, have something to do with the Oklahoma Water

Resources Board. I do you know those are the important states the probably affect people's lives. Yeah, you know, and you don't see people out there really fighting about those. Those are boring. But at the same time, you know, we face the most historic drought in this area that we've ever had. I worked very hard with the Water Resources Board to bring resources back

to District ten to get through that. You know, we've I think we've spent over a million and a half dollars or close to a million a half dollars in Copan on the water system. Because the people of Bowering and Whipperwill and Copan and Wand want clean water. And it's easy for someone to sit in Oklahoma City and say that's not a problem and the state doesn't need to be working on that because they're under the umbrella of Oklahoma City that's solving all

their problems. Their day to day life is all city government. You know, your roads, your bridges, your water, your utilities, that's all handled by the city. You don't have that in Whipperwill, Oklahoma. You don't have that in Wand, you don't have that in Delaware or Lenipol.

What you have the assistance you get has to come from the state. And that's really one of the important things that rural representatives have to have to face and have to fight for, is getting resources out to these areas because we want good roads, we want good schools, we want good utilities, we want broadband internet, we want good well equipped and well trained firefighters. We want to think when we go to bed at night that our treacher being patrolled

and our our property and you know, our homes are safe. So that's those are the things I work on. All righty, well's the last word you want to tell the folks before we sign off here again, it's it's very important that you get out and vote. Tomorrow is the Republican primary, and it decides a lot of those a lot of these offices. And vote all day tomorrow. Watch out for the what they call the October surprise, where you get those last minute text messages that make unfounded, wild claims that

nobody can disprove until Wednesday after the election's over. You know, those will become very popular. You know, understand that when you're some of the things that people are sending things out that you know have conservative ratings on them. Just understand that I don't. What's your index, Well, it depends on who you look at. You know, if you go with the you know,

the Petroleum Alliance, I've got like a ninety eight percent. But if you look at Save the Constitution that they call the gold standard of conservative rating, out of thirty five hundred bills, they picked ten to look at, and I'm already out on three of them because i support public education and I support you know, I supported the towers that broadcast our tornado warnings and our

amber alerts and all that. Well they're against those things, and so they picked their ten bills and say, well, he voted against these bills, or he voted for these bills that we don't like. The film tax credit brought one hundred million dollars to this area. That's very important to me to support. They don't support that. That's fine. You have to look at where these organizations come from, what their purpose is, and kind of take

that with a grain of salt. Because I'm out in the district all the time, I talk to a lot of people, and trust me, I vote for the people at District ten, and I hope to continue to because I have to come home every weekend. I don't say in district, I say, I have to come home and face my mama when I get home,

so I have to do right. But again, I think the most important takeaway is it's important that people get out tomorrow and vote because there are so many very important choices being made tomorrow for the people that will represent you or that will serve you. So tomorrow's Tuesday, Republican Primary election day, get out and vote. Thank you, Jude Judge Strum District ten. Right here on our community Connection

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