Jon Echols

American politician
Jon Echols
Majority Floor Leader of the Oklahoma House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 2017
Preceded byCharles Ortega
Assistant Majority Whip of the Oklahoma House of Representatives
In office
January 2013 – January 2015
Member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives
from the 90th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
November 14, 2012
Preceded byCharles Key
Personal details
Born (1979-12-03) December 3, 1979 (age 44)
Political partyRepublican
EducationUniversity of Oklahoma (BA)
Oklahoma City University (JD)

Jon Echols (born December 3, 1979) is an American politician who has served in the Oklahoma House of Representatives from the 90th district since 2012.[1][2] He is the Majority Floor Leader.[3]

Oklahoma House of Representatives

Echols also received the 2015 Distinguished Service Award for Higher Education from the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education and the Council of College and University Presidents.[4] He would go on to receive the award in 2020 and 2021 as well.[5][6]

In 2016, Echols asked Sheriff Regalado's Office to make a change to a key standard to bid on the Tulsa Jail’s medical contract so that his company could bid. Echols said he asked for the standard to be changed so that in-county companies would have a fair opportunity to make bids for the contract.[7]Turn Key Health Clinics was founded by Representative Jon Echols.[8] He is the co-founder and president. Echols has said that "he works for the company’s CEO mostly outside of Oklahoma to minimize perceived conflicts of interest."[9]

59th Legislature

In 2023, Echols was the House author on Senate Bill 840 (co-authored by Sen. Greg McCortney, R-Ada), a bill that "deals with name, image, likeness — the new endorsements phenomenon known as NIL." Echols marked it as "high-priority."[10] The bill would allow "for colleges and universities to back opportunities for NIL; allows schools to set parameters to prevent NIL activities from interfering with school or team activities; allows schools to be compensated for use of logos or facilities; prohibits students from securing NIL compensation using a school logo; allows schools to require that athletes take financial literacy and contract courses; doesn’t require that athlete compensation be in line with market value; and does not count scholarships as compensation."

In mid-April 2023, Echols steered SB 519 through committee. It "would give charter schools right of first refusal for leasing Commissioners of the Land Office property."

In October 2023, Echols voiced support for Israel in the 2023 Israel–Hamas war, calling Hamas a terrorist organization and saying that Israel is in its rights to "wipe" Hamas out, but pointing out that Hamas is "not our Muslim brothers and sisters"[11]and differentiating between Hamas and Palestinian civilians in Gaza.[11]

In 2024, he voted in favor of a bill that would require adults to show and ID before accessing porn sites.[12]

In March 2024, House Bill 1105 was introduced. It aimed to overhaul the Oklahoma law that gives "residents the power to file initiative petitions about legislative issues. With the required number of legally sufficient signatures, the initiative triggers a public vote." The bill that would change that process, authored by Speaker McCall.

References

  1. ^ "Oklahoma County legislative incumbents unchallenged". Oklahoman.com. 2012-04-12. Retrieved 2019-07-04.
  2. ^ "Representative Jon Echols". Okhouse.gov. Retrieved 2019-07-04.
  3. ^ OK House. "Representative Jon Echols".
  4. ^ "Representative Jon Echols honored for his support of Higher Ed - Oklahoma City Community College". www.occc.edu. 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
  5. ^ "House Majority Floor Leader Jon Echols Receives Higher Education Distinguished Service Award". Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education. 2020-10-14. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
  6. ^ "Echols earns Distinguished Service Award | The Journal Record". 2021-12-11. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
  7. ^ "Sheriff changed bid requirement after meeting with lawmaker seeking contract". The Frontier. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
  8. ^ "Half million dollar proposal seeks more health professionals at Cleveland County jail". Fox25. 2023.
  9. ^ Bryen, Whitney (2023-02-22). "Oklahoma sheriff, jail health care provider seek public money to increase staff after two women died". KOSU. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  10. ^ "College athletes' name, image, likeness bill is first Senate measure passed by Oklahoma House". Tulsa World. 4 April 2023.
  11. ^ a b "Your Vote Counts: Domestic Violence". www.newson6.com. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  12. ^ "House Votes". webserver1.lsb.state.ok.us. Retrieved 2024-03-12.
Oklahoma House of Representatives
Preceded by
Charles Ortega
Majority Floor Leader of the Oklahoma House of Representatives
2017–present
Incumbent
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59th Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Charles McCall (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Kyle Hilbert (R)
Majority Leader
Tammy West (R)
Minority Leader
Cyndi Munson (D)
  1. Eddy Dempsey (R)
  2. Jim Olsen (R)
  3. Rick West (R)
  4. Bob Ed Culver Jr. (R)
  5. Josh West (R)
  6. Rusty Cornwell (R)
  7. Steve Bashore (R)
  8. Tom Gann (R)
  9. Mark Lepak (R)
  10. Judd Strom (R)
  11. John Kane (R)
  12. Kevin McDugle (R)
  13. Neil Hays (R)
  14. Chris Sneed (R)
  15. Randy Randleman (R)
  16. Scott Fetgatter (R)
  17. Jim Grego (R)
  18. David Smith (R)
  19. Justin Humphrey (R)
  20. Sherrie Conley (R)
  21. Cody Maynard (R)
  22. Charles McCall (R)
  23. Terry O'Donnell (R)
  24. Chris Banning (R)
  25. Ronny Johns (R)
  26. Dell Kerbs (R)
  27. Danny Sterling (R)
  28. Danny Williams (R)
  29. Kyle Hilbert (R)
  30. Mark Lawson (R)
  31. Collin Duel (R)
  32. Kevin Wallace (R)
  33. John Talley (R)
  34. Trish Ranson (D)
  35. Ty Burns (R)
  36. John George (R)
  37. Ken Luttrell (R)
  38. John Pfeiffer (R)
  39. Erick Harris (R)
  40. Chad Caldwell (R)
  41. Denise Crosswhite Hader (R)
  42. Cynthia Roe (R)
  43. Jay Steagall (R)
  44. Jared Deck (D)
  45. Annie Menz (D)
  46. Jacob Rosecrants (D)
  47. Brian Hill (R)
  48. Tammy Townley (R)
  49. Josh Cantrell (R)
  50. Marcus McEntire (R)
  51. Brad Boles (R)
  52. Gerrid Kendrix (R)
  53. Mark McBride (R)
  54. Kevin West (R)
  55. Nick Archer (R)
  56. Dick Lowe (R)
  57. Anthony Moore (R)
  58. Carl Newton (R)
  59. Mike Dobrinski (R)
  60. Rhonda Baker (R)
  61. Kenton Patzkowsky (R)
  62. Daniel Pae (R)
  63. Trey Caldwell (R)
  64. Rande Worthen (R)
  65. Toni Hasenbeck (R)
  66. Clay Staires (R)
  67. Jeff Boatman (R)
  68. Lonnie Sims (R)
  69. Mark Tedford (R)
  70. Suzanne Schreiber (D)
  71. Amanda Swope (D)
  72. Monroe Nichols (D)
  73. Regina Goodwin (D)
  74. Mark Vancuren (R)
  75. T. J. Marti (R)
  76. Ross Ford (R)
  77. John Waldron (D)
  78. Meloyde Blancett (D)
  79. Melissa Provenzano (D)
  80. Stan May (R)
  81. Mike Osburn (R)
  82. Nicole Miller (R)
  83. Eric Roberts (R)
  84. Tammy West (R)
  85. Cyndi Munson (D)
  86. Dave Hardin (R)
  87. Ellyn Hefner (D)
  88. Mauree Turner (D)
  89. Arturo Alonso (D)
  90. Jon Echols (R)
  91. Chris Kannady (R)
  92. Forrest Bennett (D)
  93. Mickey Dollens (D)
  94. Andy Fugate (D)
  95. Max Wolfley (R)
  96. Preston Stinson (R)
  97. Jason Lowe (D)
  98. Dean Davis (R)
  99. Ajay Pittman (D)
  100. Marilyn Stark (R)
  101. Robert Manger (R)


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