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Chris Banning

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician
Chris Banning
Member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives
from the 24th district
Assumed office
November 16, 2022
Preceded byLogan Phillips
Personal details
Born1975 or 1976 (age 48–49)
Political partyRepublican
Residence(s)Bixby, Oklahoma, U.S.
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Air Force
Battles/warsOperation Provide Comfort

Chris Banning is an American politician who has served as the Oklahoma House of Representatives member from the 24th district since November 16, 2022.

Career

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Banning joined the United States Air Force in 1993 as an Airman Basic. He participated in Operation Provide Comfort between December 13, 1993, and January 12, 1997. He also provided volunteer relief at Tinker Air Force Base during the Oklahoma City bombing.[1]

Banning is the CEO of Banning Investment Group.[1]

Oklahoma House of Representatives

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Banning challenged incumbent Representative Logan Phillips in the 2022 Republican primary, along with another candidate, Bobby Schultz.[1] Banning was endorsed by Governor Kevin Stitt and Americans for Prosperity.[2] [3] Banning won the June Republican primary.[4] Since no non-Republican candidate filled, there was no November general election.[5] He was sworn in November 16, 2022.[6] In 2024, he applauded superintendent Ryan Walter's attempts to reject the American Library Association's standards for information literacy. Walters had called the current standards "woke and inappropriate for our youth". The ALA, which works with the Oklahoma Library Association and the American Association of School Librarians, said it "remains focused on ensuring that our current information literacy standards meet academic rigor and that we continue to strive to make Oklahoma a top 10 state in literacy."[7]

Personal life

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Banning and his wife, Katy, have six children. He and his family live in Bixby, Oklahoma.[8] [1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Taylor, Jillian (June 23, 2022). "Two challenging incumbent for House District 24 seat". Tulsa World . Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  2. ^ Hancock, Andrea; Brinkman, Bennett; Savage, Tres (June 30, 2022). "In Legislature, 3 incumbents out, 10 races go to runoffs". NonDoc. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  3. ^ Faught, Jamison (June 10, 2022). "AFP-Oklahoma endorses four state legislative candidates". Muskogee Politico. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  4. ^ Forman, Carmen (June 29, 2022). "Yukon state senator Jake Merrick, 2 other Oklahoma GOP lawmakers lose primary elections". The Oklahoman . Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  5. ^ LaCroix, Ryan; Mills, Kateleigh; Layden, Logan; Wallis, Beth; France, Hannah; Nunez, Xcaret; Wheeler, Graycen; Sweeney, Catherine; Ingram, Dani (June 29, 2022). "Stitt, Hofmeister battle set, O'Connor loses AG primary, several races advance to runoff". KOSU . Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  6. ^ "House Members Take Oaths of Office". Oklahoma Farm Report. November 17, 2022. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  7. ^ "The Oklahoman Subscription Offers, Specials, and Discounts". subscribe.oklahoman.com. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  8. ^ "REPRESENTATIVE CHRIS BANNING DISTRICT 24 – REPUBLICAN". okhouse.gov. Oklahoma House of Representatives. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
[edit ]
59th Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Kyle Hilbert (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Anthony Moore (R)
Majority Leader
Mark Lawson (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. Mark Chapman (R)
  13. Neil Hays (R)
  14. Chris Sneed (R)
  15. Tim Turner (R)
  16. Scott Fetgatter (R)
  17. Jim Grego (R)
  18. David Smith (R)
  19. Justin Humphrey (R)
  20. Jonathan Wilk (R)
  21. Cody Maynard (R)
  22. Ryan Eaves (R)
  23. Derrick Hildebrant (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. Jim Shaw (R)
  33. Molly Jenkins (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. Stacy Jo Adams (R)
  51. Brad Boles (R)
  52. Gerrid Kendrix (R)
  53. Jason Blair (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. Mike Kelley (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. Rob Hall (R)
  68. Mike Lay (R)
  69. Mark Tedford (R)
  70. Suzanne Schreiber (D)
  71. Vacant
  72. Michelle McCane (D)
  73. Ron Stewart (D)
  74. Vacant
  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. Ellen Pogemiller (D)
  89. Arturo Alonso (D)
  90. Emily Gise (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. Gabe Woolley (R)
  99. Ajay Pittman (D)
  100. Marilyn Stark (R)
  101. Robert Manger (R)


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