Oklahoma lawmaker battling breast cancer ‘stunned' after Stitt vetoes bill requiring insurance to cover cancer screenings
The bill, House Bill 1389, had rare, unanimous bipartisan support in the Oklahoma House of Representatives, and near-unanimous support in the Senate.
'It was amazing,' said Rep. Melissa Provenzano (D-Tulsa).
Provenzano said her idea for the bill came about after she got a call from a single mom in her district.
She said the woman went in for a routine mammogram, but when her doctor saw something concerning and recommended a second diagnostic mammogram, her insurance wouldn't cover it.
'And it was $1,200,' Provenzano said.
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The woman told Provenzano something that stuck with her.
'I have to pay my electric after the food on the table, so I was just not going to get it,' Provenzano said the woman told her.After that, Provenzano teamed up with the Susan G. Komen Foundation to write the bill, which would require insurance companies to cover diagnostic mammograms at no cost to patients. Early detection, she said, could save countless lives.It was around the time she filed the bill that Provenzano got news of her own: She had breast cancer.'December 11th, I was diagnosed,' Provenzano said. 'And that just sort of rocks your world because it's fear of the unknown.'She has been undergoing chemotherapy, once a week, for the past 11 weeks, while the bill made its way through committees and onto the House floor, where it received unanimous approval on March 10.
'I turned around and it was just, you know, dots of pink,' Provenzano said. 'Everybody had something on. And it was moving and human. And it reminded me that we're humans first. And this is an apolitical thing at the end.'
Even Republican lawmakers voiced strong support.
'Representative Provenzano — regardless of party lines, I guarantee it, I can speak for everyone… we all care about you,' Rep. Steve Bashore (R-Miami) told Provenzano after the vote.
The bill sailed through the Senate and landed on Stitt's desk on Tuesday.
'I didn't expect a veto,' Provenzano said.
But Stitt vetoed the bill Tuesday.
'I was stunned, to say the least, you know, because one in eight women in the United States are diagnosed every year,' Provenzano said.
Stitt explained his decision in a video statement on Facebook Tuesday evening.
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'It would have imposed new and costly insurance mandates on private health plans, which would actually raise premiums on Oklahoma families and businesses,' Stitt said.
Provenzano said that reasoning is not backed by facts.
'When you have early detection, like I had access to, like all women deserve access to, you're saving dollars and saving money for the insurance companies on the back end,' Provenzano said.
For Provenzano, it's hard not to take it personally.
'It feels personal,' Provenzano said. 'But I have to separate myself from that. I just want to say, did you read the bill? Did you understand what it was we're trying to do, and why this will save lives? And I just want to be able to have that conversation.'
Provenzano said she still hasn't received a call from the governor.
As she heads into her final week of chemotherapy, Provenzano said she's confident the future will hold fewer vetoes—and more moments of unity.
'When we strip away the politics, really beautiful things happen,' Provenzano said. 'And I'll keep working on that.'
Stitt was scheduled to hold his weekly press conference on Wednesday, where News 4 planned to ask him about his decision, but it was postponed until Thursday.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Newsweek
32 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Gavin Newsom Surges in 2028 Presidential Primary Poll
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Support for California Governor Gavin Newsom as a possible Democratic presidential candidate in 2028 has surged over the past four months, a new poll shows. Newsweek tried to contact Newsom via email for comment after normal business hours. Why It Matters The poll indicates support for the more aggressive position Newsom has taken in standing up to President Donald Trump, particularly over a plan by Republicans in Texas to redraw their state's congressional seat map in the hopes of winning more seats in midterm elections next year. The battle to become the 2028 presidential election candidate will likely set the new direction for the Democratic Party as it struggles with net favorability at what one recent poll showed to be a three-year low. Newsom has not formally announced his candidacy. What To Know The new poll, conducted by Echelon Insights, has Newsom in second place among potential Democratic candidates with 13 percent support, behind former Vice President Kamala Harris with 26 percent. The survey was taken from August 14 to August 18 with a 3.6 percent margin of error among 1,057 registered voters. A poll published by Echelon Insights in April had Newsom only in sixth place with 4 percent, behind former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a New York Democrat, both on 7 percent. Harris was again in first place with 28 percent. In the new poll, Buttigieg was in third place with 11 percent and Ocasio-Cortez in fourth place with 6 percent. The California governor has been punching back at Trump over the past few weeks, particularly in the war of words over redistricting. Meanwhile, his press office has turned its social media feed into a stream of all-caps posts, pop culture parodies and AI-edited meme content, aimed squarely at mocking Trump in style while countering Republican initiatives. California Governor Gavin Newsom holds a news conference at Downey Memorial Christian Church in Downey, California, on July 16, 2025. California Governor Gavin Newsom holds a news conference at Downey Memorial Christian Church in Downey, California, on July 16, 2025. Patrick T. Fallon / AFP/Getty Images Meena Bose, the executive dean of Hofstra University's Peter S. Kalikow School of Government, Public Policy and International Affairs, told Newsweek last month that polls this far out from a primary were "informative but not necessarily instructive," largely indicating name recognition or reflecting a stated interest in running in 2028. Newsom and Buttigieg both have public visibility but a more solid idea of who is running – and who is leading – will develop after the midterms and change after debates and early contests, Bose said, adding that whether Ocasio-Cortez is a viable candidate will be seen after the midterms. There is also a big question over whether Harris will stand after her loss to Trump last year. In her first interview since she left office on January 20, she told Stephen Colbert that she would not run for California governor in 2026, but denied it was so that she could run for a "different office" — the implication being another run for the presidency. Newsom has already been on the ascent since February in early 2028 polling in the aftermath of the deadly Los Angeles County fires. Online betting website Polymarket said this week that his chances of beating Ocasio-Cortez to win the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028 are increasing. The site showed Newsom on 21 percent and leading Ocasio Cortez by 7 percentage points in a hypothetical matchup that also includes other high-profile Democrats. This is 3 percentage points more than earlier this month, when Newsom was 4 percentage points ahead of Ocasio-Cortez. Polymarket showed Harris on only 5 percent. Ocasio-Cortez has also not formally announced her candidacy for the 2028 race. What People Are Saying Strategist Mike Madrid, a political consultant and co-founder of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump political action committee, previously told Newsweek about Newsom: "People thought his career was over. Now, he's in the top three in every poll." "Democrats are looking for a fighter. It's not about ideology anymore. You can be centrist or progressive — what matters is that you stand up and hit back. The more aggressive Newsom gets, the more support he builds." Trump told reporters in June: "He's done a terrible job. I like Gavin Newsom. He's a nice guy but he's grossly incompetent, everybody knows." What Happens Next Typically, most candidates do not begin announcing presidential runs until after the midterm elections.

32 minutes ago
Democrats get police escorts to prevent a new redistricting walkout as California moves to retaliate
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NBC News
2 hours ago
- NBC News
Bolivia heads to a presidential runoff as 2 decades of left-wing dominance ends
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