Trump backs Kevin Hern to fill Mullin's Oklahoma Senate seat
President Trump threw his weight behind Rep. Kevin Hern on Friday, endorsing the Oklahoma Republican for the Senate seat that will open when Sen. Markwayne Mullin moves to lead the Department of Homeland Security. The endorsement, posted to Truth Social, landed just two days after Hern became the first candidate to formally enter the race.
Trump left no ambiguity about his preference.
"Kevin Hern will be an outstanding Senator, and has my Complete and Total Endorsement – HE WILL NEVER LET YOU DOWN!"
The endorsement carries real weight in a deep-red state where a Trump nod can end a primary before it starts. And the speed of it signals something worth noting: this wasn't a wait-and-see play. Trump picked his horse early and decisively.
The Domino Effect
The vacancy traces back to Trump's decision to fire Kristi Noem from DHS and tap Mullin as her replacement. That move reshuffles not just one seat but potentially several, as Oklahoma navigates filling Mullin's Senate seat and Hern's House seat simultaneously.
Under Oklahoma law, Gov. Kevin Stitt can appoint a Republican to temporarily hold the Senate seat until after the November election. But that appointee is barred from running for the office in the next special or general election, a provision that keeps the temporary pick from leveraging incumbency into a permanent advantage, as The Hill reports.
The primary election is scheduled for June 16, with candidate filing for federal offices open April 1 through 3, according to the State Election Board. Hern got out of the gate first, and with Trump's endorsement already in hand, every other potential contender now faces a steep climb.
Bice Steps Aside
One of those potential contenders, Rep. Stephanie Bice, had floated the possibility of entering the race. On Friday, she announced she would stay in the House instead. Bice framed it as a decision rooted in purpose, not retreat.
"President Trump needs strong allies in the House and it is my honor to champion policies that better the lives of everyday Oklahomans."
Bice said she would file for re-election in the coming weeks. Trump promptly endorsed her for her current seat in Oklahoma's 5th Congressional District, thanking her "for deciding, because of her love for her Constituents, and for America itself, to run for Re-Election to Congress."
The whole sequence unfolded cleanly. Hern announces on Wednesday. Trump endorses Friday. Bice steps aside the same day and secures her own endorsement. Republicans hold a slim majority in the House, and losing Bice to a Senate campaign would have created an unnecessary vulnerability. That risk is now off the table.
Why Hern Fits the Mold
Trump praised Hern as the chair of the House Republican Policy Committee, crediting him with advancing the America First agenda from the House side. Hern, for his part, leaned into the alliance in a post on X, thanking the president for his support.
"I've fought to advance the President's America First Agenda in the House, and I'm eager to continue to be an ally for him in the Senate."
In his launch video, Hern put it in even simpler terms: he wants to ensure Trump "has a loyal ally" in the Senate. That language matters. The Senate has been the graveyard of more than a few Trump-backed priorities, where even Republican senators with friendly talking points have slow-walked confirmation votes or watered down legislation. Adding a reliable vote isn't just about Oklahoma politics. It's about governing math.
Trump seemed to underscore that exact calculus in his endorsement, noting that Hern "is strongly supported by the fiercest MAGA Warriors in Oklahoma, and the most Highly Respected Leaders in the United States Senate."
What Comes Next
The filing window opens in just a few weeks. Other candidates could still emerge, but the combination of Hern's early announcement and an immediate Trump endorsement creates a formidable barrier. Oklahoma is not a state where Republican voters casually disregard a presidential endorsement in a primary.
Stitt's interim appointment remains the wild card. Whoever fills the seat temporarily will serve without the option of running for it, making the appointment a caretaker role rather than a launching pad. The real contest is the June 16 primary, and right now, that contest has a clear frontrunner.
Trump moved fast. Hern moved faster. And the rest of the field just got a lot smaller.




