Taxes Lankford supports budget austerity through lowering taxes and reducing government spending. He took the taxpayer protection pledge promising to support no new taxes. Lankford supports loosening restrictions on interstate gun purchases.
Cannabis Lankford opposed a 2018 ballot measure to
legalize medical marijuana in Oklahoma, calling it "harmful to the social fabric of Oklahoma" and arguing that it would have a "dramatic effect on our families and our schools and our businesses and the future of our state". He also appeared in a video ad calling for defeat of the initiative, stating: "Our families won't be better if more parents and grandparents smoke more marijuana."
The measure passed with 57% of the vote. In 2015, Lankford introduced the Keeping out Illegal Drugs (KIDS) Act to block federal funds for Indian tribes that
allow the cultivation or distribution of marijuana on their land. Lankford stated: "It is important for our nation to help address this issue for the sake of the next generation of Native Americans. This legislation is a good step in trying to protect young tribal members and fulfill our trust responsibility to Native Americans."
Defense Lankford supports extending the
Patriot Act and expanding roving wiretaps occurring in the US. In 2018, he strongly criticized the National Science Foundation for funding projects that seek to increase reporting on climate change in weathercasts, saying it "is not science—it is propagandizing." According to
OpenSecrets, during his career, Lankford has taken over $1.5 million from the oil and gas industry, his largest industry donor.
Healthcare Lankford opposes the
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) and has voted to repeal it. In a 2017
Facebook post, he claimed "Since 2013, a majority of states are seeing premiums and costs double, including states that expanded
Medicaid". Lankford has stated his belief that federally funded health insurance is unconstitutional and that he will oppose any and all moves for a federal healthcare system. Lankford supported
Oklahoma Question 711, a statewide constitutional ban on same-sex marriage and
civil unions that passed in 2004 with 75% of the vote and remained law until it was challenged in court and struck down by a federal judge as unconstitutional in 2014. Lankford lambasted the decision, saying that "marriage is a state issue and Oklahoma has spoken." After the
Southern Poverty Law Center designated the
Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) an
anti-LGBT hate group, Lankford criticized the designation and defended the ADF, which had described same-sex marriage as a threat to a "healthy, free and stable society." In 2015, Lankford condemned the
Supreme Court ruling in
Obergefell v. Hodges, which held that same-sex marriage bans violated the constitution. In 2022, Lankford voted against the
Respect for Marriage Act, which later passed, repealing the
Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and requiring all
U.S. states and
territories to recognize the validity of
same-sex marriages. He said the bill disrespected religious liberty and had the potential to cause even more division among Americans. According to Lankford, the bill was about not equality but rather "making some people's rights more important than others'".
Xinjiang In August 2018, Lankford,
Marco Rubio, and 15 other lawmakers urged the Trump administration to impose sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act against
Chinese officials responsible for
human rights abuses in western
China's
Xinjiang region. They wrote: "The detention of as many as a million or more Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities in "political reeducation" centers or camps requires a tough, targeted, and global response."
Race relations In June 2020, Lankford criticized President Trump's decision to
walk to the St John's Episcopal Church near the White House, calling it "confrontational". In a BBC interview he said that racism passes on from one generation to the next, and he challenged families to invite a family of a different ethnicity to their home for a meal, to "allow friendship to develop where there has only been friendliness in the past". In January 2021, after Lankford questioned the validity of the 2020 presidential election, some Black
Tulsa leaders called for him to resign from both the 1921 Race Massacre Centennial Committee and the Senate. They saw the fraud allegations, which focused on primarily Black cities, as an attack on Black voters. Lankford later apologized for his role in casting doubt on Black votes. Lankford initially announced plans to object to the counting of some swing states'
electoral votes as part of an
attempt to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election, but he reversed course after the
2021 United States Capitol attack. He later apologized for casting doubt on the validity of the presidential election results in several swing states. Lankford voted to acquit in the
second impeachment trial of Donald Trump. On May 28, 2021, Lankford voted against creating the
January 6 commission.
Earmarks In 2021, Lankford opposed bringing back
earmarks to the Senate.
Religion Lankford praised the
Supreme Court decision
Groff v. DeJoy for making it "clear to every employer that Americans can have a faith and live their faith everywhere, including at work".
Veterans In 2022, Lankford was among the 11 senators who voted against the
Honoring our PACT Act of 2022, a bill that funded research and benefits for up to 3.5 million veterans exposed to toxic substances during their service. == Personal life ==