President Trump rescinded his endorsement of a right-wing pastor for a House seat in Oklahoma on Wednesday after a texting scandal shook up the Republican primary, throwing his weight behind the pastor’s opponent the day after both candidates advanced to a runoff.
Minutes later, the pastor, Jackson Lahmeyer, withdrew from the race.
“I do not want to be a distraction to my family, my church, and the great people of Oklahoma’s 1st Congressional District, who deserve a strong conservative voice representing them in Washington,” Mr. Lahmeyer wrote on social media.
The switch-up makes State Representative Mark Tedford the presumptive Republican nominee, putting him in a strong position to win the general election. Anchored in Tulsa, the district is considered solidly red, with voters there electing Mr. Trump by 21 percentage points in 2024.
Mr. Lahmeyer leads a Tulsa church with his wife. But the image he cultivated as a religious leader took a hit on Sunday when The Daily Mail published intimate texts between him and a woman who is not his wife, in which he called her “cute” and floated an invitation to his hotel room. In a Facebook post on Sunday night, he acknowledged sending the messages but contended that his communications had been “carefully cherry-picked to create an impression that is not accurate.”
“I own crossing a boundary line through text messaging,” Mr. Lahmeyer wrote. “I also ended all communication.”
Mr. Tedford is seeking to succeed Representative Kevin Hern, a Republican who is running for the Senate seat vacated by Markwayne Mullin, who is now the homeland security secretary.
Mr. Trump threw his weight behind Mr. Lahmeyer in early May, calling him a “MAGA Warrior” who had “been with me from the very beginning of our Movement.”
In a Truth Social post on Wednesday afternoon, the president wrote that he was reversing course but did not detail his reasoning.
“I greatly appreciate Jackson Lahmeyer’s hard work under difficult circumstances — He has always been with me, and I will always be with him,” Mr. Trump wrote. “But, when it comes to the current Congressional race for Oklahoma’s 1st Congressional District, I will be supporting America First Patriot, Mark Tedford. Mark is Pro Trump and MAGA all the way!”
Mr. Lahmeyer helped mobilize evangelical support for Mr. Trump before the 2024 election, after earlier amplifying his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. The pastor has deep ties to Mr. Trump’s longtime ally Roger J. Stone Jr., who backed Mr. Lahmeyer in his unsuccessful run to unseat Senator James Lankford of Oklahoma in the 2022 Republican primary. Speaker Mike Johnson, Republican of Louisiana, also endorsed Mr. Lahmeyer.
Mr. Lahmeyer repeatedly targeted Muslim Oklahomans in his campaign, writing on social media that “America is a Christian nation” and that “Islam MUST BE DEFEATED in the West.” He has also posted on social media that he believes the Antichrist “will be Jewish,” a “homosexual” and “not a globalist.” He has denied that this view is antisemitic, saying Jesus was also Jewish and emphasizing that he is “pro-Israel.”
Mr. Tedford, a businessman who lent more than $1 million to his campaign and had the backing of Oklahoma’s Republican State House speaker, finished first in the runoff on Tuesday, according to The Associated Press.
He will face John Croisant, a Tulsa school board member and businessman, in November. Mr. Croisant, who was uncontested for the Democratic nomination, has centered his campaign on health care affordability, education and stopping “corruption and chaos,” he said in a recent interview with The New York Times.












