Greg Treat

Treat also authored several landmark government accountability] measures that give the governor the ability to hire and fire the director of five of the largest state agencies.

[6] Treat authored Senate Bill 1848 in 2014, which required abortion providers to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles (48 km) of their practice.

[7][8] In June 2023, Treat criticized senators who did not show up for a tribal compact vote to override Governor Kevin Stitt's previous veto.

Kevin Stitt, who called the special session on taxation, had not handed senators a specific legislation-ready plan," even though the governor "has no direct role in the legislative budget process.

Chris Boring, president of the District Attorneys Council, applauded the veto but advocates for the measure believed it "is critical to address systemic failures in criminal justice for women in Oklahoma.

[20] In a press release, they accused prosecutors of “continuously and mercilessly prosecuting survivors of domestic violence, and seeking harsh, maximum punishments, while simultaneously letting their abusers plead out and face minimal consequences.”[21] A previous attempt at similar legislation was Toni Hasenbeck's and Julie Daniel's HB 1639 in 2023.

News Channel 8 Tulsa also said that the Oklahoma District Attorneys Association has "refused or ignored repeated requests for comment on the legislation for more than a year.

"[27] Treat accepted money from a private pro-cockfighting lobbyist group with misleading name, the so-called "Oklahoma Gamefowl Commission" political action committee.

Treat has also accused House Speaker Charles McCall of "refusing to negotiate and said the Senate’s income cap was a “more responsible” school choice plan.