Oregon

Oregon banned medical debt from credit reports, gave striking workers unemployment, and faces federal funding cuts. What you can do.

Latest: June 23, 2026 Latest BriefOregon's $14M Rent-Fixing WinJune 23, 2026

Democrats control the governor’s office, both chambers of the Legislature, the attorney general’s office, and the secretary of state’s office. Governor Tina Kotek won her May 19 primary and faces Republican Christine Drazan in a November rematch of the 2022 race.

Oregon has governing power. The question is whether it is using that power fast enough on homelessness, housing, and the aftermath of its drug decriminalization experiment.


Homelessness keeps getting worse despite emergency powers

Kotek declared a homelessness emergency on her first day in office in January 2023. She has extended it twice since then, most recently in January 2026.

12,034 people were homeless in the Portland metro area in January 2025, a 61% increase from two years earlier

The state committed $20 million for permanent supportive housing with intensive services for people with addiction or mental illness. In May 2026, Kotek announced $94 million to help older Oregonians find affordable housing.

Thousands of people have moved from streets to shelter and from shelter into homes. But the numbers are still climbing. Kotek’s own words frame the tension.

”We have helped thousands of people move from the streets into shelter, from shelter into homes, and prevented thousands more from experiencing homelessness in the first place. But we must maintain the momentum and strengthen our focus on the intersection of homelessness, mental health, and addiction.”

Governor Tina Kotek, January 2026

The 61% increase is the single most cited number against Kotek as she runs for reelection. Drazan will center her campaign on Portland livability and public safety, the same themes she ran on in 2022.


A $376 million bet on building more homes

The 2026 Legislature passed a $376 million housing package, the largest in state history. Kotek signed most of the bills in late March and April 2026.

HB 4128 Gives families and small buyers a 90-day head start before private equity firms can purchase single-family homes
HB 4082 Speeds up affordable housing for seniors and manufactured home communities with limited urban growth boundary expansions
SB 1567 Creates a $20 million loan fund for developers willing to build housing affordable at different income levels
Executive Order 17 Directs state agencies to make housing more available and creates a Housing Governing Council

The private equity protection in HB 4128 is one of the strongest in the country. Wall Street investors have bought thousands of single-family homes in Oregon and converted them to rentals, driving up prices for first-time buyers.

The question is whether $376 million and zoning changes can outrun a housing shortage that took decades to build.

If production catches up

  • Families and small buyers compete on fairer terms against corporate investors.
  • Seniors stay in their communities instead of being priced into displacement.
  • Other states copy the 90-day purchase window.

If building stalls

  • Homelessness numbers keep rising even with emergency spending.
  • Private equity firms find workarounds to the 90-day window.
  • The housing package becomes a campaign talking point instead of a turning point.

Oregon reversed its drug experiment

In 2020, Oregon voters made history by passing Measure 110, which decriminalized possession of small amounts of illicit drugs. It was the first law of its kind in the country.

Four years later, it was over. Governor Kotek signed House Bill 4002 in 2024, making possession a crime again.

Before HB 4002After HB 4002
Small-amount possession was a civil violation with a $100 finePossession is a misdemeanor again
Revenue went to addiction treatment servicesTreatment infrastructure still building out
Oregon was a national model for decriminalizationOregon is now cited as proof that decriminalization failed

Kotek initially insisted during her 2022 campaign that Measure 110 deserved more time. She later said intervention was necessary. The reversal split advocates. Supporters say it was the only response to the fentanyl crisis. Opponents say it criminalized addiction without building enough treatment beds first.

The treatment infrastructure Measure 110 was supposed to fund is still being built. That is the gap that matters now. Recriminalizing possession without adequate treatment means more people cycle through the courts instead of getting help.


Voters approved a gun law in 2022 and it still has not taken effect

Oregon voters passed Measure 114 in November 2022. It requires a permit to buy a gun and bans magazines holding 10 or more rounds. Nearly four years later, it has never been enforced.

Who This Affects

Oregon voters, Statewide, November 2022

Passed Measure 114 with a majority vote. A federal judge ruled it constitutional. A state circuit judge blocked it. The Court of Appeals sided with voters. The Oregon Supreme Court will make the final call. Meanwhile, the law voters chose sits unused.

Based on documented cases and public data.

The Legislature tried to help. The House passed HB 4145 by a vote of 33-19 to implement Measure 114. But Senate Republicans threatened a walkout, and Democrats gutted the bill in the final days of session. The implementation timeline was pushed to 2028. The bill went from 28 pages to two.

Passed by voters November 2022
Federal ruling Constitutional
State circuit court Blocked it
Court of Appeals Sided with voters
Implementation Pushed to 2028 after walkout threat

This is a case study in how a minority party can override a majority vote by threatening to shut down government. Oregon Democrats had the votes. They chose to compromise rather than risk a walkout that would stall the entire session.


The governor’s race is a rematch

Kotek beat Drazan by a few percentage points in 2022, in a three-way race that included independent Betsy Johnson. This time it is head-to-head.

RaceCandidatesDate
GovernorTina Kotek (D) vs. Christine Drazan (R)November 3, 2026
Gas tax referendumRepeal of Democratic-passed gas tax increaseNovember 3, 2026

Drazan will run on homelessness, Portland safety, and the perception that Democratic leadership has not delivered. Kotek will run on the $376 million housing package, the homelessness emergency response, and legislative results.

The gas tax repeal referendum adds another ballot fight. Democrats passed gas tax increases and fee hikes. A repeal effort made the ballot. The referendum could drive turnout from voters who feel the cost of living directly.

The lever Oregon’s governor controls homelessness emergency powers, housing agency direction, and the veto pen on the Legislature’s work

Voters who care about housing, drug policy, gun safety, or public lands should know what the governor can do and what the Legislature needs to send them.


Protect yourself right now

  1. Check your voter registration. Oregon uses automatic voter registration and vote-by-mail. Verify your address and ballot delivery at oregonvotes.gov.

  2. Track your ballot. Oregon lets you track your ballot online. Do not assume it arrived. Confirm it was received and counted.

  3. Know the gas tax referendum. Read the actual ballot measure language before November. Campaign ads on both sides will simplify it.

  4. Ask candidates about Measure 114. The gun law voters approved in 2022 still has not taken effect. Ask governor and legislative candidates whether they will implement it or let it sit until 2028.

  5. Call the governor’s office. 503-378-4582. Ask about treatment infrastructure. Recriminalizing drug possession without adequate treatment capacity means more court cycling, not more recovery.

Call Your Senators
Ron Wyden Democrat
202-224-5244 Senate profile →
Jeff Merkley Democrat
202-224-3753 Senate profile →
Governor Tina Kotek (D) 503-378-4582
Events

Show Up Locally

Sherwood 1st and Pine Rally

Indivisible

Southwest 1st Street & Southwest Pine Street, Sherwood, OR, 97140

Bring your favorite sign of Outrage and enjoy visiting with other members of the resistance or pedestrians in Old Town Sherwood.

Mobilize

Reclaim Independence DAY! BYO Picnic & Protest

Rally · Salem Region Indivisible

Center Street Northeast & Summer Street Northeast, Salem, OR, 97301

RECLAIM INDEPENDENCE DAY! Protest at 10:00am - 4pm Picnic Noon - 4pm Bring the family, bring your signs, bring a side for yourself and your family, lawn chairs, blankets and bring the fun to the 4th.

Mobilize

Booth Volunteer for Independence Day Parade

Community Event · Indivisible Polk County Oregon

301 S Main St, Independence, OR, 97351

Indivisible Polk Booth at 2026 Independence Day Grand Parade Sat Jul 4th 10:00-4:00 Intersection of Main and Monmouth Streets, Independence Come help at the Indivisible Polk Booth at the 2026.

Mobilize

Protest with Woodburn Indivisible & the Geezers for Good Every Saturday

Rally · Woodburn-Hubbard-Aurora Indivisible

2900 Tom Tennant Dr, Woodburn, OR, 97071

Extraordinary times require ordinary people. Join Woodburn Indivisible & the Geezers for Good weekly rallies at the Woodburn Transit Center on Hwy 214, just east of I-5, directly across the highway.

Mobilize

Dallas Rally

Indivisible Polk County Oregon

East Ellendale Avenue & Main Street, Dallas, OR, 97338

Indivisible Polk officially advertises and participates in the Dallas Rally on the 1st and 3rd Saturdays of each month. Individuals are encouraged to rally as often as they like. Join in this.

Mobilize

Fourth of July Patriotic Procession: The Signs of Fascism

Community Event · Indivisible Benton County

645 NW Monroe Ave, Corvallis, OR, 97330

On the 4th of July from 11:30-12:30, IndivisibleBC’s Visibility Brigade is planning an action in downtown Corvallis during the Red, White and Blues Festival. We will march single file, dressed in.

Mobilize

Our Corners, Our Country

Visibility Event · Indivisible

Northeast Multnomah Street & Northeast 16th Avenue, Portland, OR, 97232

Saturday, July 4 presents us with a unique opportunity to celebrate the 250th anniversary of our country’s Declaration of Independence from a cruel king who was unsuited to rule. Sadly, we have to do.

Mobilize

Our Corners: Good Trouble and Serious Fun

Visibility Event · Indivisible

Northeast 16th Avenue & Northeast Multnomah Street, Portland, OR, 97232

Our Corners had our 60th consecutive weekly gathering on May 23: we emphasize inclusivity for all, with extra effort made to enhance the opportunity for seniors and people with limited mobility to.

Mobilize
Briefs

What Changed Recently

Housing June 23, 2026

Oregon Won $14M in Rent-Fixing Settlements. 3 Landlords Still Face Trial.

Oregon and 8 other states secured a $7 million settlement with property manager LivCor for using RealPage software to artificially inflate rents.

Education June 17, 2026

Oregon to Repeal Attendance Laws. 1 in 3 Students Already Chronically Absent.

Oregon officials recommend repealing 11 compulsory school attendance statutes as roughly one-third of the state's students were chronically absent in 2024,

Economy June 16, 2026

Oregon's Jet Fuel Tax Hasn't Changed Since 1955. Airports May Close.

Oregon's Department of Aviation faces a $3 million budget shortfall in the 2027-29 cycle because its jet fuel tax rate has not increased since 1955,

Housing June 15, 2026

7.1 Million Homes Short. Wyden's DASH Act Would Build More.

Sen. Ron Wyden and Rep. Val Hoyle introduced the DASH Act on June 11, 2026, targeting a 7.1 million-unit affordable housing shortage with new tax credits and construction subsidies.

Immigration June 8, 2026

Oregon's New Immigration Shield Laws Protect Workers, Tenants, and Hospital Patients from Federal Enforcement

Four new Oregon laws took effect June 5, blocking state agencies from sharing data with ICE, protecting hospital patients from enforcement, banning employer retaliation for work authorization issues, and penalizing landlords who report tenants' immigration status.

Red States January 20, 2026

Oregon and Washington Passed Rent Caps, Paid Leave Expansions, and Gun Safety Laws While Congress Cut Benefits

Oregon and Washington passed rent stabilization, expanded paid leave, and banned bump stocks in 2025. Here's what blue states got right.

Voter Tools

Voter Registration and Resources

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