dissenting.
The court holds today that Senator Mike Fair is ineligible as a candidate for the office of labor commissioner. I cannot accede to its order. The dispositive issue in this original proceeding is whether this court’s Art. 5, § 231 jurisprudence creates a classification that will not pass muster under the Equal Protection Clause [EPC] of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. While Art. 5, § 23 is not facially infirm, the court’s construction of its provisions in Gragg v. Dudley2 [as well as in the progeny of that case] creates a fatally underinclusive class3 of legislators intended to be disabled by that section for appointment or election to certain public offices.
I
GRAGG CRAFTS AN IMPERMISSIBLY UNDERINCLUSIVE CLASS OF LAWMAKERS WHOSE MEMBERSHIP IS DENIED EQUAL PROTECTION OF THE LAWS
Mike Fair4 [Fair, petitioner or candidate] declared himself on July 8, 1994 to be a Republican candidate for the office of commissioner of labor. During its 44th session— when Fair was one of its members' — the Legislature enacted a pay raise for the labor commissioner’s office. The State Election *1226Board [Board] ruled on July 20, 1994 that Art. 5, § 23 bars him from seeking that office. Fair argues in this case that the Board’s order accords him treatment that is invidiously disparate from that which is due other similarly situated legislators of the same session.
The primary objective of the § 23 clause here in contest is the exclusion from appointive as well as elective offices of those lawmakers who were in session when an office was created or its emoluments increased.5 The aim of the restriction in question was to eliminate improper bias from a legislator’s pattern of voting and to secure to the electorate a representation that is free from the quest of personal gain.6 As adopted, § 23 applied equally to all members of the Legislature. It precluded all of them as a single class from both seeking and taking office, either through appointment or election,'7 during the term “for which he [or she] was elected.” When so applied, § 23 could not be said to “unfairly or unnecessarily burden the availability of political opportunity”8 nor to lack attributes which “bear some rational relationship to a legitimate state end.”9
By removing the § 23 disability from all House members and from all senators whose terms coincide "with statewide executive branch offices, Gragg has confined the constitutional disqualification in question to 24 mid-term senators — a small sub-class of the 149-member legislative assembly.10 When courts apply to similarly situated lawmakers different rules of accessibility to public offices, both the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and the fundamental law11 of this State are offended.12 Had Gragg extended the § 23 disability to all legislators and thus prevented them from seeking the prohibited offices within the term for which they were elected,13 the class would have remained untainted by a constitutionally flawed incidence of disability.
II
THE LEGAL AUTHORITY FOR TODAY’S PRONOUNCEMENT DOES NOT ADDRESS THE ISSUES PRESENTED BY FAIR’S QUEST FOR MANDAMUS
The court today relies upon two eases14 to overcome Fair’s contention that he was denied equal protection by the Board’s imposition of the § 23 disability upon his candidacy. In both cases the supreme courts of Washington and Texas drew analogy between local constitutional provisions and the text of Arti*1227Cle I, Section 6, U.S. Const. — the Ineligibility Clause.15 The Founding Fathers of this Nation limited the impact of the Article I, Section 6 disability16 to appointments. In neither of these cases did the petitioners argue that the state constitutional provision like the one in question here resulted in an imper-missibly underinclusive classification that denied them equal protection of the law. I hence view the authority invoked by the court as inapposite to the question tendered by Fair.
Ill
SUMMARY
The petitioner requests that his name be placed on the ballot for the office of labor commissioner. He is one of a class of 149 legislators during whose office term the salary for the labor commissioner’s office was increased. Under today’s rationale 125 members of this single class can seek the office to which Senator Fair aspires without offending the § 23 mandate; Senator Fair and 23 other similarly situated mid-term senators may not. Gragg’s teaching, which the court follows today, created a sub-class singled out for treatment that is invidiously disparate from that accorded other like-situated lawmakers.
Because I can countenance neither Gragg nor its legacy of disparity in the treatment of like-affected lawmakers, I would today (a) declare that to impose upon Senator Fair the § 23 ineligibility status and disqualify him as a candidate for the office of labor commissioner would offend against the Equal Protection Clause and against Oklahoma’s own anti-discrimination component in the Due Process Clause of Art. 2, § 7, Okl. Const., and (b) overrule Gragg prospectively to depart from its teaching of a constitutionally flawed classification by holding that the provisions of § 23 here in contest prohibit all lawmakers from seeking or taking, by appointment or election,17 any public office18 created during their term of office19 or one whose emoluments were increased during this period.
. Article 5, § 23, Okl. Const., states in pertinent part:
“No member of the Legislature shall, during the term for which he was elected, be appointed or elected to any office or commission in the State, which shall have been created, or the emoluments of which shall have been increased, during his term of office....”
. Gragg v. Dudley, 143 Okl. 281, 289 P. 254, 256-57 (1930).
. For a discussion of impermissibly underinclusive classifications see Orr v. Orr, 440 U.S. 268, 272, 99 S.Ct. 1102, 1108, 59 L.Ed.2d 306 (1979); Stanton v. Stanton, 421 U.S. 7, 13-14, 95 S.Ct. 1373, 1377, 43 L.Ed.2d 688 (1975).
.Mike Fair is a senator from district number 47 whose term of office began January 12, 1993. In common parlance he is now a “mid-term” senator, i.e., one of 24 Oklahoma senators whose terms of office are bisected by the general election. The other 24 senators' terms coincide with those held by the executive state officeholders.
. Baskin v. State, 107 Okl. 272, 232 P. 388, 390 (1925).
. See R.L. Williams, The Constitution and Enabling Act of The State of Oklahoma Annotated, 40-41 (1912). See also the commentary of Story, J., on Article I, Section 6, U.S. Const., in State ex rel. Ryan v. Boyd, 21 Wis. 208, 210, 212 (Wisc. 1848).
. Election includes registration, nomination, balloting and the manner in which votes are counted and made known. See Daxon v. State Election Board, Okl., 582 P.2d 1315, 1317 (1978).
. Clements v. Fashing, 457 U.S. 957, 964, 102 S.Ct. 2836, 2844, 73 L.Ed.2d 508 (1982).
. Id., 457 U.S. at 963, 102 S.Ct. at 2843.
. By restricting the incidence of the constitutional ineligibility clause to one-half of the Senate membership, Gragg succeeds in making § 23 ineffective as a barrier against all lawmakers' conduct for personal gain.
. See Art. 2, § 7, Okl. Const. Its pertinent terms are:
“No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”
. Like its federal counterpart, the State Due Process Clause embodies an anti-discrimination component that protects against unequal treatment. Thayer v. Phillips Petroleum Co., Okl., 613 P.2d 1041, 1045 (1980) [Opala, J., dissenting],
. "[D]uring the term for which he was elected”, as used in § 23, has been determined to extend the § 23 disability to the last day of the constitutionally mandated term of the lawmaker. Baskin, supra note 5 at 389. In Baskin this court would not allow a legislator to escape the § 23 disqualification by resigning before he was appointed to a judicial office. Id. at 390.
. State ex rel. Anderson v. Chapman, 86 Wash.2d 189, 543 P.2d 229 (1975), and Hall v. Baum, 452 S.W.2d 699 (Tex. 1970).
. See Anderson, supra note 14, 543 P.2d at 233, and Hall, supra at 703-704.
. The pertinent terms of Art. I, Sec. 6, U.S. Const., state:
“No Senator or Representative shall, during the Time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil Office under the Authority of the United States, which shall have been created, or the Emoluments whereof shall have been [increased during such time; ...." [Emphasis added.]
For a discussion of the Ineligibility Clause's history see Vreeland v. Byrne, 72 N.J. 292, 370 A.2d 825, 832-33 (1977).
. See supra note 7.
. I would reach this result by broadly interpreting the § 23 language that proscribes a lawmaker's in-term election to a prohibited office to include any in-term act by a legislator-candidate in the process of standing for a constitutionally interdicted election. For a definition of election see supra note 7. When a statute [or a state constitutional text] is susceptible of more than one meaning, it must be given that which makes it free from [federal] constitutional doubt rather than one which would make it fraught with fundamental-law infirmities. Simpson v. Dixon, Okl., 853 P.2d 176, 182 (1993); Rides Exploration Co. v. Oklahoma Water Resources Board, Okl., 695 P.2d 498, 504 (1985); Earl v. Tulsa County District Court, Okl., 606 P.2d 545, 547 — 48 (1980).
.The scope of a disability similar to the § 23 disqualification was addressed in Vreeland, supra note 16 at 831. The New Jersey Supreme Court held:
"[T]he phrase, 'the term for which he [legislator] shall have been elected’ is significant in two respects and in no other. It fixes and limits the time span within which legislative action must be taken if it is to be inhibiting, and similarly fixes and limits the time span during which the resulting ineligibility shall persist." [Emphasis mine.]