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See live updates of Wyoming election results from the 2024 election, including Senate and House races, state elections and ballot initiatives.
Summary of the 2024 Wyoming House of Representatives election results [5] Party Candidates Votes % Seats Before 67th Leg. Won 68th Leg. +/– Republican: 60 197,212: 83.39: 57: 56: 1 Democratic: 16 28,497 12.05 5 6 1 Independents: 1 865 0.37 0 0 Write-in: 9,929 4.20 — Valid ballots 236,503 87.23 — Blank or invalid ballots 34,620 12.77 ...
Mayoral and city council elections were held throughout Wyoming's towns and cities on November 5, 2024. As of 2022, there are 99 municipalities throughout the state, of which 19 are cities. [ 1 ] Under Wyoming law, each town and city has one mayor and four councilors, all elected.
Hundreds of third-party and independent candidates have run for state legislative seats in the state of Wyoming. Only candidates who achieved more than 5% of the vote since 1996 are included. Only candidates who achieved more than 5% of the vote since 1996 are included.
The primary was the first major election held in Wyoming since the elimination of crossover voting in 2023. The state saw its lowest turnout since 2016, with just 122,693 total ballots cast ...
Trump's performance in the state garnering 71.60% of the vote is the highest a presidential candidate has ever received in Wyoming, surpassing Ronald Reagan's 70.51% of the vote in the 1984 presidential election. Wyoming was nationally the most Republican-voting state in 2024, with Trump winning there by a margin of over 45%.
The 2024 Wyoming House of Representatives election was held on November 5, 2024, to elect members of the Wyoming Legislature for its 68th session. [1] Partisan primaries were held on August 20. [ 2 ] Part of the 2024 United States elections , the election was held alongside races for state senate , U.S. House , U.S. Senate , and the ...
The district encompasses Hot Springs and Washakie counties as well as parts of Big Horn, Fremont and Park counties. [2] It is represented by Republican Senator Ed Cooper of Ten Sleep. [2] [3] In 1992, the state of Wyoming switched from electing state legislators by county to a district-based system. [4]