The 2024 general election is on Nov. 5. Ballots must be received by county clerks by 7 p.m. to be counted.
Follow results from The Associated Press here.
For a visual map of the presidential race and the national balance of power, check here.
Check this page on election day for updates from around Wyoming. We'll hear from voters and candidates throughout the day, and bring you context about results as they become available.
Update 3 p.m.: Some updates
The Wyoming Freedom Caucus gained at least four seats. The Caucus will most likely have a majority in the state House this coming session but WPM is investigating before coming out with exact numbers.
A majority of Wyomingites voted in favor of the constitutional amendment. This would make residential property its own tax class. Within that, it could create a subclass specifically for owner-occupied primary residences and tax them differently.
Supporters of the amendment change say this could be big for lowering property taxes. Those against the change don’t think it goes far enough, since it doesn’t give any tax relief yet.
Final update 12:30 a.m.: Where we stand as we call it a night
Wyomingites are sending Republicans Sen. John Barrasso and Congresswoman Harriet Hageman back for their fourth and second terms, respectively. They also backed former Pres. Donald Trump for a third election in a row.
Meanwhile, the Wyoming Freedom Caucus gained four seats, getting them just shy of splitting the House. But in an upset, Democrat Ivan Posey won HD 33, defeating Republican incumbent Sarah Penn. She was endorsed by the Freedom Caucus.
Finally, it looks likely that a majority of Wyomingites voted in favor of the constitutional amendment. This would make residential property its own tax class. Within that, it could create a subclass specifically for owner-occupied primary residences and tax them differently. Those against the change don’t think it goes far enough, since it doesn’t give any tax relief yet.
Thanks for following along tonight! We’ll be back with more updates tomorrow and the next days.
Update 12:15 a.m.: ‘Constitutional Amendment A’ likely to pass – opening the door for potential property tax relief
Written By: Caitlin Tan
You might remember seeing ‘Constitutional Amendment A’ on your ballot – it was towards the end.
It seems very likely that the majority of Wyomingites voted ‘yes.’ If so, that means residential property will now be in its own tax class. Before, it was lumped in with commercial and agriculture.
This change lets lawmakers potentially break it down even further, separating owner-occupied primary homes from second homes. This is something they could do as soon as the 2025 legislative session.
Supporters of the amendment change say this could be big for lowering property taxes. This is especially top of mind in areas like Jackson and Pinedale where home values are surging, and that’s reflected in tax rates.
Notably, ‘yes’ votes were overwhelming in Teton County.
But those against the change don’t think it goes far enough since it doesn’t give tax relief yet.
This amendment started out as a Senate resolution in the 2023 legislative session. At the time, some legislators said they were worried this change to the constitution wouldn’t really provide property tax relief, just create a new class that could be taxed more or less depending on who’s in charge in Cheyenne. But the bill eventually passed, and needed the approval from Wyoming voters on election day to become law.
If the Legislature decides to lower property taxes under this new subclass, it could provide homeowners with some relief. But the amendment doesn’t answer questions that could prove to be important down the road. For instance, if you run a business out of your home, it seems unclear how your property would be taxed, then.
Update 11:41 p.m.: AP calls HD 33 for Democrat Ivan Posey
Written By: Jeff Victor
With 81 percent of the votes counted, the Associated Press named Democrat Ivan Posey winner of the race for Wyoming House District 33.
He defeated Republican incumbent Sarah Penn, who was endorsed by the state’s right-wing Freedom Caucus. She’s backed bills seeking to boost parental rights and limit public health mandates, many of which failed last session.
Posey is an Army veteran born and raised on the Wind River Reservation who has served as chairman of the Eastern Shoshone Business Council.
Posey’s victory means the Wyoming Legislature will continue to have Native American representation following Affie Ellis’s retirement this year.
Update 11:25 p.m.: AP calls HD 29 for incumbent Republican Ken Pendergraft
Written By: Jeff Victor
The Associated Press called the race for Wyoming House District 29 for Republican incumbent Ken Pendergraft.
He ran against Democrat Martha Wright.
Pendergraft is endorsed by the state’s right-wing Freedom Caucus. In his first term, he supported the faction’s efforts to pass anti-LGBTQ legislation.
His reelection puts the Freedom Caucus one seat closer to securing its first ever majority in the state House.
Update 11 p.m.: AP calls a handful of races for Republicans
Written By: Nicky Ouellet
A heads up that we’re experiencing some technical difficulties with our results reporting page and are working to sort it out.
The Associated Press has called the following races:
Republican Rob Geringer beat House District 42 over Democrat Bob Ray. The seat represents West Cheyenne and Laramie County. Geringer beat incumbent Ben Hornok in the primary. Geringer is the son of former Wyoming Gov. Jim Geringer. He plans to support education, reduce regulation on affordable housing, protect Wyoming from federal policies and explore new uses for coal. He has said he doesn’t align with either Republican caucus in the state.
Republican John Eklund beat Independent Timothy Forbis for House District 10. Eklund has held the seat in eastern Cheyenne since 2011 and aligns with the Wyoming Caucus. He cosponsored bills for firearm purchase protections and prohibiting foreign property ownership in the state.
Senate District 10 in Albany County has been called for Republican Gary Crum over Democrat Mike Selmer. Crum is a founder of Laramie-based Western States Bank, now First National Bank. He wants to address property taxes, protect individual and property rights, and create more efficient rural healthcare. He carried the endorsement of his predecessor, Dan Furphy.
UPDATE 9:55 p.m.: AP calls HD 47 for incumbent Republican Bob Davis
Bob Davis is projected to win House District 47, representing an area east of Rock Springs.
Davis has held the seat since 2023 and is a member of the Freedom Caucus, according to Cowboy State Daily reporting. He beats Democratic challenger James Wilson.
Davis is a member of the Wyoming Sage-Grouse Implementation Team and the Legislature’s Regulatory Reduction Task Force.
He’s sponsored bills banning gender-affirming care for minors and creating education savings accounts.
With his win, the more conservative Freedom Caucus is just a few seats from gaining a majority in the state House.
Update 9:50 p.m.: AP calls HD 28 for incumbent Republican John Winter
Written By: Jeff Victor
With 68 percent of the votes counted, the Associated Press called the race in Wyoming House District 28 for the Republican incumbent John Winter.
He ran against Democrat Larry Alwin.
Winter was first elected in 2018 and is a member of the state’s right-wing Freedom Caucus. In his first three terms, he backed efforts to repeal gun free zones and outlaw gender-affirming care.
Update 9:30 p.m.: AP calls SD 12 for incumbent Republican John Kolb
Written By: Nicky Ouellet
John Kolb is projected to hold onto Senate District 12 representing Rock Springs.
The president of Alpha Petroleum Service Inc. and electrician says he’s not a member of either GOP caucus. He’s held the seat since 2021.
Kolb co-sponsored bills to protect parental rights, allow charter schools to apply for federal and state grants, and prohibit doctors from performing procedures related to gender transitioning. He’s fiscally conservative and is interested in issues such as public lands, public education, and Medicaid expansion, as well as a supporter of energy development.
Kolb was challenged by Democrat Kenilynn Zanetti.
Update 9:15 p.m.: Hageman holds onto U.S. House seat for second term
Written By: Melodie Edwards
The AP called the race for Wyoming’s single U.S. House seat for attorney Harriet Hageman. She wins a second term in office after defeating Liz Cheney her first go around. On Tuesday, she beat challengers Democrat Kyle Cameron, Libertarian Richard Brubaker and Constitution Party’s Jeffrey Haggit.
During her campaign, Hageman visited every county more than once, talking to Wyomingites about their concerns. What she heard didn’t surprise her.
“Because I live here too,” Hageman told WPR. “I know exactly what's happening in this country and the war on energy that the current administration has been waging against, especially the state of Wyoming, probably more than any other state in the nation. We're the largest energy producer in the nation. We're the largest coal producer. We're the eighth largest oil and gas producer.”
When asked whether she’ll accept the result of the presidential election, she said, “I don't mean to be rude, but that is just such a silly question because you're asking me to make a decision about something that I don't know what the outcome is. If it is demonstrated, either way, that there have been problems with mishandling a ballot, or there has been an effort to prevent people from being able to vote, then after the election, we have to look at those things. Why would I give you an answer about something that I don't know that it happened or if it's going to happen?”
Hageman said she’ll also prioritize immigration and getting the cost of goods under control.
In terms of what committees she hopes to sit on in her next term, she said she wants to stay right where she’s at: on Judiciary, Natural Resources and chairing the subcommittee on Indian and Insular Affairs.
Hageman is a member of the House Freedom Caucus.
Update 9:03 p.m.: AP calls HD 60 for incumbent Republican Marlene Brady
Voters in Wyoming House District 60 have elected Marlene Brady, a Freedom Caucus-endorsed Republican, according to the Associated Press.
During the primary election, Brady unseated the district’s previous representative, Tony Niemiec.
She defeated Democrat Carmen Whitehead in the general.
Brady’s win puts the Freedom Caucus one step closer to a majority in the state House.
Update 8:06 p.m.: AP calls HD 4 for incumbent Republican Jeremy Haroldson
With 61 percent of votes counted, The Associated Press has called House District 4 for Jeremy Haroldson. He ran against Democrat Charles Randolph, a retired railroad worker.
Haroldson has held the seat representing Wheatland, Chugwater and Glendo since 2021. He’s endorsed by the Wyoming Freedom Caucus and was formerly vice chair.
In the last session, Haroldson sponsored a bill that would’ve removed all state-run gun-free zones, but it ended up getting vetoed. He was also focused on finding funds to fix an ailing water tank in Wheatland. He’s also
Haroldson told WPR he would be looking at the speaker pro tempore seat if he wins.
His win pushes the Freedom Caucus one seat closer to a majority in the state House.
Update 7:15 p.m.: AP calls Trump, Barrasso as winners in Wyoming
Written By: Caitlin Tan
Polls closed just a few minutes ago and The Associated Press has called the presidential race in Wyoming for former Pres. Donald Trump. The U.S. Senate race has also been called for incumbent Republican John Barrasso.
But with no precincts reporting results, how does the AP do it?
It’s a heavy lift – trying to call an election mere hours after the polls close. And the Associated Press (AP) is considered the gold standard in the game.
The AP has tallied local, state and national election results since 1848. Many major news outlets, including Wyoming Public Radio, rely on the AP. That’s because the U.S. doesn’t have an official nationwide group that does this.
So how does the AP do it? They put in the time and the hard work of analyzing vote counts. But after 176 years, they’ve got it nailed down to a science.
The AP’s vote count relies on state and local election offices around the nation. As ballots come in tonight, the AP looks at three things on a county-wide level: Who’s in the lead? What areas are the votes coming in from? And how many uncounted ballots are there still?
By looking at those three things, the AP can start to weigh the likelihood of a certain candidate winning.
But getting that information can be tricky in some areas. For example, in some Wyoming counties, election officials don’t share ballot counts in progress. Rather, they only share the final count. In these cases, the AP relies on their system called AP VoteCast, which can shed light on voters’ opinions on candidates and issues they care most about.
It is not an exit poll, as it is not based on in-person interviews conducted at polling locations. Instead, AP VoteCast uses a combination of mail, phone, and online research to meet voters where they are — increasingly, that’s casting a ballot before Election Day by mail, absentee or via in-person early voting.
Sometimes the AP will call a race before all, or even the majority, of the votes are counted. Here’s what they say:
The AP’s race calls are not predictions and are not based on speculation. They are declarations based on an analysis of vote results and other election data that one candidate has emerged as the winner and that no other candidate in the race will be able to overtake the winner once all the votes have been counted.
Basically, it comes down to math. If it’s 100 percent clear the candidate will win, despite uncounted ballots, the AP will call the race. But if there’s even a seed of doubt, they won’t call it – even if a candidate is already declaring victory.
Here’s some good examples: In the 2000 presidential election, the AP didn’t call the race between George W. Bush and Al Gore. They said the margin in Florida was too close. In the 2020 election, the AP didn’t declare Joe Biden the winner until four days after Election Day.
To follow along with how the 2024 election will shake out, keep checking back here. Or see the AP’s calls for Wyoming races here.
Update 7:05 p.m.: Presidential race, property taxes top of mind for Wilson voters
Written By: Dante Filpula Ankney/KHOL
Jackson Hole Community Radio talked with a steady stream of voters who shuffled across icy streets and into the Old Wilson Schoolhouse as polls opened this morning.
On their minds? The presidential election and the state’s constitutional amendment on property taxes.
“The government is a mess, said Rachel Miller, an office manager. “I'm hoping that Trump wins and fixes it. Locally, I'd like somebody to fix our property tax situation.”
For Karyn Chin of Wilson, the top of the ballot was tough.
“I wanted to be really excited about the Harris-Walz campaign,” Chin said. “I did end up voting for Harris-Walz, but it was a pretty tough decision for me. I wanted to see more from her and from her campaign. I wanted to feel a lot of joy around that election, but in the end, it just came down to a duty to feel like I had to protect democracy.”
Anne Jones of Wilson, a realtor, said taxes are her top issue.
“My property taxes have gone up close to 50 or 100 percent year over year, making it almost unaffordable for us to stay in our current location,” she said. “Especially in Teton County, because we have such a pay disparity here. So many people work three or four jobs just to be able to make it and don't get that time to spend with their family. And I think it would be really important that we can figure out how to make it more affordable in general for us to keep our local residents because that's really what makes this place special.”
Wyomingites are voting on a constitutional amendment that would change property tax structure in the state. If approved, it would create a separate rate of taxation for all residential property, like multi-family, single family property. Within that, it would create a subclass specifically for owner-occupied primary residences, and tax those folks differently.
Hear more voters from Teton County here.
Update 7 p.m.: To keep up with an influx of newly registered voters, Sheridan County prints more ballots
Written By: Melodie Edwards
Voter turnout has been high across the state. In Sheridan County’s 29 precincts, that included a lot of newly registered voters – some folks who were purged from the rolls earlier this year or new residents in the county. Over 1,500 new registrations came in just today.
The county’s election supervisor, James Temple, said they hadn’t expected so many new voters and are printing extra ballots to keep up.
Temple said they have plenty of paper and ink and that he’s glad to see such a strong turnout for the election in Sheridan County.
“I’m grateful and keeping up with demand just fine,” Temple said. He added he won’t know how many extra ballots he’s printed for a few days.
Update 6:30 p.m.: Polls close in half an hour and how votes are counted
Written By: Melodie Edwards
Polls are closing in about half an hour. A reminder that as long as you're waiting in a line at a polling station at 7 p.m. you can still vote.
“If you have long lines at 7 p.m., we instruct our judges to get everybody inside the building and lock the doors so that we have a total ending area at 7 p.m.,” said Fremont County County Clerk Julie Freese.
Once the polls close at 7 p.m., here is a rundown of what happens behind the scenes, how those votes are counted and how we come up with those unofficial numbers by the end of tonight. Our state government reporter and our managing editor went into detail about this in our last Road to Cheyenne.
When can we expect results? In many counties, we’ll have unofficial results within a couple hours. Clerks are trying to hit a 10:30 p.m. deadline on election night. If they won’t have unofficial results by then, they need to tell the secretary of state and explain why; for instance, if a storm’s closed roads and they can’t get results from a polling site.
Platte County Clerk Malcolm Ervin said these few hours after polls close are some of the most exciting and terrifying for a county clerk. That’s when they start counting ballots.
“You think it's gone well,” Ervin said. “But really, at about 7:30 p.m. is when you find out if it has or has not gone as well as you think.”
Ervin said they prepare for as much as they can – what to do if there’s a fire, what to do if roads are closed, increased security this year because of threats around the country – but there’s also just stuff that pops up unexpectedly that he’ll have to deal with.
There are two ways ballots are counted, depending on how they’re cast. If you vote in person, you scan your own ballot through the tabulating machine. This machine is from Election Systems & Software. All counties in the state have used ES&S equipment since 2020. These machines are not connected to the internet. They look like copy machines.
Throughout the day, voters are putting their ballots into the machines, and the machines are taking a scanned picture of each ballot. As soon as the last person in line at 7 p.m. has voted, the machines start running results.
Each machine dumps its numbers onto, basically, a USB memory stick, and election staff escort that little memory drive back to the county's election headquarters.
Those results are then taken from the media stick and put into what's called Electionware, which is some software Wyoming uses. It's on a standalone computer, not connected to the internet in any way. It then compiles all the results from all of those pieces of equipment into one nice package, one complete report, so that we can send it to the secretary of state and to the public. And those memory sticks aren’t escorted by just anyone, they have special couriers.
“The courier, by statute, can be a law enforcement officer. I have two of those. And then the rest of them are election judges,” said Fremont County County Clerk Julie Freese.
Any registered voter who’s not running for office can become an election judge. You just need to get in touch with your county or municipal clerk, or the chairperson of your political party. The clerk appoints election judges and runs trainings.
Mailed absentee ballots are a little different.
“We open all of our absentee ballots on the Thursday before the election,” said Converse County Clerk Karen Rimmer. “We have to notify the secretary of state of that. We do that with what we call our absentee counting board, which is a bipartisan team of Republicans and Democrats. This is a process that's open to the public.”
This process is sorting the absentee ballot envelopes by precinct, opening them up and running them through the tabulators – but they won’t run any results reports or add these ballots to the final vote count until after the polls close.
Then on election night, all these USB drives go into each county’s election headquarters. It varies by county how or where the public can watch from here on out.
“Once all the results are in, then we post our results on our website,” said Rimmer. “Then we also have to send those results to the secretary of state's office. Once we send them, they actually make a phone call to us, and they verify what we have sent. So that way they know that it came from us, and we know that they've received it.”
Polls close at 7 p.m. and it will take a couple of hours before we get unofficial results. Stay tuned to WPM’s blog and we’ll make sure you get the most up-to-date information as the results start coming in.
Update 4:15 p.m.: Laramie residents brave cold temps and high winds on Election Day
Written By: Jordan Uplinger
Voters braved high winds and cold temperatures, but were greeted with a bright sunrise as they hit the polls in Laramie this morning. Democrats and Republicans show up for a plethora of different issues.
Some, like David Fails, a Republican, said he was happy to vote but wished the ballot had more power behind it.
“I'm definitely happy to have voted,” said Fails. “Definitely wish I was in another state to have voted – obviously Wyoming, it ain't gonna affect much.”
Wyoming carries only three electoral votes, and the state hasn’t gone blue since 1964.
“I vote Republican, it's going to be Republican,” said Fails.
Presidential elections are not a holiday in the U.S. However, 28 states, including Wyoming, have a law that gives time off for workers to vote. Bethany Kelly is one of those workers who took time off to cast her ballot. Like many others, she was greatly concerned about the presidential race, while feeling confident in her local officials.
Before heading back to work, Kelly expressed a feeling that could be seen in the eyes Democratic and Republican voters alike: election exhaustion.
“I’ve kept in the loop and at this point, I kind of just wanna wake up on Inauguration Day,” she said.
Hear more voters from Laramie here.
Update 3:30 p.m.: Voters on the Wind River Reservation have their eyes on House District 33
Written By: Hannah Habermann
House District 33 will decide whether or not there’s an Indigenous representative in the Wyoming Legislature. Incumbent Sarah Penn (R-Fort Washakie) is facing a challenge from Democrat and Eastern Shoshone tribal member Ivan Posey there, for a district that represents a big chunk of the Wind River Reservation.
That race – and the uncertainty of the national election – were on the minds of some voters casting their ballots at the Fort Washakie High School gym on the Wind River Reservation the morning of the election.
Suzanne Presgrove is Northern Arapaho and lives on the nearby Old Wind River Highway. She’s supporting Posey.
“I've known him most of my life and he's a really good person,” she said. “I think he'll do good. He's smart and he's a veteran and he's for Indigenous people.”
Connor Eckhout grew up in Michigan and moved to Wyoming in 2017.
He was excited to cast his ballot for former Pres. Donald Trump and said he was feeling “super positive” about the election.
But Richard Baldes, who’s Eastern Shoshone, is worried about a Trump victory.
“The way he treats women, ‘grab them by the crotch,’ come on,” Baldes said. “You’ve got women and a lot of people of color voting for him, and I can't understand that. I cannot understand that.”
Baldes wasn’t optimistic about changes he’d hope to see in the Wyoming Legislature this upcoming year.
“Not really, I think it's a mess, too,” he said. “I hate to be so pessimistic, but you know, reality is reality and that's the way it is.”
His parting thoughts were: “Vote for the buffalo.”
Hear more voters from the Wind River Reservation here.
Update 2:30 p.m.: Voters in Meeteetse are feeling anxious about the presidential race
Written By: Olivia Weitz
Education funding, reproductive healthcare and cost of living were top of mind for voters leaving the polls at the Meeteetse Recreation Center earlier today.
Also: the fate of the presidential election.
“I think it's going to be a pretty important election to see which way our country goes. [I’m] a little bit apprehensive about how it's going to turn out,” said Alan Hogg, who has a ranch near town.
“It's pretty nerve wracking,” said Michael Moreland, a general contractor. “I don't want to live four more years like the last four years. I guess we'll just have to see what happens.”
Moreland added that Democratic policies, like abortion and importing oil and gas from overseas, are driving the nation into the ground.
Meanwhile, remote worker Jason Winzenried wants to not have politicians in charge of women's healthcare choices.
“It's maybe a little inflammatory, but I wasn't going to vote for the guy who tried to overthrow the government last time around. That's just the bottom line for me. That's a disqualifier, if nothing else.”
Hear more voters from Meeteetse here.
Update Nov. 5 10 a.m.: Wyoming community leaders denounce political violence
Wyoming community leaders are circulating an open letter denouncing political violence and committing to transparency in advance of today’s election.
The more than 100 people and organizations who have signed the letter have agreed to accept the results of a free and fair election, report concerns, support efforts to strengthen communities against division and extremism, and commit to countering lies and discerning facts.
Those include Rev. Mary Erickson of St. John’s Episcopal Church in Jackson and Marissa Carpio of Equality State Policy Center.
This comes as there are increased threats around the country. As a result, states and cities are beefing up security to prepare for potential election related violence.
Platte County Clerk Malcolm Ervin told WPM that tensions are high.
“We've increased security significantly at polling places,” Ervin said. “Every clerk at this point has had meetings with their emergency management coordinators about some additional security measures here. Specifically, we've expanded our security presence quite a bit, so it will look even different than it did in the primary.”
Earlier this year, Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray posted to Facebook a voicemail he said he received that threatened retribution if Gray started “cheating, stealing, election denying this time around.”
While individual cases of voter fraud have been discovered in Wyoming elections, no evidence of widespread or coordinated efforts to sway results have been found.
Update Nov. 5, 7:30 a.m.: Wyoming Election Survey finds Wyomingites are confident in the state election but not in the federal government
The Wyoming Election Survey got started about 50 years ago. Every two years, the University of Wyoming School of Politics, Public Affairs and International Studies in partnership with the Wyoming Survey and Analysis Center surveys Wyomingites about their political and voting attitudes, and various state and political issues.
This year, 739 Wyomingites replied to the survey between Sept. 24 and Oct. 27. The margin of error was 3.6 percentage points. These numbers are aligned with past years.
While Wyoming is a strong Republic state, residents have a diverse array of opinions on issues.
“People can identify with and support the same party, but still have a range of issues, a range of beliefs about various issues,” said Andrew Garner, professor of political science. “It just shows that people and parties are not homogenous.”
Wyoming’s political landscape remains Republican-majority with support for former Pres. Donald Trump. In the presidential race, 66 percent of respondents said they were going to vote for Trump.
When asked, “How reliable or unreliable do you think the vote counts for president will be?”, the answer varied depending on what level of government.
When asked about the reliability of the vote count at the county level, 89 percent believed it will be somewhat reliable or very reliable. At the state level, that percentage decreased only a little to 87 percent. Meanwhile at the country level, it decreased much more dramatically to 56 percent.
At the federal level, there is not a lot of trust. Thirty-eight respondents expressed a severe lack of trust in the federal government, believing the feds cannot ever be trusted to do what is right.
To find out more about the survey results, click here.
Update Nov. 4, 5 p.m.: One more sleep
About a quarter of voting-age Wyomingites have voted early or absentee ahead of Tuesday’s election. That’s catching up to the number of people who voted in the primary – just 27 percent turnout.
“It is high, which is to be expected,” said Malcolm Ervin, election clerk in Platte County. “You always have interest with a general, with a presidential general. But this one specifically, I think people are really getting out to vote.”
Voting Wyomingites will determine the balance of power in the Legislature between more moderate and more conservative Republicans, whether there’s any Indigenous representation in the state legislature and whether to amend the constitution related to property taxes.
Voters must get themselves – or their absentee ballots – to the polls before 7 p.m. Anyone still in line at 7 p.m. will be able to vote, but none after.
If you’re a first-time voter or if you didn’t vote in 2022, you’ll need to register. You can do that at your polling location or with your county clerk. Remember to bring your ID.
Wyoming Public Radio will carry live coverage as results come in Tuesday night. Catch us on the radio – or follow along online on this blog. And if you still have questions on voting or election security, check out our 2024 election guide.