WYOMING 3 Electoral Votes
Population 
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Wyoming Secretary of State)
Total Population, July 1, 2007 est. 522,830
Total Registration, Feb. 19, 2008 216,708
Rep. 136,844 (63.15%)   Dem. 57,327 (26.45%)   Unaffiliated 21,950 (10.13%)   Lib. 533   Other  54  
Wyoming has: 23 counties.

Government
Governor: Dave Freudenthal (D) elected in 2002, re-elected in 2006. 
State Legislature: Wyoming State Legislature  House: 60 seats  Senate: 30 seats
Local: Counties and Municipalities...  NACO Counties
U.S. House: 1R - 1. B.Cubin (R)
U.S. Senate: Mike Enzi (R) up for re-election in 2008, John Barrasso (R) up for election in 2008. 
On June 22, 2007, Gov. Dave Freudenthal (R) appointed state Sen. John Barrasso (R) to temporarily fill the seat held by Sen. Craig Thomas (R), who passed away on June 4, 2007.  Barrasso will face a special election in Nov. 2008.
On Nov. 10, 2007 Rep. Barbara Cubin (R) announced she will not seek re-election. 

The Cowboy State 
 

 State of Wyoming
Secretary of State

Republican Party of WY
WY Democratic Party
WY Libertarian Party
Constitution Party-WY
Green Party-WY

WY Tribune-Eagle
Casper Star-Tribune
News & Media

Politics1-WY
 

County Conventions -- Dems.: Saturday, March 8, 2008.  Reps.: Saturday, January 5, 2008
Democrats
18 Delegates (12 Pledged, 6 Unpledged) and 4 Alternates
0.40% of the 4,049 Delegate Votes. 

First determining step is county conventions on March 8, 2008.
District-level delegates selected by presidential preference caucuses at the State Convention in Jackson on May 23-24, 2008.

Obama  |  Clinton

Final Corrected Unofficial Results
Delegates to the State Convention
Votes
Delegates
Hillary Clinton
3,311
129.5
Barack Obama
5,378
187.5
Other
64
2.0
Total
8,753
319

 
 

Republicans
14 delegates (penalized 14 delegates because process violates RNC rules)
0.59% of the 2,380 Delegates.

Huckabee  |  Romney  |  F.Thompson

Results
On Jan. 5, 2008 Wyoming Republicans held county conventions in all 23 counties.  Approximately 3,000 people participated, electing 12 delegates and 12 alternates to the national convention.  Eight of those delegates were committed to Mitt Romney, three to Fred Thompson, and one to Duncan Hunter.  Wyoming is a non-binding state so these delegates are free to vote for whoever they choose and can change their votes at any time.  The remaining delegates will be elected at the State Convention on May 30, 2008. (reactions: Romney, WYGOP)

Setting the Date
On Aug. 25, 2007 at their state central committee meeting Wyoming Republicans voted to hold county conventions on Jan. 5, 2008, putting them in the first-in-the nation position, but risking penalties from the Republican National Committee. [On Oct. 22, 2007 the RNC Executive Committee votes to penalize New Hampshire, Florida, South Carolina, Michigan and Wyoming by half their delegates to the the Republican National Convention for starting their delegate selection in advance of Feb. 5, 2008.  This move must still be approved by full RNC].  Earlier in the year they had discussed holding the party's 2008 county conventions on "the same date as the New Hampshire Republican Primary, whenever that may be."  [Feb. 3, 2007 letter]. 

General Election -- Tuesday, November 2, 2004
Wyoming statutes allow voters to register at the polls on Election Day (thus the total ballots cast is higher than total registration).
+Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
167,629 (68.86)
Kerry/Edwards (Dem.) 70,776 (29.07)
Badnarik/Campagna (Lib.) 1,171 (0.48)
Nader/Camejo (Ind.) 2,741 (1.13)
Peroutka/Baldwin (Ind.) 631 (0.26)
Write-Ins 480 (0.20)
Total........243,428  

Total Ballots Cast: 245,789 incl. 433 presidential over votes

2004 Overview
The Bush-Cheney ticket amassed a plurality of 96,853 votes (39.79 percentage points).  Bush carried 22 counties; Kerry did carry Teton County (Jackson).  In a Nov. 3, 2004 press release Secretary of State Joe Meyer stated, “Having Wyoming’s Dick Cheney on the ballot has probably driven our high voter turnout the last two Presidential elections.”  General Election Details
Past Results
1996
Dole (Rep.)...........105,388 (49.81)
Clinton (Dem.)........77,934 (36.84)
Perot (Ind.).............25,928
 (12.26)
Others (2)................2,321
(0.91)
Total........211,571
Note: The 12%-plus for Perot marked his fourth strongest showing.

1992
Bush (Rep.)............79,347 (39.56)
Clinton (Dem.)........68,160 (33.98)
Perot (Ind.).............51,263
 (25.56)
Others (2+w/ins).......1,817
(1.10)
Total........200,587

2000
Gore/Lieberman (Dem.)
60,481
(27.70)
Phillips/Frazier (Ind.)
720
(0.33)
Browne/Olivier (Lib.)
1,443
(0.66)
Hagelin/Goldhaber (NLP)
411
(0.19)
Buchanan/Foster (Ref.)
2,724
(1.25)
+Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
147,947
(67.76)
Nader/LaDuke (w/in)*
4,625
(2.12)
Total........218,351

Total Ballots Cast: 221,685

*The state canvass does not include the Nader write in votes.  The state canvassing board did not canvass those votes because they did not affect the outcome of the race.  However, Nader requested that his write-in votes be counted according to W.S. 22-16-103(b).
 

2000 Overview
The Bush-Cheney ticket easily won Wyoming's 3 electoral votes, carrying all 23 counties and securing a plurality of 87,466 votes (40.06 percentage points) in Cheney's home state.
Notes: Third parties on the ballot: The Libertarian Party qualified as minor party, having won support from more than 5% of the electors in the last general election.  The Natural Law Party and the Reform Party qualified as provisional parties (June 1, 2000 deadline).  Howard Phillips qualified as an independent candidate by meeting the signature requirement.  (An independent candidate needed to submit signatures of 3,484 certified voters (2 percent of the voting population) by the Aug. 28, 2000 deadline).  A Nader petition effort fell short.

2004 Delegate Selection
In Wyoming selection of delegates to the national nominating conventions is party business and is not governed by statute.
Democrats
March 20, 2004 - County Caucuses
May 15, 2004 - State Convention
Delegates: 19 Delegates (13 Pledged and 6 Unpledged) and 4 Alternates.






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