The 2024 Wyoming elections were held in large part on November 5, 2024, to elect members of the federal, state, and local governments. 
  Election schedule
 - April 13, 2024: Democratic presidential caucuses.
  - April 20, 2024: Republican presidential caucuses.
  - August 20, 2024: State, federal, and local primaries.
  - November 5, 2024: General election.[1]
 
 President of the United States
   United States Senate
   United States House of Representatives
   State legislature
 Wyoming Senate
   Summary of the 2024 Wyoming  Senate election results[5]   | Party  |  Candidates  |  Votes  |  %  |  Seats  | 
  Before 67th Leg.  |  Up  |  Won  |  After 68th Leg.  |  +/–  | 
  |   |  Republican  |  15  |  105,174  |  89.78  |  29  |  15  |  15  |  29  |     | 
  |   |  Democratic  |  3  |  7,742  |  6.61  |  2  |  0  |  0  |  2  |     | 
  |   |  Write-in  |  4,227  |  3.61  |  —  | 
  | Valid ballots  |  117,143  |  87.24  |  —  | 
  | Blank or invalid ballots  |  17,139  |  12.76  |  —  | 
  | Total  |  134,282  |  100%  |  31  |  15  |  31  |     | 
 
 Wyoming House of Representatives
   Constitutional Amendment A
 2024 Wyoming Constitutional Amendment A|
|
|
|
    Choice   |  Votes  |  %  |      Yes  |  146,336  |  59.31%  |       No  |  100,392  |  40.69%  |       | Valid votes  |  246,728  |  91.00%  |    | Invalid or blank votes  |  24,395  |  9.00%  |    | Total votes  |  271,123  |  100.00%  |      | 
  | 
  Results by county  Results by  precinct     |   Yes      90–100%     80–90%     70–80%     60–70%     50–60%    |    No     90–100%     80–90%     70–80%     60–70%     50–60%    |    Other      No data        |     | 
 2024 Wyoming Constitutional Amendment A would "separate residential real property into its own class of property for purposes of property tax assessments. The amendment would authorize the legislature to create a subclass of owner occupied primary residences."[6] 
  2024 Wyoming Constitutional Amendment A   | Choice |  Votes |  %  | 
    Yes |  146,336 |  59.31%  | 
    No |  100,392 |  40.69%  | 
  | Valid votes |  246,728 |  91.00%  | 
  | Invalid or blank votes |  24,395 |  9.00%  | 
  | Total votes  |  271,123 |  100.00%  | 
  Judicial elections
  Thirty judges were stood for retention election on November 5, including two Supreme Court justices for 8-year terms, fourteen circuit court judges for 4-year terms, and fourteen district court judges for 6-year terms.[7] 
  Justice John G. Fenn retention election   | Choice |  Votes |  %  | 
    Yes |  175,991 |  77.74%  | 
    No |  50,382 |  22.26%  | 
  | Valid votes |  226,373 |  83.49%  | 
  | Invalid or blank votes |  44,750 |  16.51%  | 
  | Total votes  |  271,123 |  100.00%  | 
  Chief Justice Kate M. Fox retention election   | Choice |  Votes |  %  | 
    Yes |  177,803 |  78.64%  | 
    No |  48,638 |  21.36%  | 
  | Valid votes |  226,441 |  83.52%  | 
  | Invalid or blank votes |  44,682 |  16.48%  | 
  | Total votes  |  271,123 |  100.00%  | 
 Local elections
  References
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U.S. President |  | 
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U.S. Senate |  | 
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U.S. House (election ratings) |  | 
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| Governors |  | 
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 Lieutenant governors |  | 
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Attorneys general |  | 
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Secretaries of state |  | 
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State treasurers |  | 
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| Judicial |  | 
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Other statewide elections |  - Alabama 
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| Local |  - Alameda County, CA (recall)
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  - Washington, D.C.
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States and territories |  | 
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Ballot measures |  - Alabama 
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