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WyoFile on MSNAs Wyoming GOP gathers, old disputes resurfaceState Republicans used the meeting in Cody to elect new leadership. But an ongoing conflict over an election in Hot Springs County also flared up.
Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray delivered a town hall address at the Campbell County Public Library Thursday evening, addressing a recently passed bill championing the Secretary’s latest
Sheridan resident Bryan Miller was elected the new chairman of the Wyoming Republican Party on Saturday, beating out Jackson resident Rebecca Bextel by
Laramie, Platte and Teton County voters are among plaintiffs arguing several state election laws “impermissibly discriminate” against their constitutionally protected rights.
The Wyoming GOP is considering letting members of the Hot Springs Republican Party it says were illegally elected to county positions vote in the
After months of campaigning, Teton County’s Rebecca Bextel was not selected Saturday as the next leader of the Wyoming Republican Party.
CHEYENNE — Republican Reps. Ann Lucas and Steve Johnson have accepted invitations to join the Wyoming Freedom Caucus, according to Chairwoman Rep. Rachel Rodriguez-Williams, R-Cody. It’s been widely reported that the 68th Wyoming Legislature had one of the largest freshman classes in recent memory,
Election integrity will continue to be an issue for the Wyoming Legislature this year. The Joint Corporations, Elections and Political Subdivisions Committee will kick off its first meeting of the legislative interim with an election demonstration from the county clerks and a presentation from Secretary of State Chuck Gray.
The laws are aimed at safeguarding elections. Opponents say they could disenfranchise millions of eligible voters, including some married women.
After the 2024 election, Sheridan County sent 1,518 letters to voters notifying them they’d be removed from the voter rolls. The letters, Sheridan County Clerk and Recorder Eda Schunk Thompson said, give voters the chance to contact the clerk’s office and stay registered to vote; 345 people did so to remain on the voter rolls.
A group of Wyoming voters, former political candidates and a retired lawmaker are challenging several state election laws in a sweeping complaint filed in Laramie County District Court this month.
Enacted in 1973, Wyoming’s “sore loser law” stipulates “an unsuccessful candidate for office at a primary election whose name is printed on any party ballot may not accept nomination for ...
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