VOTE FOR A BETTER WYOMING IN 2024!

Thousands of your Wyoming neighbors will go to the polls this summer & fall.
Join them to pick the lawmakers who will decide our state's future!

Healthcare access, quality public education, affordable communities, and accessible public lands are just a few of the issues that state legislators, county commissioners, city councilors, and school board trustees make big decisions about. All of these leaders play major roles in our day-to-day lives and shape the Wyoming that future generations will inherit.

Voting is one of the most important ways that we can make our voices heard and express the will of our communities.

Better Wyoming will provide you with all the information you need to cast a ballot, including updates when and how to cast a ballot, and which political offices influence issues you care about. Sign up to commit to be a Wyoming voter in 2024 today,

Most political decisions that affect our day-to-day lives aren’t made by national politicians. They're made by people we vote for further down the ballot, in our local and state election. From education to housing, good jobs to the environment, these issues are shaped by the actions of local and state elected officials. This election season, make sure you know who impacts the issues you care about.

Wyoming’s public education system is among the best in the country, providing hardworking Wyoming families and communities with a quality education that many other rural states lack. To protect Wyoming’s education system, vote for candidates who support well-funded schools, and who keep education free from the hot-button politics that hinder teachers' ability to educate our next generations.

  • State legislators determine school funding levels and write laws impacting public schools, such as efforts to ban books and punish librarians or to create positive new programs like universal pre-K education.

  • School Board Trustees oversee local school districts, making decisions about curriculum, teacher pay, and broad policies that affect students' well-being.

Voting in Wyoming is easy with the right information

This is what you need to know to cast a ballot in the 2024 General Election.

There are three ways to vote in the General Election!

  1. Early at the Courthouse October 3rd– November 4th (Mon. - Fri. during office hours)
    • Bring a valid government ID!
  2. On November 5 – Election Day
  3. Request your mail-in ballot after October 8th. 
  4. Do your research

Not registered but want to vote? No sweat!

Wyoming residents can register and vote at the same time.

  • Register and vote at the same time at your local county courthouse October 22 – November 4, 2024.
  • Register and vote on Election Day, November 5, between 7am and 7pm at your polling place.
  • IMPORTANT: Bring a valid government ID, such as a driver's license from any state or your passport.

That’s it! If you have questions, reach out to us at info@betterwyo.org or contact your local county clerk.

Rev. Bob Garrard

Rev. Bob Garrard

I vote because it is a right and responsibility as a citizen of the USA. Nowhere else can I send a more meaningful political message. If I do not vote, then this right can disappear. I vote even when I know my vote may be like spitting into the Wyoming wind.

Jordan Bishop

Jordan Bishop

For me, voting is a concrete way that I can put my faith into action. I believe that all people of good conscience have an obligation to vote based on our values, not on a partisan basis. If we value human dignity, equality, and justice then it is our moral duty to make our voices heard by voting in local, state, and national elections.

Chip in now to help ensure all Wyomingites have a voice this election

Campaign Updates

Better Wyoming receives “School Bell Award”

April 23, 2026

Over the last year, we’ve collaborated with the Wyoming Education Association (WEA) to protect public education funding, fight off book-banning bills that would punish educators, and train their members to become grassroots leaders in their communities.

Better Wyoming’s ‘Voter 101’ town hall talks about low voter turnout and why your vote matters

April 15, 2026

Better Wyoming held a voter information town hall in Casper to kick off this election season. This town hall provided attendees with information on how to register to vote, what you can bring with you to the polls, and more information to help folks to feel confident to cast a ballot. More importantly, this town hall discussed voter turnout and highlighted why every person’s vote matters in local and statewide elections.

Faith Leaders Speak Out For a Compassionate Budget

February 27, 2026

Budgets aren’t just abstract numbers and endless, confusing line-items. They’re moral documents. That’s what a group of two dozen Wyoming faith leaders said, when they gathered at the State Capitol on February 12th.