Wicomico County was granted a charter form of government in 1964. No
Republican carried Wicomico County until 1928, when
Herbert Hoover won because of anti-Catholic sentiment in the heavily Protestant county against Democratic candidate
Al Smith. The popular general
Dwight D. Eisenhower carried Wicomico in 1952. Eisenhower again carried Wicomico in 1956; and Republican
Richard Nixon won it in 1960, against
John F. Kennedy who, like Al Smith, was Catholic. No Democratic presidential nominee has won Wicomico County since
Lyndon Johnson’s landslide in
1964, as white conservatives increasingly moved into the Republican Party.
Bill Clinton, a son of the South, came within 384 votes of beating
Bob Dole in 1996. The county trended Republican in 2000 and 2004, but
Barack Obama obtained a higher proportion of the county vote in 2008 and 2012, likely benefiting from support from young, educated, or minority voters. In 2020,
Joe Biden came extremely close to winning the county, with
Donald Trump only edging him out by 890 votes. Biden obtained 47.7% of the county's vote, the highest percentage for any Democrat since 1964. Trump also won less than 50% of the vote, the first time a Republican had been held below a majority of the vote in Wicomico County since 1996. Wicomico County's government, since 2006, uses a council-elected executive system where the voters elect members of the County Council and Executive. Before 2006, the county operated under a council-administrator system where voters elected council members who in turn appointed an administrator to oversee the government.
County council The legislative functions of government are vested in the
County Council. The County Council consists of seven members, five of whom are elected from
single-member districts; the other two are elected
at-large.
County executive The
county executive oversees the executive branch of the County government, which consists of a number of offices and departments. The executive branch is charged with implementing County law and overseeing the operation of County Government. The position of County Executive was established by a modification of the county's Charter in 2006. Day-to-day functions of the executive branch fall to the appointed Director of Administration, who also serves as the Acting County Executive during vacancies in the office of the County Executive. Upon the death of Robert L. "Bob" Culver Jr., on July 26, 2020, the Wicomico County Council appointed then-Director of Administration John D. Psota to that role in an acting capacity until the 2022 election cycle for the county executive seat. In June 2024, the Wicomico County Council voted to approve a referendum for the
2024 elections on whether to restore Wicomico County to a
council–manager government, thereby abolishing the county executive position. The measure, which was not approved by voters, would have gone into effect at the conclusion of Julie Giordano's current term in late 2026.
Sheriff Law enforcement in the county is provided by the
Wicomico County Sheriff's Office. The sheriff, Mike Lewis, a Republican, is an elected official. Municipal police agencies exist in the towns of
Delmar and
Pittsville, along with the cities of
Fruitland and
Salisbury.
State's attorney The Wicomico County
State's Attorney is responsible for prosecuting the felony, misdemeanor, and juvenile cases occurring in the county. The current elected State's Attorney is Jamie Dykes. ==Geography==