Political landscape Wyoming is the
least populous of all 50 U.S. states. With less than 30% of the population identifying with or leaning towards the Democratic Party, compared to almost 60% identifying with or leaning towards the Republicans, it is also the most solid Republican state, ahead of
Idaho and
Utah. In the
2012 presidential election, incumbent President
Barack Obama received less than 28% of the Wyoming vote, trailing
Mitt Romney by more than 40 points, after running unopposed in the
Democratic caucuses. In his first
presidential election in 2008, running against Republican candidate
John McCain, he received 32.5% of the vote, after defeating
Hillary Clinton in the
Wyoming caucuses with 61% of the popular vote. In her first candidacy Clinton had surprisingly made Wyoming a focus of her campaign, joining both her daughter
Chelsea and husband
Bill Clinton in a final campaign sprint.
2016 campaign Though no
opinion polls have been conducted in Wyoming,
Bernie Sanders was expected to win a clear majority of the 14 pledged delegates. Ten days ahead of the important
New York primary, Sanders hoped to extend his series of wins. National frontrunner
Hillary Clinton, who enjoyed the support of the four party leaders attending the
2016 Democratic National Convention as unpledged "
superdelegates," though this time, she didn't campaign in Wyoming in person. Instead, her campaign sent her husband, former President
Bill Clinton to hold a stump speech in
Cheyenne's Kiwanis Community House, which was attended by some 500 people., more than the final reported turnout of 280. ==Procedure==