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General elections were held in Guam on November 5, 2024. [1] Voters in Guam chose their non-voting delegate to the United States House of Representatives, attorney general, supreme court judges and all fifteen members of the territorial legislature. The elections were held on the same day as the 2024 United States elections.
The election coincided with the 2024 Guamanian general election which will decide other federal and state offices, including elections to the Legislature of Guam. The non-voting delegate is selected for a two-year term. Incumbent delegate James Moylan, who was first elected in 2022 with 52.2% of the vote, was re-elected to a second term. [1]
Mayoral elections in Guam were held on November 5, 2024 as part of the 2024 Guamanian general election, to elect mayors of nineteen villages in Guam and vice mayors in six, with primaries taking place on August 3. [1] The incumbent vice mayor of Sinajana, Rudy Don Iriarte, died on January 4, 2024. A special election to fill the office was ...
Here's a guide to the others. Voting booths stand during the 2024 U.S. presidential election on Election Day at the Detroit Police Department, Twelfth Precinct in Detroit, Michigan on November 5 ...
The last votes of the 2024 primary will be cast on June 8, when Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands hold their caucuses. The first presidential debate is scheduled to take place on June 27 in Atlanta ...
The 2024 Guam Republican presidential caucuses were held on Saturday, March 16, 2024, as part of the Republican Party primaries. The Republican Party of Guam officially convened for their party convention to allocate all nine of the territory's delegates to former president Donald Trump , who became the presumptive nominee after clinching the ...
Goldberg also advised anxious Americans to "get some papers" to ease election woes. Whoopi Goldberg urges Americans to hold buttholes 'clutched' in election lines, then let farts 'rip' in voting booth
The Legislature of Guam has fifteen members elected at large in an open primary for two year terms. The island also holds both Democratic and Republican presidential caucuses every election year, and conducts a presidential straw poll to coincide with the U.S. general election, even though Guam's votes do not officially count in presidential races.