Wyoming has had no such statewide order — just a local one in Teton County — but the coronavirus has loomed large for party officials for weeks, prompting them to push back the due date for mailed ballots and the tabulation day to help ensure participation.

They plan to have a courier drive the ballots to Denver for machine tabulation Saturday. After auditing overnight, results are expected by midday Sunday.

To receive a ballot, participants must have been registered as Democrats no later than March 20.

Population and party rules give Wyoming and North Dakota the smallest delegations to the national convention Aug. 17-20 in Milwaukee. Each state will have 18 delegates.

Fourteen of Wyoming’s delegates are at stake. The other four are unpledged delegates, also known as superdelegates, whose votes wouldn’t come into play except in the unexpected event of a contested convention.

The ranked-choice process allowed voters to choose and rank up to five candidates. After the initial count, candidates with the fewest votes will have theirs reallocated to the others in subsequent counts until each remaining candidate has at least 15 percent of the vote.

The 14 delegates will be awarded proportionately to those candidates.

Besides Biden and Sanders, Hawaii U.S. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard; former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg; former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg; Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren; Minnesota U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar; and investor Tom Steyer, of San Francisco; were on the ballot.