Alright, so the other day I got curious about the voting results right here in Omaha. You know how it is, you hear bits and pieces, maybe see something on the local news, but I wanted to see the actual numbers for myself. Wasn’t even sure where to start, honestly.

First thing I did was just hop on the computer. Opened up my browser and typed in something simple, like “omaha nebraska election results”. Naturally, a whole bunch of news websites popped up first. KETV, WOWT, the World-Herald… they all had summaries, which was okay, but I kinda wanted the official tally, you know? Straight from the source.
So, I thought, okay, who actually runs the elections here? That’s gotta be the county, right? Douglas County. I changed my search to something like “douglas county nebraska election commission”. That seemed more direct.
Finding the Official Spot
That worked better. Found the Douglas County Election Commission website. Took a minute to figure out where to click. Websites like these can be a bit clunky sometimes, not always straightforward. Had to poke around a bit.
I looked for sections labeled “Election Results” or “Voting Information”. Found something like that eventually. They usually have results for recent elections listed out. I had to make sure I was looking at the right year and the right election – primary, general, special, whatever it was I was interested in at the time.
Once I clicked into the results section for the election I wanted, it started making more sense. They had stuff broken down:

- Overall summary results
- Results by precinct (which is really detailed if you want to see how your specific neighborhood voted)
- Sometimes turnout numbers too
It took a few clicks, but I got there. The official numbers were all laid out. It wasn’t fancy looking, mostly just lists and numbers, but it was the real data. I spent some time just looking through the races I cared about, seeing the final counts.
So yeah, that was my little adventure in digging up the Omaha voting results. Started broad with a general search, then narrowed it down to the official county election commission site. A little bit of clicking around, but the info was there. Always better to go to the source if you can.