Cedar Point, KS Political Map | Democrat & Republican Areas in Cedar Point

Cedar Point is a Republican stronghold. About 22% of voters here vote Democratic and 78% Republican.

 
Cedar Point, KS block-group political-lean map
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About 71% of adults in Cedar Point typically vote, above the U.S. average of about 62%. Among adults in Cedar Point, ~16% vote Democratic, ~55% Republican, and ~29% don't vote. The map below shows estimated turnout by block group.

Cedar Point, KS block-group voter-turnout map
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How Cedar Point compares

Among cities within 25 miles, Cedar Point leans more Republican than 12 of 24 neighbors.

Cedar Point runs about 40 points more Republican than Kansas as a whole.

Why Cedar Point leans the way it does

This analysis examined 14,881 data points per city to find what predicts political lean and turnout. The items below are a few correlations that stood out for Cedar Point, not a ranked or complete list of what matters most.

Rural areas with a high white share vote Republican. Cedar Point sits in the bottom quarter on density and about 95% of residents are non-Hispanic white, about 10 points above the Kansas average of 85%.

Paved land cover and Republican lean

Places with little paved surface tend to lean Republican; Cedar Point, KS sits in the bottom quarter nationally on this measure. Paved ground does not change how people vote; it mostly reflects how urban and built-up a place is.

Why turnout in Cedar Point looks the way it does

Areas with high high-school completion turn out at higher rates. About 97% of adults in Cedar Point have completed high school, about 7 points above the U.S. average of 90%. Learn more about the findings and methodology on the political spectrum map.

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Sources and methodology

Precinct-level voting records used to fit the model come from Kansas Secretary of State, Elections, distributed by the Voting and Election Science Team. Demographic inputs come from the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS 5-year estimates and the 2020 Decennial Census). Health and environmental inputs come from the CDC (PLACES and the Environmental Justice Index). Land cover comes from the USGS and EPA. Election-day and lead-up weather come from PRISM 4km daily grids and the NOAA Global Historical Climatology Network. Mail-voting and election-administration patterns come from the MIT Election Lab's Survey of the Performance of American Elections. Block-group crime detail comes from CrimeGrade. Internet data and modeling support provided by ISPreports.org.

Modeling and analysis by the BestNeighborhood data science team. Full methodology and findings: political spectrum map.

Methodology reviewed by the BestNeighborhood data team. Last updated May 2026.