Cheyenne County, Nebraska
| Donald Trump ✓Republican | 81.1% | 3,692 |
|---|---|---|
| Kamala HarrisDemocratic | 17.3% | 787 |
| Chase OliverLibertarian | 1.6% | 73 |
| Year | Margin (D minus R) |
|---|---|
| 1892 | −27.6% |
| 1896 | +6.8% |
| 1900 | −16.4% |
| 1904 | −40.1% |
| 1908 | −4.4% |
| 1912 | +12.0% |
| 1916 | +18.4% |
| 1920 | −48.5% |
| 1924 | −35.0% |
| 1928 | −25.1% |
| 1932 | +39.9% |
| 1936 | +35.5% |
| 1940 | −10.4% |
| 1944 | −20.5% |
| 1948 | −0.5% |
| 1952 | −31.0% |
| 1956 | −27.2% |
| 1960 | −19.3% |
| 1964 | −7.6% |
| 1968 | −41.9% |
| 1972 | −53.3% |
| 1976 | −15.3% |
| 1980 | −55.9% |
| 1984 | −56.6% |
| 1988 | −36.2% |
| 1992 | −29.0% |
| 1996 | −38.1% |
| 2000 | −56.5% |
| 2004 | −61.1% |
| 2008 | −49.6% |
| 2012 | −50.9% |
| 2016 | −62.7% |
| 2020 | −61.9% |
| 2024 | −63.8% |
Cheyenne County sits in the western Panhandle, where sparse population and an agriculture-driven economy have produced presidential margins exceeding 60 points for the Republican ticket in recent cycles.
Across the recorded series it reached a Democratic high of 39.9 points in 1932 and a Republican high of 63.8 points in 2024. Between 2020 and 2024 the county moved 1.9 points toward the Republican candidate; the 2024 margin was 63.8 points.
A population of 9,533, a 87% non-Hispanic-white share, and a median household income of $60,348 describe the county. The county's voting pattern over the last decade is most similar to that of Perkins County and Owyhee County.
Compare two places, side by side
Twelve curated comparisons line up election history, demographics, and the divergence story for two places at a glance. Browse all comparisons →
Cheyenne County, Nebraska. Akashic. https://akashic.app/county/31033/. Accessed May 20, 2026. License: CC BY 4.0.