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All 4 Kansas seats to theUnited States House of Representatives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The2010 congressional elections in Kansas were held on November 2, 2010, and determined who would survive thestate ofKansas in theUnited States House of Representatives. Kansas has four seats in the House, apportioned according to the2000 United States census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; the elected served in the112th Congress from January 3, 2011, until January 3, 2013.
Results of the 2010 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas by district:[1]
| District | Republican | Democratic | Others | Total | Result | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| District 1 | 142,281 | 73.76% | 44,068 | 22.85% | 6,537 | 3.39% | 192,886 | 100% | Republican Hold |
| District 2 | 130,034 | 63.13% | 66,588 | 32.33% | 9,353 | 4.54% | 205,975 | 100% | Republican Hold |
| District 3 | 136,246 | 58.40% | 90,193 | 38.66% | 6,846 | 2.93% | 233,285 | 100% | Republican Gain |
| District 4 | 119,575 | 58.79% | 74,143 | 36.45% | 9,665 | 4.75% | 203,383 | 100% | Republican Hold |
| Total | 528,136 | 63.21% | 274,992 | 32.91% | 32,401 | 3.88% | 835,529 | 100% | |

When incumbent Republican CongressmanJerry Moran opted torun for Senate instead of seeking an eighth term in Congress, creating an open seat. RepublicanState SenatorTim Huelskamp won in a crowded Republican primary that includedJim Barnett, a fellowState Senator and the2006 Republican nominee for Governor; Rob Wasinger, the former Chief of Staff to retiring SenatorSam Brownback;Sue Boldra, a college instructor;Tracey Mann, a real estate agent; and Monte Shadwick, the former Mayor ofSalina. Huelskamp faced Alan Jilka, the Democratic nominee and another former Mayor ofSalina and Jack Warner, the Libertarian candidate. As was expected in this solidly conservative[2] district that encompasses almost two-thirds of the state, Huelskamp overwhelmingly defeated Jilka and Warner and won his first term to Congress.
| Poll Source | Dates Administered | Tim Huelskamp (R) | Alan Jilka (D) | Jack Warner (L) | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Survey USA[3] | October 5–6, 2010 | 63% | 26% | 5% | 6% |
| SurveyUSA[4] | August 5–8, 2010 | 65% | 23% | 7% | 5% |
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[5] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Rothenberg[6] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[7] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| RCP[8] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| CQ Politics[9] | Safe R | October 28, 2010 |
| New York Times[10] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| FiveThirtyEight[10] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Tim Huelskamp | 142,281 | 73.76 | |
| Democratic | Alan Jilka | 44,068 | 22.85 | |
| Libertarian | Jack Warner | 6,537 | 3.39 | |
| Total votes | 192,886 | 100.00 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
Source[12]
| County | Tim Huelskamp Republican | Alan Jilka Democratic | Jack Warner Libertarian | Margin | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| Barber | 1,646 | 80.84% | 324 | 15.91% | 66 | 3.24% | 1,322 | 64.93% | 2,036 |
| Barton | 6,356 | 78.19% | 1,515 | 18.64% | 258 | 3.17% | 4,841 | 59.55% | 8,129 |
| Chase | 774 | 72.40% | 252 | 23.57% | 43 | 4.02% | 522 | 48.83% | 1,069 |
| Cheyenne | 935 | 83.93% | 148 | 13.29% | 31 | 2.78% | 787 | 70.65% | 1,114 |
| Clark | 740 | 81.23% | 128 | 14.05% | 43 | 4.72% | 612 | 67.18% | 911 |
| Clay | 2,328 | 79.95% | 530 | 18.20% | 54 | 1.85% | 1,798 | 61.74% | 2,912 |
| Cloud | 2,195 | 71.99% | 771 | 25.29% | 83 | 2.72% | 1,424 | 46.70% | 3,049 |
| Comanche | 658 | 84.04% | 100 | 12.77% | 25 | 3.19% | 558 | 71.26% | 783 |
| Decatur | 934 | 80.80% | 194 | 16.78% | 28 | 2.42% | 740 | 64.01% | 1,156 |
| Dickinson | 4,423 | 71.59% | 1,555 | 25.17% | 200 | 3.24% | 2,868 | 46.42% | 6,178 |
| Edwards | 844 | 79.77% | 166 | 15.69% | 48 | 4.54% | 678 | 64.08% | 1,058 |
| Ellis | 6,039 | 70.28% | 2,330 | 27.12% | 224 | 2.61% | 3,709 | 43.16% | 8,593 |
| Ellsworth | 1,526 | 68.52% | 639 | 28.69% | 62 | 2.78% | 887 | 39.83% | 2,227 |
| Finney | 4,839 | 75.91% | 1,303 | 20.44% | 233 | 3.65% | 3,536 | 55.47% | 6,375 |
| Ford | 4,597 | 73.19% | 1,336 | 21.27% | 348 | 5.54% | 3,261 | 51.92% | 6,281 |
| Geary | 3,055 | 63.71% | 1,580 | 32.95% | 160 | 3.34% | 1,475 | 30.76% | 4,795 |
| Gove | 880 | 81.18% | 176 | 16.24% | 28 | 2.58% | 704 | 64.94% | 1,084 |
| Graham | 823 | 76.56% | 226 | 21.02% | 26 | 2.42% | 597 | 55.53% | 1,075 |
| Grant | 1,459 | 82.24% | 267 | 15.05% | 48 | 2.71% | 1,192 | 67.19% | 1,774 |
| Gray | 1,232 | 78.57% | 252 | 16.07% | 84 | 5.36% | 980 | 62.50% | 1,568 |
| Greeley | 442 | 72.34% | 147 | 24.06% | 22 | 3.60% | 295 | 48.28% | 611 |
| Greenwood | 536 | 77.79% | 124 | 18.00% | 29 | 4.21% | 412 | 59.80% | 689 |
| Hamilton | 632 | 78.80% | 132 | 16.46% | 38 | 4.74% | 500 | 62.34% | 802 |
| Haskell | 977 | 85.03% | 129 | 11.23% | 43 | 3.74% | 848 | 73.80% | 1,149 |
| Hodgeman | 739 | 81.12% | 120 | 13.17% | 52 | 5.71% | 619 | 67.95% | 911 |
| Jewell | 867 | 75.85% | 219 | 19.16% | 57 | 4.99% | 648 | 56.69% | 1,143 |
| Kearny | 867 | 82.65% | 151 | 14.39% | 31 | 2.96% | 716 | 68.26% | 1,049 |
| Kiowa | 903 | 86.99% | 110 | 10.60% | 25 | 2.41% | 793 | 76.40% | 1,038 |
| Lane | 605 | 79.82% | 119 | 15.70% | 34 | 4.49% | 486 | 64.12% | 758 |
| Lincoln | 858 | 72.90% | 266 | 22.60% | 53 | 4.50% | 592 | 50.30% | 1,177 |
| Logan | 929 | 85.15% | 140 | 12.83% | 22 | 2.02% | 789 | 72.32% | 1,091 |
| Lyon | 5,180 | 60.55% | 2,998 | 35.04% | 377 | 4.41% | 2,182 | 25.51% | 8,555 |
| Marion | 3,386 | 75.73% | 977 | 21.85% | 108 | 2.42% | 2,409 | 53.88% | 4,471 |
| Marshall | 2,560 | 69.55% | 959 | 26.05% | 162 | 4.40% | 1,601 | 43.49% | 3,681 |
| McPherson | 7,007 | 73.51% | 2,271 | 23.83% | 254 | 2.66% | 4,736 | 49.69% | 9,532 |
| Meade | 1,244 | 83.66% | 193 | 12.98% | 50 | 3.36% | 1,051 | 70.68% | 1,487 |
| Mitchell | 1,648 | 74.54% | 487 | 22.03% | 76 | 3.44% | 1,161 | 52.51% | 2,211 |
| Morris | 1,496 | 73.15% | 472 | 23.08% | 77 | 3.77% | 1,024 | 50.07% | 2,045 |
| Morton | 862 | 86.63% | 105 | 10.55% | 28 | 2.81% | 757 | 76.08% | 995 |
| Nemaha | 2,127 | 75.91% | 580 | 20.70% | 95 | 3.39% | 1,547 | 55.21% | 2,802 |
| Ness | 953 | 84.86% | 131 | 11.67% | 39 | 3.47% | 822 | 73.20% | 1,123 |
| Norton | 1,362 | 78.55% | 326 | 18.80% | 46 | 2.65% | 1,036 | 59.75% | 1,734 |
| Osborne | 1,229 | 78.58% | 281 | 17.97% | 54 | 3.45% | 948 | 60.61% | 1,564 |
| Ottawa | 1,632 | 75.42% | 463 | 21.40% | 69 | 3.19% | 1,169 | 54.02% | 2,164 |
| Pawnee | 1,635 | 75.31% | 475 | 21.88% | 61 | 2.81% | 1,160 | 53.43% | 2,171 |
| Phillips | 1,607 | 81.91% | 300 | 15.29% | 55 | 2.80% | 1,307 | 66.62% | 1,962 |
| Pratt | 2,267 | 75.49% | 624 | 20.78% | 112 | 3.73% | 1,643 | 54.72% | 3,003 |
| Rawlins | 980 | 86.27% | 127 | 11.18% | 29 | 2.55% | 853 | 75.09% | 1,136 |
| Reno | 12,748 | 70.19% | 4,837 | 26.63% | 577 | 3.18% | 7,911 | 43.56% | 18,162 |
| Republic | 1,409 | 74.91% | 418 | 22.22% | 54 | 2.87% | 991 | 52.68% | 1,881 |
| Rice | 2,215 | 75.78% | 615 | 21.04% | 93 | 3.18% | 1,600 | 54.74% | 2,923 |
| Rooks | 1,649 | 83.28% | 262 | 13.23% | 69 | 3.48% | 1,387 | 70.05% | 1,980 |
| Rush | 982 | 77.63% | 232 | 18.34% | 51 | 4.03% | 750 | 59.29% | 1,265 |
| Russell | 2,010 | 75.11% | 579 | 21.64% | 87 | 3.25% | 1,431 | 53.48% | 2,676 |
| Saline | 10,871 | 62.02% | 5,961 | 34.01% | 697 | 3.98% | 4,910 | 28.01% | 17,529 |
| Scott | 1,515 | 84.64% | 221 | 12.35% | 54 | 3.02% | 1,294 | 72.29% | 1,790 |
| Seward | 2,781 | 78.27% | 645 | 18.15% | 127 | 3.57% | 2,136 | 60.12% | 3,553 |
| Sheridan | 846 | 81.98% | 164 | 15.89% | 22 | 2.13% | 682 | 66.09% | 1,032 |
| Sherman | 1,500 | 78.99% | 336 | 17.69% | 63 | 3.32% | 1,164 | 61.30% | 1,899 |
| Smith | 1,149 | 77.06% | 305 | 20.46% | 37 | 2.48% | 844 | 56.61% | 1,491 |
| Stafford | 1,175 | 78.75% | 269 | 18.03% | 48 | 3.22% | 906 | 60.72% | 1,492 |
| Stanton | 493 | 85.15% | 68 | 11.74% | 18 | 3.11% | 425 | 73.40% | 579 |
| Stevens | 1,310 | 87.22% | 155 | 10.32% | 37 | 2.46% | 1,155 | 76.90% | 1,502 |
| Thomas | 2,055 | 80.43% | 448 | 17.53% | 52 | 2.04% | 1,607 | 62.90% | 2,555 |
| Trego | 901 | 77.87% | 212 | 18.32% | 44 | 3.80% | 689 | 59.55% | 1,157 |
| Wabaunsee | 1,961 | 72.74% | 599 | 22.22% | 136 | 5.04% | 1,362 | 50.52% | 2,696 |
| Wallace | 504 | 83.44% | 85 | 14.07% | 15 | 2.48% | 419 | 69.37% | 604 |
| Washington | 1,766 | 82.56% | 322 | 15.05% | 51 | 2.38% | 1,444 | 67.51% | 2,139 |
| Wichita | 628 | 82.63% | 117 | 15.39% | 15 | 1.97% | 511 | 67.24% | 760 |

Freshman incumbent Republican CongresswomanLynn Jenkins, who was initially sent to Congress after defeating previous CongresswomanNancy Boyda in2008, was the only member of the Kansas congressional delegation to seek re-election this cycle. This conservative[2] district that consists of most of eastern Kansas normally elects Republicans by large margins, so Congresswoman Jenkins was in no real danger of losing her seat to the Democratic nominee, community organizer Cheryl Hudspeth. Though Democrats hoped to make hay out of Jenkins’ claim that Republicans needed a "great white hope" to challenge PresidentObama,[13] Jenkins was not vulnerable in the slightest and was overwhelmingly elected to her second term.
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[5] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Rothenberg[6] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[7] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| RCP[8] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| CQ Politics[9] | Safe R | October 28, 2010 |
| New York Times[10] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| FiveThirtyEight[10] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Lynn Jenkins (incumbent) | 130,034 | 63.13 | |
| Democratic | Cheryl Hudspeth | 66,588 | 32.33 | |
| Libertarian | Robert Garrard | 9,353 | 4.54 | |
| Total votes | 205,975 | 100.00 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
Source[14]
| County | Lynn Jenkins Republican | Cheryl Hudspeth Democratic | Robert Garrard Libertarian | Margin | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| Allen | 3,103 | 69.92% | 1,186 | 26.72% | 149 | 3.36% | 1,917 | 43.20% | 4,438 |
| Anderson | 1,948 | 71.83% | 595 | 21.94% | 169 | 6.23% | 1,353 | 49.89% | 2,712 |
| Atchison | 3,007 | 64.96% | 1,439 | 31.09% | 183 | 3.95% | 1,568 | 33.87% | 4,629 |
| Bourbon | 3,462 | 72.72% | 1,146 | 24.07% | 153 | 3.21% | 2,316 | 48.65% | 4,761 |
| Brown | 2,194 | 73.70% | 616 | 20.69% | 167 | 5.61% | 1,578 | 53.01% | 2,977 |
| Cherokee | 3,964 | 65.35% | 1,877 | 30.94% | 225 | 3.71% | 2,087 | 34.40% | 6,066 |
| Coffey | 2,389 | 79.85% | 475 | 15.88% | 128 | 4.28% | 1,914 | 63.97% | 2,992 |
| Crawford | 5,946 | 54.06% | 4,667 | 42.43% | 386 | 3.51% | 1,279 | 11.63% | 10,999 |
| Doniphan | 1,713 | 76.75% | 415 | 18.59% | 104 | 4.66% | 1,298 | 58.15% | 2,232 |
| Douglas | 7,588 | 49.26% | 7,197 | 46.72% | 618 | 4.01% | 391 | 2.54% | 15,403 |
| Franklin | 5,324 | 70.53% | 1,748 | 23.16% | 477 | 6.32% | 3,576 | 47.37% | 7,549 |
| Geary | 24 | 77.42% | 7 | 22.58% | 0 | 0.00% | 17 | 54.84% | 31 |
| Jackson | 2,804 | 66.12% | 1,224 | 28.86% | 213 | 5.02% | 1,580 | 37.26% | 4,241 |
| Jefferson | 4,019 | 64.97% | 1,864 | 30.13% | 303 | 4.90% | 2,155 | 34.84% | 6,186 |
| Labette | 3,789 | 66.80% | 1,691 | 29.81% | 192 | 3.39% | 2,098 | 36.99% | 5,672 |
| Leavenworth | 12,572 | 67.52% | 5,298 | 28.45% | 750 | 4.03% | 7,274 | 39.07% | 18,620 |
| Linn | 2,480 | 75.45% | 646 | 19.65% | 161 | 4.90% | 1,834 | 55.80% | 3,287 |
| Miami | 7,300 | 73.49% | 2,150 | 21.65% | 483 | 4.86% | 597 | 55.53% | 9,933 |
| Nemaha | 946 | 72.99% | 281 | 21.68% | 69 | 5.32% | 665 | 51.31% | 1,296 |
| Neosho | 3,330 | 70.02% | 1,250 | 26.28% | 176 | 3.70% | 2,080 | 43.73% | 4,756 |
| Osage | 3,706 | 66.50% | 1,472 | 26.41% | 395 | 7.09% | 2,234 | 40.09% | 5,573 |
| Pottawatomie | 5,001 | 74.54% | 1,335 | 19.90% | 373 | 5.56% | 3,666 | 54.64% | 6,709 |
| Riley | 8,770 | 62.99% | 4,570 | 32.83% | 582 | 4.18% | 4,200 | 30.17% | 13,922 |
| Shawnee | 31,662 | 55.42% | 22,723 | 39.77% | 2,748 | 4.81% | 8,939 | 15.65% | 57,133 |
| Wilson | 2,155 | 79.67% | 455 | 16.82% | 95 | 3.51% | 1,700 | 62.85% | 2,705 |
| Jewell | 838 | 72.68% | 261 | 22.64% | 54 | 4.68% | 577 | 50.04% | 1,153 |

This conservative-leaning[2] district, which is based in theKansas City metropolitan area and the college town ofLawrence, has been represented by Democratic CongressmanDennis Moore since he was first elected in1998. This year, however, Moore declined to seek a seventh term to Congress, calling for a "new generation of leadership."[15] On the Republican side,Kevin Yoder won the primary to became the Republican nominee; while Stephene Moore, a nurse and the wife of the retiring Congressman, won the Democratic nomination. Though the race was marked by sharp disagreement between Yoder and Moore on matters such as cap-and-trade and international outsourcing American jobs,[16] Yoder won the election with a 20-point margin of victory. This was Yoder's first of four congressional election victories.
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[5] | Likely R(flip) | November 1, 2010 |
| Rothenberg[6] | Likely R(flip) | November 1, 2010 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[7] | Likely R(flip) | November 1, 2010 |
| RCP[8] | Likely R(flip) | November 1, 2010 |
| CQ Politics[9] | Likely R(flip) | October 28, 2010 |
| New York Times[10] | Safe R(flip) | November 1, 2010 |
| FiveThirtyEight[10] | Safe R(flip) | November 1, 2010 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Kevin Yoder | 136,246 | 58.40 | |||
| Democratic | Stephene Moore | 90,193 | 38.66 | |||
| Libertarian | Jasmin Talbert | 6,846 | 2.93 | |||
| Total votes | 233,285 | 100.00 | ||||
| Republicangain fromDemocratic | ||||||
Source[17]
| County | Kevin Yoder Republican | Stephene Moore Democratic | Jasmin Talbert Libertarian | Margin | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| Douglas | 6,018 | 34.88% | 10,575 | 61.30% | 659 | 3.82% | -4,557 | -26.41% | 17,252 |
| Johnson | 118,876 | 64.74% | 59,858 | 32.60% | 4,899 | 2.67% | 59,018 | 32.14% | 183,633 |
| Wyandotte | 11,352 | 35.04% | 19,760 | 60.99% | 1,288 | 3.98% | -8,408 | -25.95% | 32,400 |

Based aroundmetro Wichita and rural counties in the south-central region ofKansas, this conservative[2] district has been represented by Republican CongressmanTodd Tiahrt since he was first elected in theRepublican Revolution of1994. This year, though, Congressman Tiahrt declined to seek a ninth term and opted torun for U.S. Senate instead. In the Republican primary, businessmanMike Pompeo edged out several rivals, includingState SenatorJean Schodorf and businessmanWink Hartman.State RepresentativeRaj Goyle, who raised eyebrows when he was elected to represent a conservative area in theKansas House of Representatives, became the Democratic nominee. The general election was contentious, and sparks flew when the Pompeo campaign tweeted a link to a controversial blog that referred to Goyle as "just another 'turban topper' we don’t need in Congress or any political office that deals with the U.S. Constitution, Christianity, and the United States of America!"[18] The tweet, recommending the piece as a "good read", led to an apology from Pompeo.[19] The Goyle camp attacked Pompeo for what they called "bigoted attacks" when a supporter of the Republican candidate sponsored billboards that said "Vote American, [v]ote Pompeo" and "True Americans vote for Pompeo."[20] Pompeo went on to defeat Goyle, 59%-36%.[21]
| Poll source | Dates administered | Mike Pompeo (R) | Raj Goyle (D) | David Moffett/Shawn Smith* (L) | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Survey USA[22] | October 25–28, 2010 | 54% | 38% | 2%* | 2% |
| Cole Hargrave[23] | October 10–11, 2010 | 48% | 31% | - | - |
| Survey USA[24] | October 6–7, 2010 | 53% | 40% | 2%* | 3% |
| Survey USA[25] | September 14–15, 2010 | 50% | 40% | 3% | 4% |
| Gerstein Agne[26] | September 8–9, 2010 | 46% | 46% | - | - |
| Gerstein Agne[26] | August 10–12, 2010 | 50% | 47% | - | - |
| Survey USA[27] | August 9–11, 2010 | 49% | 42% | 4% | 5% |
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[5] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Rothenberg[6] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[7] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| RCP[8] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| CQ Politics[9] | Safe R | October 28, 2010 |
| New York Times[10] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| FiveThirtyEight[10] | Safe R | November 1, 2010 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Mike Pompeo | 119,575 | 58.79 | |
| Democratic | Raj Goyle | 74,143 | 36.45 | |
| Reform | Susan G. Ducey | 5,041 | 2.48 | |
| Libertarian | Shawn Smith | 4,624 | 2.27 | |
| Total votes | 203,383 | 100.00 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
Source[28]
| County | Mike Pompeo Republican | Raj Goyle Democratic | Susan G. Ducey Reform | Shawn Smith Libertarian | Margin | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| Butler | 13,308 | 63.64% | 6,473 | 30.95% | 612 | 2.93% | 519 | 2.48% | 6,835 | 32.68% | 20,912 |
| Chautauqua | 1,010 | 78.54% | 204 | 15.86% | 40 | 3.11% | 32 | 2.49% | 806 | 62.67% | 1,286 |
| Cowley | 5,786 | 57.11% | 3,856 | 38.06% | 230 | 2.27% | 260 | 2.57% | 1,930 | 19.05% | 10,132 |
| Elk | 756 | 66.49% | 307 | 27.00% | 38 | 3.34% | 36 | 3.17% | 449 | 39.49% | 1,137 |
| Greenwood | 1,017 | 62.62% | 486 | 29.93% | 52 | 3.20% | 69 | 4.25% | 531 | 32.70% | 1,624 |
| Harper | 1,373 | 65.19% | 600 | 28.49% | 66 | 3.13% | 67 | 3.18% | 773 | 36.70% | 2,106 |
| Harvey | 6,597 | 57.51% | 4,362 | 38.03% | 283 | 2.47% | 229 | 2.00% | 2,235 | 19.48% | 11,471 |
| Kingman | 1,801 | 67.18% | 686 | 25.59% | 111 | 4.14% | 83 | 3.10% | 1,115 | 41.59% | 2,681 |
| Montgomery | 6,802 | 73.60% | 2,030 | 21.96% | 213 | 2.30% | 197 | 2.13% | 4,772 | 51.63% | 9,242 |
| Sedgwick | 76,548 | 56.69% | 52,475 | 38.86% | 3,101 | 2.30% | 2,897 | 2.15% | 24,073 | 17.83% | 135,021 |
| Sumner | 4,577 | 58.90% | 2,664 | 34.28% | 295 | 3.80% | 235 | 3.02% | 1,913 | 24.62% | 7,771 |
| Preceded by 2008 elections | United States House elections in Kansas 2010 | Succeeded by 2012 elections |