Tom Cotton
State of Arkansas
Arkansas Senate Intelligence
Tom Cotton sits in one of the GOP’s safest arenas: Arkansas is R+36, and his 13 years in office have fused national-security hawkishness with a culturally conservative, law-and-order brand that fits the state’s electorate. The state’s defining political feature is its blend of populist economics and deep-red identity politics—older, heavily white, and still shaped by a sizable veteran population (7.4%) and a manufacturing-agriculture backbone. That gives Cotton wide room to operate as a national figure, but it also means Arkansas voters expect ideological clarity and tangible economic relevance, not transactional dealmaking for its own sake.
For advocates, the opening is to tie any ask to security, jobs, and local resilience. Arkansas is not a persuasion state so much as a validation state: messages work when they reinforce self-reliance while addressing real strain—median income is $60,773, poverty sits at 11.5%, and obesity at 39.6%. Campaigns framed around defense supply chains, energy reliability, rural health access, or workforce stability can travel; anything that reads as coastal, regulatory, or culture-war-adjacent will get boxed out fast.
Economic & Demographic Snapshot
Data sourced from U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-Year Estimates (2017-2021 vs. 2019-2023). All figures are statistical estimates with 90% confidence level.
Arkansas State Demographics
Median Age 38.5 (vs 38.5) · Homeownership 66.4% (vs 65.5%) · Bachelor’s+ 25.8% (vs 33.7%) · Poverty 11.5% (vs 12.4%) · Income $60,773 (vs $37,585)
Age Distribution
Near the national median age (38.5 vs 38.5 nationally). The largest age cohort is 10–19 at 13.4%.
Race & Ethnicity
White residents are the largest group at 69.1%. Also significant: Black (14.7%).
* Hispanic includes respondents of any race. Racial categories include both Hispanic and non-Hispanic individuals.
Education
25.8% hold a bachelor’s degree or higher, below the 33.7% national average. 11.3% of residents lack a high school diploma.
Income Distribution
Median household income is $60,773, well above the $37,585 national median.
Housing
Homeownership at 66.4% (vs 65.5% nationally). Median rent is $947. Median home value is $188,000.
How People Get to Work
Car-dependent: 78.9% drive alone to work. Average commute is 22.5 minutes.
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