Wisconsin's 21st Senate district
American legislative district in southeast Wisconsin
The 21st Senate district of Wisconsin is one of 33 districts in the Wisconsin Senate .[ 1] Located in southeastern Wisconsin, the district comprises northeast Racine County and southwest Milwaukee County . It includes the city of Franklin , the northern half of the city of Racine , the western half of the city of Greenfield , and part of southwest Milwaukee , as well as the villages of Greendale , Hales Corners , Caledonia , Wind Point , and North Bay .[ 2]
Current elected officials
Van H. Wanggaard is the senator representing the 21st district. He was elected to his first term in the 2010 general election, but was removed from office in a recall election in 2012. He subsequently was returned to office in the 2014 general election, and is now in his second four-year term.[ 3]
Each Wisconsin State Senate district is composed of three Wisconsin State Assembly districts. The 21st Senate district comprises the 61st, 62nd, and 63rd Assembly districts. The current representatives of those districts are:[ 4]
The district, in its current boundaries, crosses three congressional districts. Most of the district is contained within Wisconsin's 1st congressional district , which is represented by U.S. Representative Bryan Steil . The portion of the district in Greenfield falls within Wisconsin's 5th congressional district , represented by Scott L. Fitzgerald . The portion of the district in the city of Milwaukee falls within Wisconsin's 4th congressional district , represented by Gwen Moore .[ 5]
Recalls
The 21st Senate district is unique in Wisconsin recall history . In 1996, it became the first district in which a Wisconsin state legislator was successfully removed from office via recall election, when Kimberly Plache defeated George Petak . With the recall of Van H. Wanggaard in 2012, it became the only Wisconsin district where there have been more than one successful recall elections.[ 6]
Boundaries
As with all state senate and assembly seats, the boundaries of the 21st have moved over time during decennial redistricting . Senators of previous eras have represented different geographic areas.
The district was created after the 1850 census and reapportionment and was drawn for Winnebago County , in central Wisconsin. The inaugural holder was Coles Bashford in the 6th session of the Wisconsin Legislature, 1853.
In the 19th century, the district included at various times Marathon , Oconto , Shawano and Waupaca counties, and was located within the now-defunct 9th Congressional District
For most of the 20th century, the district covered the city of Racine and Racine County, in southeastern Wisconsin, within the boundaries of the 1st Congressional District .
In redistricting after the 2010 census, the city of Racine was mostly removed and rural and suburban portions of Kenosha County were added to the district, turning the 21st into a safe Republican seat.[ 7]
The 2024 redistricting again dramatically reshaped the district, removing all of Kenosha County and most of Racine County. The district instead moved back into the city of Racine, comprising the city's north side and stretching north into southwest Milwaukee County. Under the new map, it is projected to be one of the most competitive districts in the state Senate.
Past senators
The 21st senate district has had several notable officeholders, including American Civil War General John Azor Kellogg and Wisconsin Governors Coles Bashford and Walter Samuel Goodland .
A list of all previous senators from this district:
Senator
Party
Notes
Session
Years
District definition
District created by 1852 Wisc. Act 499.
1852
1852–1856 1856–1860 1861–1865 1866–1870 Winnebago County
Coles Bashford
Whig
Won 1852 election. Resigned 1855, elected Governor of Wisconsin.
6th
1853
7th
1854
Rep.
8th
1855
John Fitzgerald
Dem.
Won 1855 special election.
9th
1856
Edwin Wheeler
Rep.
10th
1857
11th
1858
Ganem W. Washburn
Rep.
12th
1859
13th
1860
Horace O. Crane
Rep.
Resigned June 1861.
14th
1861
Samuel M. Hay
Rep.
Won 1861 special election.
15th
1862
Joseph B. Hamilton
Rep.
16th
1863
17th
1864
George S. Barnum
Natl. Union
18th
1865
19th
1866
George Gary
Natl. Union
Resigned Oct. 1867.
20th
1867
William G. Ritch
Rep.
Won 1867 special election.
21st
1868
Ira W. Fisher
Rep.
22nd
1869
23rd
1870
James H. Foster
Rep.
Redistricted to 19th district .
24th
1871
Myron Reed
Dem.
25th
1872
Marathon , Oconto , Shawano , Waupaca counties, and & Lincoln County (organized 1876)
Myron H. McCord
Rep.
26th
1873
27th
1874
Willis C. Silverthorn
Dem.
28th
1875
29th
1876
Henry Mumbrue
Lib. Rep.
30th
1877
Marathon , Portage , and Waupaca counties
31st
1878
John Azor Kellogg
Rep.
32nd
1879
33rd
1880
Charles F. Crosby
Rep.
34th
1881
35th
1882
John Ringle
Dem.
36th
1883–1884
Shawano , Waupaca , and Marathon counties
37th
1885–1886
John E. Leahy
Rep.
38th
1887–1888
39th
1889–1890
Shawano and Waupaca counties, and
Joseph H. Woodnorth
Dem.
40th
1891–1892
41st
1893–1894
Portage and Waushara counties, and
John Phillips
Rep.
42nd
1895–1896
43rd
1897–1898
1896–1901 1902–1911 Portage and Waupaca counties
William H. Hatton
Rep.
44th
1899–1900
45th
1901–1902
46th
1903–1904
47th
1905–1906
Edward E. Browne
Rep.
48th
1907–1908
49th
1909–1910
50th
1911–1912
Edward F. Kileen
Rep.
51st
1913–1914
Waushara , Adams , Juneau , and Marquette counties
Frank H. Hanson
Rep.
52nd
1915–1916
53rd
1917–1918
John A. Conant
Rep.
54th
1919–1920
55th
1921–1922
Max W. Heck
Rep.
56th
1923–1924
1922–1953 1954–1963 Racine County
57th
1925–1926
Walter S. Goodland
Rep.
Won 1926 election. Re-elected 1930. Elected Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin in 1934.
58th
1927–1928
59th
1929–1930
60th
1931–1932
61st
1933–1934
Joseph Clancy
Dem.
62nd
1935–1936
63rd
1937–1938
Kenneth L. Greenquist
Prog.
64th
1939–1940
65th
1941–1942
Edward F. Hilker
Rep.
66th
1943–1944
67th
1945–1946
68th
1947–1948
69th
1949–1950
Gerald T. Flynn
Dem.
70th
1951–1952
71st
1953–1954
Lynn E. Stalbaum
Dem.
Won 1954 election. Re-elected 1958, 1962. Resigned 1964 after election to U.S. House .
72nd
1955–1956
73rd
1957–1958
74th
1959–1960
75th
1961–1962
76th
1963–1964
Henry Dorman
Dem.
Won 1965 special election. Re-elected 1966, 1970, 1974. Defeated in 1978 primary.
77th
1965–1966
78th
1967–1968
79th
1969–1970
80th
1971–1972
81st
1973–1974
82nd
1975–1976
83rd
1977–1978
Joseph A. Strohl
Dem.
Won 1978 election. Re-elected 1982, 1986. Majority Leader 1987-1990. Defeated in 1990 election.
84th
1979–1980
85th
1981–1982
86th
1983–1984
87th
1985–1986
88th
1987–1988
89th
1989–1990
George Petak
Republican
Won 1990 election. Re-elected 1994. Defeated in 1996 recall election.
90th
1991–1992
91st
1993–1994
Town of Caledonia
Town of Dover
Town of Mount Pleasant
Town of Yorkville
Village of Elmwood Park
Village of North Bay
Village of Sturtevant
Village of Union Grove
Village of Wind Point
City of Racine
Wards 1, 6, 7, Town of Burlington
Wards 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 14, 15, 16, City of Burlington
92nd
1995–1996
Kimberly Plache
Dem.
Won 1996 recall election. Re-elected 1998. Defeated in 2002 election.
93rd
1997–1998
94th
1999–2000
95th
2001–2002
Cathy Stepp
Rep.
Won 2002 election. Did not seek re-election.
96th
2003–2004
97th
2005–2006
John Lehman
Dem.
Won 2006 election. Defeated in 2010 election.
98th
2007–2008
99th
2009–2010
Van H. Wanggaard
Rep.
Won 2010 election. Defeated in 2012 recall election.
100th
2011–2012
John Lehman
Dem.
Won 2012 recall election. Did not seek re-election.
101st
2013–2014
Van H. Wanggaard
Rep.
Won 2014 election. Re-elected 2018, 2022.
102nd
2015–2016
103rd
2017–2018
104th
2019–2020
105th
2021–2022
106th
2023–2024
Most of Kenosha County, most of Racine County, part of Walworth County
References
^ "Senate District 21" . Wisconsin Legislature . Retrieved March 14, 2021 .
^ "Wisconsin Legislative Districts - Senate District 21 Boundaries" . Wisconsin Legislature . Retrieved March 13, 2021 .
^ "Senator Van H. Wanggaard" . Wisconsin Legislature . Retrieved March 13, 2021 .
^ Wisconsin Blue Book, 2011-12 edition, page 60 . ISBN 978-0-9752820-1-4 .
^ "State of Wisconsin Congressional Districts" (PDF) . Wisconsin Legislature . Retrieved March 13, 2021 .
^ Craig Gilbert (May 20, 2012). "Racine's 21st Senate District no stranger to recalls" . Milwaukee Journal Sentinel . Retrieved February 11, 2019 .
^ Berman, Ari (January 24, 2018). "How the GOP Rigs Elections" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved February 16, 2019 .
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