Election Name: | 2014 Wisconsin elections |
Country: | Wisconsin |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2013 Wisconsin elections |
Previous Year: | 2013 |
Next Election: | 2015 Wisconsin elections |
Next Year: | 2015 |
Election Date: | April 1, 2014 November 4, 2014 |
The 2014 Wisconsin Fall General Election was held in the U.S. state of Wisconsin on November 4, 2014. Wisconsin's Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, and State Treasurer were all up for election, as well as Wisconsin's eight seats in the United States House of Representatives. The November general election in 2014 also featured a statewide referendum on an amendment to the Constitution of Wisconsin. The 2014 Wisconsin Fall Primary Election was held on August 12, 2014.
The Republican Party of Wisconsin held onto all statewide offices up for election in 2014, except for secretary of state, where Democrat Doug La Follette won his tenth term. Republicans also retained control of the Wisconsin State Senate and Wisconsin State Assembly. The partisan breakdown of Wisconsin's delegation to the United States House of Representatives was unchanged, remaining five Republicans and three Democrats.
For local offices and judicial seats, the 2014 Wisconsin Spring General Election was held April 1, 2014. No Wisconsin Supreme Court seats were up in 2014, but three seats on the Wisconsin Court of Appeals and 41 Wisconsin Circuit Court seats were up. The 2014 Wisconsin Spring Primary Election was held on February 18.
See main article: United States House of Representatives elections in Wisconsin, 2014. All 8 of Wisconsin's congressional districts were up for election at the Fall general election. Seven of eight incumbent representatives ran for reelection, with Tom Petri retiring from District 6. Party composition remained unchanged after the general election.
scope=col rowspan=3 | District | scope=col rowspan=3 colspan="2" | Incumbent | scope=col rowspan=3 colspan="2" | Elected | scope=col rowspan=3 | Defeated | scope=col colspan=2 | Democratic | scope=col colspan=2 | Republican | scope=col colspan=2 | Others | scope=col colspan=2 | Total | scope=col rowspan=3 | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=col colspan=2 style="background:" | scope=col colspan=2 style="background:" | scope=col colspan=2 | scope=col colspan=2 | |||||||||||||||
scope=col data-sort-type="number" | Votes | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | % | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | Votes | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | % | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | Votes | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | % | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | Votes | scope=col data-sort-type="number" | % | |||
District 1 | Paul Ryan | Paul Ryan | 105,552 | 36.63% | 182,316 | 63.27% | 302 | 0.10% | 288,170 | 12.23% | align=left | Republican Hold | ||||||
District 2 | Mark Pocan | Mark Pocan | Peter Theron (R) | 224,920 | 68.40% | 103,619 | 31.51% | 308 | 0.09% | 328,847 | 13.96% | align=left | Democratic Hold | |||||
District 3 | Ron Kind | Ron Kind | Tony Kurtz (R) Ken Van Doren (Ind) | 155,368 | 56.46% | 119,540 | 43.44% | 253 | 0.09% | 275,161 | 11.68% | align=left | Democratic Hold | |||||
District 4 | Gwen Moore | Gwen Moore | Dan Sebring (R) | 179,045 | 70.24% | 68,490 | 26.87% | 7,357 | 2.89% | 254,892 | 10.82% | align=left | Democratic Hold | |||||
District 5 | Chris Rockwood (D) | 101,190 | 30.40% | 231,160 | 69.45% | 476 | 0.14% | 332,826 | 14.13% | align=left | Republican Hold | |||||||
District 6 | Tom Petri | Glenn Grothman | Mark L. Harris (D) | 122,212 | 40.87% | 169,767 | 56.77% | 7,054 | 2.36% | 299,033 | 12.69% | align=left | Republican Hold | |||||
District 7 | Sean Duffy | Sean Duffy | Kelly Westlund (D) | 112,949 | 39.41% | 169,891 | 59.28% | 3,763 | 1.31% | 286,603 | 12.17% | align=left | Republican Hold | |||||
District 8 | Reid Ribble | Reid Ribble | Ron Gruett (D) | 101,345 | 34.94% | 188,553 | 65.01% | 150 | 0.05% | 290,048 | 12.31% | align=left | Republican Hold | |||||
Total | 1,102,581 | 46.81% | 1,233,336 | 52.36% | 19,663 | 0.83% | 2,355,580 | 100.00% |
See main article: 2014 Wisconsin gubernatorial election. Incumbent Republican Governor Scott Walker and Lieutenant Governor Rebecca Kleefisch, first elected in 2010, sought re-election to a second term after surviving a recall election in 2012.
The Democratic Party nominated business executive Mary Burke and state senator John Lehman for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively. Burke was a member of the Madison school board and former Secretary of Wisconsin's Department of Commerce. Lehman was a state senator and former teacher from Racine, who had just won back his senate seat in a recall election.
Walker and Kleefisch won the November election with 52% of the vote.[1]
See main article: 2014 Wisconsin Attorney General election.
Republican incumbent attorney general J. B. Van Hollen, first elected in 2006, did not seek re-election to a third term. Waukesha County District Attorney Brad Schimel defeated Jefferson County District Attorney Susan Happ in the November general election.
Happ defeated state representative Jon Richards and Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne in the Democratic primary.
See main article: 2014 Wisconsin Secretary of State election.
Incumbent Democratic secretary of state Doug La Follette, first elected in 1974 and regaining his seat in 1982, narrowly won his 10th four-year term, defeating the Republican candidate, telecommunications manager Julian Bradley.
La Follette was unopposed in the Democratic primary.
In the Republican primary, Bradley defeated State Representative Garey Bies.
See main article: 2014 Wisconsin State Treasurer election.
Incumbent Republican Treasurer Kurt W. Schuller, first elected in 210 declined to run for re-election. In the election, Republican nominee Matt Adamczyk defeated Democratic nominee Dave Sartori, a former Greenfield alderman to succeed Schuller.
Adamczyk defeated attorney Randall Melchert in the Republican primary.
Sartori defeated Dave Leeper, a former Green County District Attorney, in the Democratic primary.
See main article: 2014 Wisconsin Senate election. 17 of the Wisconsin State Senate's 33 seats were up for election in the November general election. Republicans added one seat to their majority, retaking the 21st senate district which had been lost in the 2012 recall elections.
Seats | Party (majority caucus shading) | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Republican | ||||
nowrap colspan=2 | Last election (2012) | 8 | 8 | 16 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" colspan=2 | Total after last election (2012) | 15 | 18 | 33 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" colspan=2 | Total before this election | 15 | 17 | 32 | |
Up for election | 7 | 10 | 17 | ||
of which: | nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Incumbent retiring | 3 | 3 | 6 |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Vacated | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Unopposed | 2 | 0 | 2 | |
nowrap style="background:#ccc" colspan=2 | This election | 6 | 11 | 17 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" colspan=2 | Change from last election | 1 | 1 | ||
nowrap style="font-size:80%" colspan=2 | Total after this election | 14 | 19 | 33 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" colspan=2 | Change in total | 1 | 2 |
Dist. | Incumbent | This race | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Member | Party | First elect | Status | Candidates | Results | ||||||
01 | Republican | align=center | 2010 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
03 | Democratic | align=center | 2002 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
05 | Republican | align=center | 2010 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
07 | Democratic | align=center | 2010 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
09 | Republican | align=center | 2010 | Ran for U.S. House of Representatives | nowrap | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. House New member elected Republican hold | |||||
11 | --Vacant-- | nowrap | Incumbent resigned New member elected Republican hold | ||||||||
13 | Republican | align=center | 1994 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
15 | Democratic | align=center | 1974 (2010) | Did not run | nowrap | Incumbent retired New member elected Democratic hold | |||||
17 | Republican | align=center | 1991 | Did not run | nowrap | Incumbent retired New member elected Republican hold | |||||
19 | Republican | align=center | 1982 | Did not run | nowrap | Incumbent retired New member elected Republican hold | |||||
21 | Democratic | align=center | 2006 (2012) | Ran for lieutenant governor | nowrap | Incumbent retired to run for lieutenant governor New member elected Republican gain | |||||
23 | Republican | align=center | 2010 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
25 | Democratic | align=center | 1986 | Did not run | nowrap | Incumbent retired New member elected Democratic hold | |||||
27 | Democratic | align=center | 1986 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
29 | Republican | align=center | 2012 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
31 | Democratic | align=center | 2006 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected | |||||
33 | Republican | align=center | 2012 | Ran | nowrap | Incumbent re-elected |
All 99 seats of the Wisconsin State Assembly were up for election in November. 21 Assembly incumbents (14 Republicans, 7 Democrats) did not seek re-election.
Affiliation | Party | Total | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Democratic | Vacant | |||||
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Before 2014 elections | 60 | 39 | 99 | 0 | ||
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Latest voting share | ||||||
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | After 2014 elections | 63 | 36 | 99 | 0 | ||
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Voting share | 64% | 36% |
Three seats on the Wisconsin Court of Appeals were up for election in 2014. None of the three elections was contested.
Forty one of the state's 249 circuit court seats were up for election in 2014. Four of those elections were contested.
In the November election, Wisconsin voters overwhelmingly approved an amendment to the Constitution of Wisconsin to establish a dedicated transportation fund administered by the Wisconsin Department of Transportation. The amendment also specified that none of the money which flowed into the fund, collected by transportation fees or taxes, could be appropriated to any other program. Critics argued that purpose of the amendment was to create budget inflexibility that would force legislators to raid education funds to balance the budget.[2] [3]
There was an attempt to amend the Constitution of Wisconsin to establish a right to life. This amendment did not ultimately make it onto the ballot in 2014, as it did not obtain a necessary vote in the 101st Wisconsin Legislature.