F. Joseph Sensenbrenner Jr. Explained

Joe Sensenbrenner
Order:52nd
Office:Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin
Term Start:April 1983
Term End:April 18, 1989
Predecessor:Joel Skornicka
Successor:Paul Soglin
Office1:Deputy Attorney General of Wisconsin
Governor1:Martin J. Schreiber
Lee S. Dreyfus
Term Start1:March 1981
Term End1:April 1983
Predecessor1:David Hanson
Successor1:Edward Garvey
Party:Democratic
Birth Place:Appleton, Wisconsin
Residence:Madison, Wisconsin
Children:2 sons
Profession:management consultant, attorney

Frank Joseph "Joe" Sensenbrenner Jr. (born 1948) is a retired American attorney, management consultant, and Democratic politician. He was the 52nd Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin, serving from 1983 to 1989, and held high-ranking offices in the state government, serving as executive secretary and legal advisor to Governor Patrick J. Lucey, and as Deputy Attorney General of Wisconsin under Bronson La Follette. He is currently President of the Board of Rooted, a non-profit organization which works to encourage healthy and sustainable neighborhoods in Madison.

Early life and education

Born into a well-off family in Appleton, Wisconsin, Sensenbrenner graduated from Georgetown Preparatory School, a Jesuit boarding school in North Bethesda, Maryland.[1] He received his bachelor's degree in classics and political economy from Williams College in 1970, and went on to earn his J.D. from University of Pennsylvania in 1973.[2]

Career

Before his third year in law school, in the summer of 1972, Sensenbrenner went to work in the Wisconsin state government as an intern for the Health Policy and Planning Task Force.[3] After being admitted to the State Bar of Wisconsin, Sensenbrenner was employed as a pardon and extradition counsel to Governor Patrick J. Lucey, and was soon promoted to legal advisor to the Governor. He briefly left the Governor's office to accept a role as an Assistant Attorney General in the Wisconsin Department of Justice, but returned to Lucey's office in December 1975 when he was appointed executive secretary and chief of staff.[4] He served with Lucey until his resignation, and then returned to the Wisconsin Department of Justice as an Assistant Attorney General for local government issues.[3] He was subsequently promoted to Deputy Attorney General in 1981 by Attorney General Bronson La Follette.[5] He remained in the job until his election as Mayor of Madison in April 1983.[6]

In December 1982, incumbent Madison Mayor Joel Skornicka announced he would not run for a third term. Two weeks later, Sensenbrenner announced his candidacy. Sensenbrenner quickly earned the endorsement of the outgoing Mayor and inherited many of his campaign supporters and staff.[3] Sensenbrenner's campaign emphasized his experience in state government and management skills, and, in the crowded 8-person nonpartisan primary, he came in a close second to former alderman and past mayoral candidate Robert Reynolds.[7] Reynolds and Sensenbrenner faced off in the April election, with both running on a liberal Democratic platform. Sensenbrenner continued to emphasize his managerial acumen, while Reynolds focused more on his desire to lead and motivate the city's various constituencies. Sensenbrenner prevailed with 53% of the vote in the April general election.[8] Sensenbrenner went on to win reelection in 1985, taking 73% of the vote,[9] and again in 1987.[10]

In 1989, Sensenbrenner sought reelection while advocating for a proposed convention center on Lake Monona. Sensenbrenner was challenged by former Mayor Paul Soglin, who had served six years as mayor in the 1970s, and four other candidates. He faced attacks throughout the race on the prioritization of the convention center, seen as a luxury pavilion for the city's elites, over the interests and services for working class downtown and near-downtown districts. Sensenbrenner barely survived the February primary, with only 50 votes separating him from 3rd place finisher Rick Berg.[11] Also on the April election ballot was a city referendum for raising property taxes to pay for Sensenbrenner's proposed convention center. Sensenbrenner and the referendum were defeated by a similar margin.[12] [13] Despite the setback for the convention center, it did eventually get built. New-Mayor Paul Soglin quickly reversed his position from the campaign and the convention center, now known as Monona Terrace, was opened in 1997.[14]

After leaving government, Sensenbrenner started a management consulting business, Sensenbrenner Associates, and offered his services to businesses and governments.[15] He retired in 2009.

Personal life and family

Sensenbrenner is a great-grandson and inheritor of Wisconsin industrialist Frank Jacob Sensenbrenner, the 2nd President of the Kimberly-Clark corporation and a former President of the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents.[16] Jim Sensenbrenner, who represented Wisconsin for 21 terms in the United States House of Representatives, is a second cousin of Joe Sensenbrenner.

He married Mary Ellyn Drury of Portage, Wisconsin, on May 22, 1976, at St. Mary's Catholic Church in Portage. At the time of their wedding, he was executive secretary to Governor Lucey and she was an attorney for the Office of the State Insurance Commissioner.[1] They have two adult sons and still reside in Madison.

Outside of politics and business, Sensenbrenner became involved in several nonprofits, serving on the boards of the Grassroots Leadership College, the Bartell Community Theatre, and the Urban Open Space Foundation, which pushed the development of Madison's McPike Park in 1999. Sensenbrenner is still President of the Board of the nonprofit Rooted, the successor organization to the Urban Open Space Foundation.[17]

Electoral history

Madison Mayor (1983)

| colspan="5" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| Nonpartisan Primary, February 15, 1983| colspan="5" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 5, 1983

Madison Mayor (1985, 1987)

| colspan="5" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 2, 1985| colspan="5" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 7, 1987

Madison Mayor (1989)

| colspan="5" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| Nonpartisan Primary, February 21, 1989| colspan="5" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 4, 1989

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Miss Drury weds governor's aide . . May 24, 1976 . 4 . January 28, 2021 . .
  2. Web site: Joe Sensenbrenner . Center for Resilient Cities . https://web.archive.org/web/20160824141208/https://www.resilientcities.org/people/joe-sensenbrenner/ . August 24, 2016 . January 28, 2021 . Wayback Machine.
  3. News: Joseph Sensenbrenner . . April 3, 1983 . January 28, 2021 . .
  4. News: Sensenbrenner is Picked to Head Lucey's Office Staff . . December 12, 1975 . January 28, 2021 . .
  5. News: Sensenbrenner to Succeed Hanson . . March 11, 1981 . 27 . January 28, 2021 . .
  6. News: Justice post is expected to be Garvey's . . June 10, 1983 . 6 . January 28, 2021 . .
  7. News: Reynolds, Sensenbrenner reach mayor's race finals . . February 16, 1983 . 1 . Mell . Doug . January 28, 2021 . .
  8. News: Sensenbrenner ready to roll . . April 6, 1983 . Stamler . Mike . 1 . January 28, 2021 . .
  9. News: Sensenbrenner wins handily . . April 3, 1985 . Mell . Doug . 5 . January 25, 2021 . .
  10. News: For 2 more years, it's Mayor Joe . . April 8, 1987 . Mulhern . Barbara . 1 . January 28, 2021 . .
  11. News: It's mayor vs. ex-mayor . . February 22, 1989 . Patricia . Simms . Ron . Seely . 1 . January 28, 2021 . .
  12. News: Mayor Soglin - again . . April 5, 1989 . 1 . Patricia . Simms . January 28, 2021 . .
  13. News: Voters thumb noses at convention center . . April 5, 1989 . 1 . January 28, 2021 . .
  14. News: Deal of the Decade . . July 14, 1997 . Callender . David . 5 . January 28, 2021 . .
  15. News: Ex-Mayor Sensenbrenner Does Lots of Seminars . . July 3, 2006 . Ingersoll . Brenda . January 28, 2021 .
  16. News: F. J. Sensenbrenner, 87, Neenah Industrialist, Regent President, Dies . . July 22, 1952 . 1 . January 28, 2021 . .
  17. Web site: Our Board . Rooted . January 28, 2021 .