Wisconsin's 17th Senate district explained

Image Caption:2024 map defined in
2022 map defined in Johnson v. Wisconsin Elections Commission
2011 map was defined in
composed of Assembly districts 49, 50, and 51
Chamber:Senate
State:Wisconsin
District:17
Representative:Howard Marklein
Residence:Spring Green
Party:Republican
Incumbentsince:January 3, 2015 (years)
Population:178,093
Population Year:2020
Voting Age:137,984
Percent White:93.51
Percent Black:1.19
Percent Hispanic:2.54
Percent Asian:0.9
Percent Native American:1.22
Percent Pacific Islander:0.08
Website:Official website
Notes:Southwest Wisconsin

Wisconsin's 17th Senate district is one of 33 districts in the Wisconsin Senate.[1] Located in southwest Wisconsin, the district comprises all of Crawford, Grant, Green, Lafayette, and Iowa counties, as well as parts of southwest Dane County. It includes the cities of Boscobel, Brodhead, Cuba City, Darlington, Dodgeville, Lancaster, Mineral Point, Monroe, Oregon, Platteville, Prairie du Chien, and Shullsburg.[2]

Current elected officials

Howard Marklein is the senator representing the 17th district. He was first elected in the 2014 general election, and is now in his second four-year term. Before serving as senator, he was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from 2011 to 2015, representing the 51st Assembly district.[3] After the 2024 redistricting, Marklein no longer resides in the new district.

Each Wisconsin State Senate district is composed of three Wisconsin State Assembly districts. The 17th Senate district comprises the 49th, 50th, and 51st Assembly districts. The current representatives of those districts are:[4]

The 17th Senate district crosses two congressional districts. The portion of the district in Iowa, Lafayette, Green, and Dane counties fall within Wisconsin's 2nd congressional district, which is represented by Mark Pocan. The remainder of the district, in Grant and Crawford County, falls within Wisconsin's 3rd congressional district, represented by Derrick Van Orden.[5]

History

The 17th Senate district was one of the original 19 Senate districts when Wisconsin was established as a U.S. state. The 17th district was defined in Article XIV, Section 12 of the Wisconsin Constitution as "The towns of Racine, Caledonia, Mount Pleasant, Raymond, Norway, Rochester, Yorkville, and Burlington, in the county of Racine".[6] At that time, this list of towns constituted the northern half of Racine County, but after the establishment of Kenosha County in 1850, this collection of towns would constitute the entire territory of Racine County. During these years, the Free Soil Party was established as a splinter faction of the Democratic Party, and Racine County was a center of Free Soil power in the state of Wisconsin.

In 1852, the Wisconsin Legislature passed a reapportionment which expanded the Senate to 25 seats. The act redefined the 17th Senate district as "The towns of Janesville, Rock, Fulton, Porter, Centre, Plymouth, Newark, Avon, Spring Valley, Magnolia, and Union, in the county of Rock".[7] This constituted the western half of Rock County. The 1856 redistricting, which expanded the Senate to 30 seats, reiterated the existing boundaries for the 17th district, but noted the addition of the city of Janesville, which was incorporated in 1853. The 1861 redistricting act, which expanded the Senate to its current number of 33 senators, expanded the 17th district to cover all of Rock County.[8]

The district boundaries remained unchanged until 1892, when a controversial redistricting act was passed just days before the 1892 election. The new boundaries of the 17th district were defined as "The county of Green and the towns of Union, Porter, Magnolia, Center, Spring Valley, Plymouth, Avon, Newark, Beloit and the Third and Fourth wards of the city of Beloit, in the county of Rock, and the towns of Cottage Grove, Deerfield, Pleasant Springs, Dunkirk, Dunn, Rutland, Christiana, Albion and the city of Stoughton, in the county of Dane".[9] Simplified, this constituted all of Green County, western Rock County, and southeast Dane County.

The 1892 act was quickly superseded by an 1896 act, which redefined the 17th Senate district as "Green and Lafayette counties, and the towns of Avon, Beloit, Clinton, Newark, Plymouth, Spring Valley, Turtle, and the village of Clinton, and the city of Beloit, in the county of Rock." The list of towns in Rock county constituted roughly the southern half of the county. This act was, in turn, superseded by the 1901 redistricting act which removed Rock County from the district entirely, and added Iowa County to Green and Lafayette.[10]

In 1951, after several decades without redistricting, the Wisconsin Legislature passed the so-called Rosenberry plan, named for retired Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Marvin B. Rosenberry, who chaired the redistricting commission which drafted the plan. The new plan went into effect in the 1954 elections, after some additional wrangling and judicial arguments. Under that plan, the 17th Senate district added Grant County to Green, Lafayette, and Iowa.[11]

In the 1960s, the Legislature missed a court-imposed deadline to pass a redistricting plan after the 1960 U.S. census. The Wisconsin Supreme Court, therefore, enforced its own plan for legislative districts in a filing in State ex rel. Reynolds v. Zimmerman. In the court-ordered plan, the 17th Senate district added Richland County to Grant, Green, Iowa, and Lafayette.[12]

The district only changed slightly in the 1972 redistricting, the first to occur after the Supreme Court ruling requiring state legislative districts to offer equal representation. The 17th district lost several towns of northwest Grant County, and gained parts of southwest Rock County and northwest Dane County.[13]

In the 1981 - 1982 session, the Legislature again failed to pass a redistricting plan, and, as a result of litigation, a panel of three federal judges ordered a new districting plan in Wisconsin State AFL-CIO v. Elections Board. Under the court-ordered plan, the 17th Senate district lost most of Richland County and northern Green County, and the parts of Dane County that had been added in 1972, it gained more of Rock County and part of southern Sauk County.[14] This court-ordered plan was only in-effect for the 1982 election; in 1983 the Legislature acted to override the court-ordered plan with their own plan for the remainder of the 1980s elections. The 17th district regained all of Richland County and added most of Sauk County and part of southern Juneau County; it lost all of Green and Rock counties.[15]

The 1992 redistricting was again ordered by a panel of judges, and this time was not superseded by a Legislative plan. The 1992 plan saw the 17th district add all of Juneau and the remaining parts of Grant County while losing much of Richland County. The subsequent 2002 and 2011 maps vary in boundaries, but keep roughly this configuration, stretching from Grant to Juneau, with parts of Richland, Sauk, Iowa, and Lafayette counties.

Past senators

The boundaries of districts have changed over history. Previous politicians of a specific numbered district have represented different geographic areas, due to redistricting.

At statehood, the district was one of two for Racine County.It was represented by:

SenatorPartyNotesSessionYearsDistrict definition
District created1848 Northern Racine County
align=left Philo WhiteDem.1st
Victor Willard2nd1849
3rd1850
Stephen O. Bennett4th1851 Racine County
5th1852
Ezra MillerDem.6th1853
7th1854
James SutherlandRep.8th1855
9th1856
10th1857
11th1858
Zebulon P. BurdickRep.12th1859
13th1860
Ezra FootRep.14th1861
15th1862










Rock County
William A. LawrenceRep.16th1863
17th1864
18th1865
19th1866
Samuel J. Todd20th1867
21st1868
Charles G. WilliamsRep.22nd1869
23rd1870
24th1871
25th1872
Horatio DavisRep.26th1873
27th1874
28th1875
29th1876
Hamilton RichardsonRep.30th1877
31st1878
32nd1879
33rd1880
34th1881
35th1882
Simon LordRep.36th1883–1884
37th1885–1886
Allen P. LovejoyRep.38th1887–1888
39th1889–1890
Richard BurdgeRep.40th1891–1892
41st1893–1894 Green County and
Henry PutnamRep.42nd1895–1896
43rd1897–1898 Green and Lafayette counties and
Harry C. MartinRep.44th1899–1900
45th1901–1902
46th1903–1904Green, Iowa, and Lafayette counties
1910 population: 64,213
47th1905–1906
48th1907–1908
49th1909–1910
50th1911–1912
51st1913–1914
Platt WhitmanRep.52nd1915–1916
53rd1917–1918
Oscar R. OlsonRep.54th1919–1920
55th1921–1922
Olaf H. JohnsonRep.56th1923–1924
57th1925–1926
Charles W. HutchisonRep.58th1927–1928
59th1929–1930
align=left William OlsonRep.Died Nov. 193160th1931–1932
Vacant
George EngebretsonRep.Won 1932 special election61st1933–1934
62nd1935–1936
63rd1937–1938
Carl LovelaceRep.Died Feb. 194164th1939–1940
65th1941–1942
Vacant
Melvin OlsonRep.66th1943–1944
67th1945–1946
68th1947–1948
69th1949–1950
70th1951–1952
71st1953–1954
Robert S. TravisRep.72nd1955–1956Grant, Green, Iowa, and Lafayette counties
73rd1957–1958
74th1959–1960
75th1961–1962
Gordon RoseleipRep.76th1963–1964
77th1965–1966Grant, Green, Iowa, Lafayette, and Richland counties
78th1967–1968
79th1969–1970
80th1971–1972
81st1973–1974Iowa, Lafayette, Richland counties and
Most of Grant County
Most of Green County
Kathryn MorrisonDem.82nd1975–1976
83rd1977–1978
Richard KreulRep.Resigned July 199184th1979–1980
85th1981–1982
86th1983–1984Iowa, Lafayette counties and
Most of Grant County
Most of Green County
Western Rock County
Southern Sauk County
Part of Richland County
87th1985–1986Iowa, Lafayette, Richland counties and
Most of Grant County
Most of Sauk County
Southern Juneau County
Part of Vernon County
88th1987–1988
89th1989–1990
90th1991–1992
Vacant
Dale SchultzRep.Won 1991 special election
91st1993–1994Grant, Iowa, Juneau, Lafayette counties and
Most of Sauk County
Northeast Richland County
92nd1995–1996
93rd1997–1998
94th1999–2000
95th2001–2002
96th2003–2004Grant, Iowa, Juneau, counties and
Most of Lafayette County
Most of Sauk County
Most of Richland County
Part of Monroe County
97th2005–2006
98th2007–2008
99th2009–2010
100th2011–2012
101st2013–2014 Grant, Juneau, Lafayette, Richland counties and
Most of Sauk County
Western of Iowa County
Southwest Green County
Part of Monroe County
Rep.102nd2015–2016
103rd2017–2018
104th2019–2020
105th2021–2022
106th2023–2024 Grant, Juneau, Lafayette, Richland counties and
most of Sauk County
western of Iowa County
southwest Green County
part of Vernon County

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Senate District 17 . . March 10, 2021 .
  2. Web site: Wisconsin Legislative Districts - Senate District 17 Boundaries . . March 10, 2021 .
  3. Web site: Senator Howard L. Marklein . . March 10, 2021 .
  4. Book: Wisconsin Blue Book, 2011-12 edition, page 52. 978-0-9752820-1-4.
  5. Web site: State of Wisconsin Congressional Districts . . March 10, 2021 .
  6. Manual for the use of the Assembly of the State of Wisconsin, for the year 1853 . 1853 . State of Wisconsin . https://images.library.wisc.edu/WI/EFacs/WIBlueBks/BlueBks/WIBlueBk1853/reference/wi.wibluebk1853.i0004.pdf . Constitution of the State of Wisconsin . 38 . March 10, 2021 .
  7. An Act to apportion and district anew the members of the Senate and Assembly of the State of Wisconsin . Act . 499 . 1852 . . 776 .
  8. An Act to apportion the State into Senate and Assembly Districts . Act . 216 . 1861 . . 238.
  9. An Act to apportion the State of Wisconsin into Senate and Assembly districts . Special Session 2 Act . 1 . 1891 . . 8-9 .
  10. An Act to apportion and district anew the State of Wisconsin into Senate districts . Act . 309 . 1901 . . 427 .
  11. An Act to amend 4.01 and 4.02 of the statutes, relating to the apportionment of assemblymen and senators . Act . 728 . 1951 . . 583.
  12. https://cite.case.law/wis-2d/23/606/ . State ex rel. Reynolds v. Zimmerman . . May 14, 1964 . 23 . Wis. 2d . 606 . March 10, 2021 . .
  13. An Act ... relating to districting the senate and assembly based on the number of inhabitants shown by the certified results of the 1970 census of population . Act . 304 . 1971 . . 1193-1194 .
  14. https://cite.case.law/f-supp/543/630/ . Wisconsin State AFL-CIO v. Elections Board . . June 9, 1982 . 543 . F. Supp. . 630 . March 10, 2021 . .
  15. An Act ... relating to redistricting the senate and assembly based on the 1980 federal census of population and making miscellaneous changes in the statutes pertaining to decennial legislative redistricting . Act . 29 . 1983 . . 636, 644-645, 683 .