Image Caption: | 2024 map defined in 2022 map defined in Johnson v. Wisconsin Elections Commission 2011 map was defined in |
Chamber: | Assembly |
State: | Wisconsin |
District: | 61 |
Representative: | Amanda Nedweski |
Residence: | Pleasant Prairie |
Party: | Republican |
Incumbentsince: | January 3, 2023 (years) |
Population: | 59,361 |
Population Year: | 2020 |
Voting Age: | 47,545 |
Percent White: | 80.33 |
Percent Black: | 4.18 |
Percent Hispanic: | 8.98 |
Percent Asian: | 4.9 |
Percent Native American: | 1.95 |
Percent Pacific Islander: | 0.1 |
Website: | Official website |
Notes: | Southeast Wisconsin |
The 61st Assembly District of Wisconsin is one of 99 districts in the Wisconsin State Assembly.[1] Located in southeastern Wisconsin, the district comprises part of southwest Milwaukee County, including the villages of Greendale and Hales Corners, most of the city of Greenfield, and parts of southwest Milwaukee and northeast Franklin.[2] The district is represented by Republican Amanda Nedweski, since January 2023.[3] After the 2024 redistricting, Nedweski no longer resides in the new 61st district.
The 61st Assembly District is located within Wisconsin's 21st Senate district, along with the 62nd and 63rd Assembly Districts.[4]
The district was created in the 1972 redistricting act (1971 Wisc. Act 304) which first established the numbered district system, replacing the previous system which allocated districts to specific counties.[5] The 61st district was drawn roughly in line with the boundaries of the previous Racine County 2nd district (the northern part of the city of Racine). The 61st district boundaries were relatively consistent in redistricting from 1972 to 2011, with the exception of the 1982 redistricting, which scrambled all State Assembly districts and moved the 61st district to north-central Wisconsin for the 1983 - 1984 legislative session. That changed with the controversial 2011 redistricting plan (2011 Wisc. Act 43) which moved the district to Kenosha County - the territory which had been covered by the 61st district was then split between the 62nd and 66th Assembly districts. This was part of a larger gerrymandering plan for the Racine and Kenosha County districts to convert one Assembly seat and one Senate seat from tossups to safely Republican.
The 2024 redistricting again dramatically reshaped the 21st Senate district, moving the 61st district from Kenosha County to southwest Milwaukee County. Most of the area previously covered by the 61st district became the bulk of the new 32nd Assembly district. Under the new map configuration, the 61st Assembly district is projected to be one of the most competitive districts in the state legislature.
District created | |||||||
Dem. | Racine | Racine | January 1, 1973 | January 3, 1983 | |||
Rep. | Merrill | Langlade, Lincoln, Marathon | January 3, 1983 | January 7, 1985 | |||
Dem. | Racine | Racine | January 7, 1985 | July 1, 1990 | |||
--Vacant-- | July 1, 1990 | January 7, 1991 | |||||
Dem. | Racine | January 7, 1991 | January 7, 2013 | ||||
Rep. | Randall | Kenosha | January 7, 2013 | June 7, 2022 | [6] | ||
--Vacant-- | June 7, 2022 | Current | |||||
Rep. | Pleasant Prairie | January 3, 2023 | Current |
Year | Date | Elected | Defeated | Total | Plurality | Other primary candidates | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1972[7] | Democratic | 9,261 | 56.39% | Rep. | 7,162 | 43.61% | 16,423 | 2,099 | |||||
1974[8] | Democratic | 5,881 | 57.82% | Rep. | 4,291 | 42.18% | 10,172 | 1,590 | |||||
1976[9] | Democratic | 12,309 | 94.72% | Amer. | 686 | 5.28% | 12,995 | 11,623 | |||||
1978[10] | Democratic | 7,911 | 68.88% | Rep. | 3,575 | 31.12% | 11,486 | 4,336 | |||||
1980[11] | Democratic | 10,724 | 65.06% | Rep. | 5,758 | 34.94% | 16,482 | 4,966 | |||||
1982[12] | Sheehan Donoghue | Republican | 8,377 | 50.80% | Dem. | 8,112 | 49.20% | 16,489 | 265 | ||||
1984[13] | Democratic | 10,880 | 55.21% | Rep. | 8,827 | 44.79% | 19,707 | 2,053 | |||||
1986[14] | Democratic | 7,575 | 58.88% | Rep. | 5,291 | 41.12% | 12,866 | 2,284 | |||||
1988[15] | Democratic | 11,700 | 67.09% | Rep. | 5,738 | 32.91% | 17,438 | 5,962 | |||||
1990[16] | Democratic | 7,232 | 62.09% | Rep. | 4,415 | 37.91% | 11,647 | 2,817 | |||||
1992[17] | Democratic | 11,963 | 66.66% | Rep. | 5,984 | 33.34% | 17,947 | 5,979 | |||||
1994[18] | Democratic | 7,464 | 100.0% | --Unopposed-- | 7,464 | 7,464 | |||||||
1996[19] | Democratic | 10,218 | 85.97% | Tax. | 904 | 7.61% | 11,886 | 9,314 | |||||
Lib. | 764 | 6.43% | |||||||||||
1998[20] | Democratic | 9,515 | 100.0% | --Unopposed-- | 9,515 | 9,515 | |||||||
2000[21] | Democratic | 13,703 | 99.56% | 13,763 | 13,643 | ||||||||
2002[22] | Democratic | 9,525 | 98.15% | 9,705 | 9,345 | John Dickert (Dem.)[23] | |||||||
2004[24] | Democratic | 17,173 | 89.49% | Lib. | 1,980 | 10.32% | 19,189 | 15,193 | |||||
2006[25] | Democratic | 11,431 | 99.06% | --Unopposed-- | 11,539 | 11,323 | |||||||
2008[26] | Democratic | 16,267 | 87.71% | Lib. | 2,242 | 12.09% | 18,547 | 14,025 | |||||
2010[27] | Democratic | 10,026 | 81.96% | Lib. | 2,167 | 17.71% | 12,233 | 7,859 | |||||
2012[28] | Republican | 16,589 | 55.67% | Dem. | 13,186 | 44.25% | 29,798 | 3,403 | |||||
2014[29] | Republican | 17,452 | 97.41% | --Unopposed-- | 17,916 | 16,988 | |||||||
2016[30] | Republican | 19,622 | 66.59% | Dem. | 9,792 | 33.23% | 29,466 | 9,830 | |||||
2018[31] | Republican | 16,606 | 61.87% | Dem. | 10,207 | 38.03% | 26,841 | 6,399 | |||||
2020[32] | Republican | 28,254 | 96.26% | Dem. | 8 | 0.03% | 29,352 | 27,164 | |||||
2022[33] | Republican | 17,542 | 64.00% | Dem. | 9,851 | 35.94% | 27,408 | 7,691 |