Wisconsin's 79th Assembly district explained

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:79
Representative:Alex Joers
Residence:Middleton
Party:Democratic
Incumbentsince:January 3, 2023 (years)
Population:60,002
Population Year:2020
Voting Age:48,827
Percent White:72.54
Percent Black:7.39
Percent Hispanic:7.88
Percent Asian:10.68
Percent Native American:1.57
Percent Pacific Islander:0.11
Website:Official website
Notes:Madison, Wisconsin

The 79th Assembly District of Wisconsin is one of 99 districts in the Wisconsin State Assembly.[1] Located in south-central Wisconsin, the district is entirely contained within the city of Madison, in central Dane County. The district comprises much of the west side of the city of Madison.[2] The district is represented by Democrat Alex Joers, since January 2023.[3] After the 2024 redistricting, Joers no longer resides in the new 79th district.

The 79th Assembly District is located within Wisconsin's 27th Senate district, along with the 80th and 81st Assembly districts.[4]

History

The 79th Assembly district has had a volatile history in redistricting, and has had four major changes to its composition in the seven redistricting cycles since its creation.

The district was initially drawn encompassing most of Marquette County, the southern halves of Adams and Juneau counties, and parts of northern Columbia County and northern Sauk County. The first representative of the district was Tommy Thompson, who previously represented the Adams - Juneau - Marquette district. The 1982 court-ordered redistricting moved the 79th district to the city of Appleton, Wisconsin, in Outagamie County, roughly taking the place of the 42nd Assembly district. The Legislature's 1983 redistricting act moved the district to south-central Wisconsin, comprising the southwest corner of Dane County, most of the northern quarter of Green County, and a small part of northwestern Rock County. The 1992 redistricting made only minor changes to the 1983 map, but added half of the city of Middleton, which would become an anchor for the district over the next 30 years. The 2002 map added more of Middleton and shrunk the geographic footprint of the district to a strip of western Dane County. The 2011 redistricting act shed the towns of western Dane County and shifted the district to north-central Dane County, adding the village of Waunakee. As the population of Middleton and Waunakee surged 25% and 23%, respectively, from the 2010 to 2020 census, the district shed remaining rural towns and became more concentrated around those two municipalities. The 2024 redistricting shifted the district entirely into the city of Madison.

For notable past representatives, Tommy Thompson went on to become the 42nd Governor of Wisconsin and 19th United States Secretary of Health and Human Services. David Prosser, Jr., went on to serve on the Wisconsin Supreme Court for 18 years. Joe Wineke later served as Chairman of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin.

List of past representatives

List of representatives to the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 79th district!Member!Party!Residence!Counties represented!Term start!Term end!Ref.
District created
Tommy ThompsonRep.ElroyColumbia, Juneau, Marquette, Sauk
Rep.AppletonOutagamieJanuary 3, 1983January 7, 1985
Joe WinekeDem.VeronaDane, Green, RockJanuary 7, 1985April 20, 1993
--Vacant--Dane, GreenApril 20, 1993July 11, 1993
Rick SkindrudRep.Mount HorebJuly 11, 1993January 6, 2003
Sondy Pope-RobertsDem.Mount HorebDaneJanuary 6, 2003January 7, 2013
Dianne HesselbeinDem.MiddletonJanuary 7, 2013January 2, 2023[5]
Alex JoersDem.MiddletonJanuary 3, 2023Current

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Assembly District 79 . . February 4, 2021 .
  2. Web site: Wisconsin Legislative Districts - Assembly District 79 Boundaries . . February 4, 2021 .
  3. Web site: Representative Alex R. Joers . . January 3, 2023 .
  4. An Act ... relating to: legislative redistricting . Act . 94 . 2023 . . February 23, 2024 .
  5. Web site: Representative Dianne Hesselbein . . February 4, 2021.