Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2012 Wisconsin elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2012 Wisconsin elections

← 2011April 3, 2012
November 6, 2012
2013 →
Elections in Wisconsin
Presidential elections
Presidential primaries
Democratic
2000
2004
2008
2016
2020
2024
Republican
2004
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
U.S. Senate elections
Class 1
Class 3
U.S. House of Representatives elections
General elections
Gubernatorial elections
Lieutenant Gubernatorial elections
Secretary of State elections
Attorney General elections
Treasurer elections
Superintendent elections
State Senate elections
State Assembly elections
Supreme Court elections
County Executive elections

The2012 Wisconsin Fall General Election was held in theU.S. state ofWisconsin on November 6, 2012. One of Wisconsin'sU.S. Senate seats and all ofWisconsin's eight seats in theUnited States House of Representatives were up for election, as well as sixteen seats in theWisconsin State Senate and all 99 seats in theWisconsin State Assembly. Voters also chose ten electors to represent them in theElectoral College, which then participated in selecting the president of the United States. The2012 Fall Partisan Primary was held on August 14, 2012.[1] In the presidential election, Wisconsin congressmanPaul Ryan was the Republican nominee forVice President of the United States.

2012 also saw the culmination of the recall effort in Wisconsin which had been incited by GovernorScott Walker's2011 Wisconsin Act 10, which stripped public employee unions of collective bargaining rights. During 2012, Walker faced arecall election along withfour Republican state senators. These recall elections were all held on June 5, 2012, with a special primary on May 8. Walker survived the gubernatorial recall, but Democrats gained control of the state Senate.

In the Fall general election, the Democratic presidential candidate, incumbent presidentBarack Obama, wonWisconsin's ten electoral votes and secured a second four-year term. U.S. SenatorHerb Kohl retired and was succeeded by fellow DemocratTammy Baldwin; there was no change to the partisan makeup of Wisconsin's congressional delegation, remaining at five Republicans and three Democrats. This was also the first legislative election after a dramatic Republican gerrymander was implemented in 2011; Republicans gained two seats in the Wisconsin Senate, regaining the majority, and maintained their majority in the Wisconsin State Assembly.

The2012 Wisconsin Spring Election was held April 3, 2012. This election featured a not-yet-settled Republican party presidential nominating contest, and various judicial and local elections, including county executive and mayoral elections in Wisconsin's largest city and county,Milwaukee. The2012 Wisconsin Spring Primary was held February 21, 2012.

Federal offices

[edit]

President

[edit]
Main article:2012 United States presidential election in Wisconsin

Incumbent presidentBarack Obama sought a second four-year term. In Wisconsin, voters elected Obama's electoral slate. Obama went on to win the majority of the electoral college.

Democratic primary

[edit]
Main article:2012 Democratic Party presidential primaries

In the 2012 Democratic Party presidential primaries, the Wisconsin Democratic presidential preference primary was held concurrent with the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. The only candidate for the Democratic nomination was incumbent president Barack Obama, who received about 98% of the vote.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]
Main article:2012 Republican Party presidential primaries

In the 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries, the Wisconsin Republican presidential preference primary was held concurrent with the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. As the incumbent president was a Democrat, the Republican presidential nominating contest was open and saw nine candidates enter the race. By the time of Wisconsin's presidential preference primary, only four candidates remained in the race, former Massachusetts governorMitt Romney, former U.S. senatorRick Santorum (PA), former Speaker of the House of RepresentativesNewt Gingrich (GA), and U.S. RepresentativeRon Paul (TX). Other candidates whose names appeared on the ballot included former AmbassadorJon Huntsman Jr. (UT) and U.S. RepresentativeMichele Bachmann (MN).

Mitt Romney won the Wisconsin Republican presidential preference primary with 44%, Santorum received 37% of the votes, Paul received 11%, with 6% going to Gingrich.[1]

General election

[edit]

Barack Obama won the presidential election against Mitt Romney and was awarded Wisconsin's ten electoral votes.

United States presidential election in Wisconsin, 2012[2]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticBarack Obama (incumbent) /
Joe Biden (incumbent)
1,620,98552.83%−3.39pp
RepublicanMitt Romney /
Paul Ryan
1,407,96645.89%+3.57pp
LibertarianGary Johnson /
Jim Gray
20,4390.67%+0.37pp
IndependentJill Stein /
Ben Manski
7,6650.25%
ConstitutionVirgil Goode /
Jim Clymer
4,9300.16%
IndependentJerry White /
Phyllis Scherrer
5530.02%
IndependentGloria La Riva /
Filberto Ramirez Jr.
5260.02%
IndependentRocky Anderson (write-in) /
Luis J. Rodriguez (write-in)
1120.00%
IndependentRoseanne Barr (write-in) /
Cindy Sheehan (write-in)
880.00%
Write-in5,1700.17%-0.05pp
Plurality213,0196.94%-6.96pp
Total votes3,068,434100.0%+2.85%
Democratichold

U.S. Senate

[edit]
Main article:2012 United States Senate election in Wisconsin

A regularly scheduled election was held for Wisconsin'sClass 1U.S. Senate seat at the Fall general election, November 6, 2012. The incumbent,Herb Kohl, first elected in 1988, retired after 24 years in the U.S. Senate. The election was won by DemocratTammy Baldwin, who had previously served 14 years in the U.S. House of Representatives. Baldwin received 51% of the vote and defeated former Wisconsin governorTommy Thompson in the general election. With her election, Baldwin became the first openly gay member of the U.S. Senate and Wisconsin's first female U.S. senator.

U.S. House

[edit]

All 8 of Wisconsin's congressional districts were up for election at the Fall general election, November 6, 2012. Seven of the eight incumbent representatives ran for reelection, with Tammy Baldwin vacatingDistrict 2 to run for U.S. Senate. Party composition remained unchanged after the general election.

DistrictIncumbentThis race[2]
Num.PVIRepresentativeFirst electedResultsCandidates
Wisconsin 1R+3Paul RyanRepublican1998Incumbent re-elected.
  • Green tickYPaul Ryan (Rep.) 54.9%
  • Rob Zerban (Dem.) 43.4%
  • Keith Deschler (Ind.) 1.7%
Wisconsin 2D+16Tammy BaldwinDemocratic1998Incumbent retired torun for U.S. senator.
New member elected.
Democratic hold.
  • Green tickYMark Pocan (Dem.) 68.0%
  • Chad Lee (Rep.) 32.0%
  • Joe Kopsick (Ind.)
Wisconsin 3D+6Ron KindDemocratic1996Incumbent re-elected.
Wisconsin 4D+21Gwen MooreDemocratic2004Incumbent re-elected.
  • Green tickYGwen Moore (Dem.) 72.3%
  • Dan Sebring (Rep.) 23.8%
  • Robert R. Raymond (Ind.) 2.8%
Wisconsin 5R+12Jim SensenbrennerRepublican1978Incumbent re-elected.
Wisconsin 6R+5Tom PetriRepublican1979(Special)Incumbent re-elected.
  • Green tickYTom Petri (Rep.) 62.1%
  • Joe Kallas (Dem.) 37.9%
Wisconsin 7EVENSean DuffyRepublican2010Incumbent re-elected.
Wisconsin 8R+2Reid RibbleRepublican2010Incumbent re-elected.

State offices

[edit]

Executive

[edit]

Gubernatorial recall

[edit]
Main article:2012 Wisconsin gubernatorial recall election

Wisconsin governorScott Walker was subject to a recall petition in the Spring of 2012 and faced a recall election on June 5, 2012. He survived the recall election; Walker received 53% of the vote in a rematch with his 2010 opponent, Milwaukee mayorTom Barrett.

Wisconsin Gubernatorial Recall Election, 2012[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanScott Walker (incumbent)1,335,58553.08%+0.79pp
DemocraticTom Barrett1,164,48046.28%−0.24pp
IndependentHariprasad Trivedi14,4630.57%
Write-in1,5370.06%+0.06pp
Total votes2,516,065100.00%
Republicanhold

Lieutenant gubernatorial recall

[edit]
Main article:2012 Wisconsin lieutenant gubernatorial recall election

Alongside Walker, lieutenant governorRebecca Kleefisch was subject to recall petitions in the Spring of 2012 and faced recall elections on June 5, 2012. She survived the recall election; Kleefisch defeated Fire Fighters union presidentMahlon Mitchell with a slightly smaller margin than Walker had in defeating Barrett.

Wisconsin Lieutenant Gubernatorial Recall Election, 2012[4]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanRebecca Kleefisch (incumbent)1,301,73952.9%
DemocraticMahlon Mitchell1,156,52047.1%
Total votes2,458,259100.0
Republicanhold

Legislative

[edit]

State Senate recall

[edit]
Main article:2012 Wisconsin Senate recall elections

Four Wisconsin state senators were subjects of a coordinated recall effort to remove them from office in the Spring of 2012. The four recall elections occurred on June 5, 2012. One incumbent,Van H. Wanggaard, was defeated in the recall. One other chose to resign and was replaced by another of the same party. The net result was that Democrats gained the majority of the state Senate.

Dist.IncumbentThis race
MemberPartyFirst electedResultGeneral[5]
13Scott L. FitzgeraldRepublican1994Incumbent retained
21Van H. WanggaardRepublican2010Incumbent recalled.
Democratic gain.
23Terry MoultonRepublican2010Incumbent retained
29Vacant(Incumbent resigned)New member elected. Republican hold

State Senate 33rd district special election

[edit]

A special election was held December 2, 2012, to fill the33rd State Senate seat vacated byRich Zipperer, who resigned to become deputy chief of staff to Governor Scott Walker. Republican state representativePaul Farrow won the seat without opposition.[6]

State Senate

[edit]
Main article:2012 Wisconsin Senate election

The 16 even-numbered districts out of 33 seats in theWisconsin Senate were up for election at the Fall general election, November 6, 2012. Ten of these seats were held by Democrats and six were held by Republicans. Prior to the election, Democrats controlled the chamber with a 17 to 16 majority. Republicans flipped two seats in the general election, taking an 18–15 majority going into the101st Wisconsin Legislature.

Dist.IncumbentThis race[2]
MemberPartyFirst electedPrimary election candidatesGeneral election candidatesResult
2Robert CowlesRepublican1987(special)Robert Cowles (Rep.)Green tickYRobert Cowles (Rep.) 98.54%Incumbent re-elected.
4Lena TaylorDemocratic2004Lena Taylor (Dem.)
  • Green tickYLena Taylor (Dem.) 86.62%
  • David D. King (Ind.) 13.11%
Incumbent re-elected.
6Spencer CoggsDemocratic2003(special)
  • Nikiya Harris (Dem.)
  • Michael Mayo (Dem.)
  • Allyn Monroe Swan (Dem.)
  • Elizabeth M. Coggs (Dem.)
  • Delta L. Triplett (Dem.)
Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.
8Alberta DarlingRepublican1992
  • Alberta Darling (Rep.)
  • Green tickYAlberta Darling (Rep.) 95.58%
  • Beth L. Lueck (Dem. write-in)
Incumbent re-elected.
10Sheila HarsdorfRepublican2000
  • Sheila Harsdorf (Rep.)
  • Daniel C. Olson (Dem.)
  • Green tickYSheila Harsdorf (Rep.) 59.17%
  • Daniel C. Olson (Dem.) 40.72%
Incumbent re-elected.
12Jim HolperinDemocratic2008
  • Green tickYTom Tiffany (Rep.) 56.24%
  • Susan Sommer (Dem.) 40.45%
  • Paul O. Ehlers (Ind.) 3.26%
Incumbent retired.
New member elected.
Republican gain.
14Luther OlsenRepublican2004
  • Luther Olsen (Rep.)
  • David Wayne Eiler (Rep.)
  • Margarete Worthington (Dem.)
  • Green tickYLuther Olsen (Rep.) 57.53%
  • Margarete Worthington (Dem.) 42.4%
Incumbent re-elected.
16Mark F. MillerDemocratic2004
  • Mark F. Miller (Dem.)
  • Green tickYMark F. Miller (Dem.) 98.73%
Incumbent re-elected.
18Jessica KingDemocratic2011
(recall)
Incumbent lost.
New member elected.
Republican gain.
20Glenn GrothmanRepublican2004
  • Glenn Grothman (Rep.)
  • Tanya Lohr (Dem.)
  • Green tickYGlenn Grothman (Rep.) 68.63%
  • Tanya Lohr (Dem.) 31.3%
Incumbent re-elected.
22Robert WirchDemocratic1996
  • Robert Wirch (Dem.)
  • Pam Stevens (Rep.)
  • Green tickYRobert Wirch (Dem.) 69.57%
  • Pam Stevens (Rep.) 30.29%
Incumbent re-elected.
24Julie LassaDemocratic2003(special)
  • Julie Lassa (Dem.)
  • Scott Kenneth Noble (Rep.)
  • Steve Abrahamson (Rep.)
  • Green tickYJulie Lassa (Dem.) 56.59%
  • Scott Kenneth Noble (Rep.) 43.31%
Incumbent re-elected.
26Fred RisserDemocratic1962
Incumbent re-elected.
28Mary LazichRepublican1998
  • Mary Lazich (Rep.)
  • Jim Ward (Dem.)
  • Green tickYMary Lazich (Rep.) 63.38%
  • Jim Ward (Dem.) 36.51%
Incumbent re-elected.
30Dave HansenDemocratic2000
  • Dave Hansen (Dem.)
  • John Macco (Rep.)
  • Ray Suennen (Rep.)
  • Green tickYDave Hansen (Dem.) 54.23%
  • John Macco (Rep.) 45.68%
Incumbent re-elected.
32Jennifer ShillingDemocratic2011
(recall)
  • Jennifer Shilling (Dem.)
  • Bill Feehan (Rep.)
  • Green tickYJennifer Shilling (Dem.) 58.28%
  • Bill Feehan (Rep.) 41.64%
Incumbent re-elected.

State Assembly

[edit]
Main article:2012 Wisconsin State Assembly election

All 99 seats of theWisconsin State Assembly were up for election at the Fall general election, November 6, 2012. This was the first election after the redistricting of the legislature in 2011, and 21 seats had no incumbent on the ballot in this election. Republicans won 60 seats, matching their total from the 2010 election and maintaining their majority going into the 101st Wisconsin Legislature.

SeatsParty
(majority caucus shading)
Total
DemocraticInd.Republican
Last election (2010)3816099
Total before this election3815897
Up for election3915999
of which:Incumbent retiring81615
Vacated1012
Unopposed160420
This election3906099
Change from last electionIncrease 1Decrease 1Steady
Total after this election3906099
Change in totalIncrease 1Decrease 1Increase 2

Judicial

[edit]

State Court of Appeals

[edit]

Four seats on theWisconsin Court of Appeals were on the ballot at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. None of the elections were contested, one new judge was elected.[1]

  • In District I, incumbent judgeRalph Adam Fine was elected to a fifth six-year term, running unopposed. He was first elected in 1988.
  • In District II, incumbent chief judgeRichard S. Brown was elected to a sixth six-year term, running unopposed. He was first elected in 1978 (to a four-year term).
  • In District III, incumbent judgeMark Mangerson, appointed by Governor Scott Walker in 2011, was elected to his first six-year term, running unopposed.
  • In District IV, assistant state attorney generalJoAnne Kloppenburg was elected to a six-year term, running unopposed, to succeed retiring judgeMargaret J. Vergeront.

State Circuit Courts

[edit]

Fifty two of the state's 249 circuit court seats were on the ballot at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. Twelve of those elections were contested, two incumbents were defeated.[1]

Local offices

[edit]

Kenosha County

[edit]

Kenosha mayor

[edit]

A regularly scheduled mayoral election was held inKenosha, Wisconsin, at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. The incumbent Keith Bosman, first elected in 2008, was elected to a second four-year term, defeating city council president Jesse Downing. Two other candidates were eliminated in the February primary: video producer Jeff Baas and bar owner Nasser Museitif.

Marathon County

[edit]

Wausau mayor

[edit]

A regularly scheduled mayoral election was held inWausau, Wisconsin, at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. The incumbent Jim Tipple, first elected in 2004, was elected to a third four-year term.

Milwaukee County

[edit]

Milwaukee mayor

[edit]
Main article:2012 Milwaukee mayoral election

A regularly scheduled mayoral election was held inMilwaukee, Wisconsin, at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. The incumbentTom Barrett, first elected in 2004, was elected to a third four-year term, defeating University of Wisconsin faculty member Edward McDonald. One other candidate was eliminated in the February primary, Ieshuh Griffin.

Milwaukee County executive

[edit]

A regularly scheduled county executive election was held inMilwaukee County, Wisconsin, at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. The incumbentChris Abele, first elected in a 2011 special election, was elected to his first four-year term without opposition.

Outagamie County

[edit]

Appleton mayor

[edit]

A regularly scheduled mayoral election was held inAppleton, Wisconsin, at the Spring general election, April 3, 2012. The incumbent Tim Hanna, first elected in 1996, was elected to a fifth four-year term, defeating city councilmember Thomas Konetzke.[7]

Sheboygan County

[edit]

Sheboygan mayor recall

[edit]

A mayoral recall election was held inSheboygan, Wisconsin, concurrent with the Spring primary, February 21, 2012. A special recall primary was held on January 17, 2012. After incumbent mayorBob Ryan ran into a series of controversies, Sheboygan residents collected over 4,700 signatures to trigger a recall election, submitting their petitions on November 1, 2011. In the recall election, Ryan was defeated by former state representativeTerry Van Akkeren in a rematch of the2009 mayoral election.[8] Six other candidates ran and were eliminated in the nonpartisan primary: city councilmember Jean Kittelson, retired executive Roberta Filicky-Peneski, businessman Randy Schwoerer, musician Erik Neave, high school student Asher Heimermann, and restaurant worker Mark Hermann.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeLemanski, Lynn; Pohlman, Julie, eds. (2013)."Elections"(PDF).State of Wisconsin 2013–2014 Blue Book (Report).Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau.ISBN 978-0-9752820-6-9. RetrievedApril 8, 2024.
  2. ^abcCanvass Results for 2012 Presidential and General Election - 11/6/2012 (Report).Wisconsin Government Accountability Board. December 26, 2012. RetrievedApril 8, 2024 – viaWisconsin Historical Society.
  3. ^"Canvass Results for 2012 JUNE 5 RECALL ELECTION - 6/5/2012"(PDF). G.A.B. Canvass Reporting System. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on October 15, 2016. RetrievedDecember 30, 2022.
  4. ^"Wisconsin Recall Election Results Map". Elections.huffingtonpost.com. RetrievedJuly 23, 2012.
  5. ^"Elections". RetrievedJune 9, 2012.
  6. ^"Republican to be sworn in to Senate".The Post-Crescent. December 7, 2012. p. A2. RetrievedApril 9, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  7. ^Penzenstadler, Nick (April 8, 2012)."In votes and dollars, Mayor Hanna comes out on top".The Post-Crescent. p. 3. RetrievedApril 9, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  8. ^"Van Akkeren hopes 'to move (Sheboygan) forward' after beating Ryan".WTMJ-TV. Archived fromthe original on November 9, 2014. RetrievedDecember 17, 2014.
  9. ^Schultz, Steve (January 17, 2012)."Sheboygan mayor advances to runoff in recall".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. RetrievedMay 21, 2024.
U.S.
President
U.S.
Senate
U.S.
House

(Election
ratings
)
Governors
Attorneys
general
Other
statewide
elections
State
legislatures
Mayoral
Local
States and
territories
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012_Wisconsin_elections&oldid=1264012291"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp