2016 Wisconsin State Senate election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2016 Wisconsin State Senate election

← 2014 November 8, 2016 (2016-11-08) 2018 →

16 of the 33 seats in the Wisconsin State Senate
17 seats needed for a majority
Turnout67.34%[1]
  Majority party Minority party
  Mary Lazich 2009.JPG Shilling Campaign (5964200435) (cropped).jpg
Leader Mary Lazich Jennifer Shilling
Party Republican Democratic
Leader's seat District 28 District 32
Last election 19 14
Seats before 18 14
Seats won 20 13
Seat change Increase1 Decrease1
Popular vote 618,589 639,545
Percentage 48.62% 50.26%
Seats up 8 8
Races won 9 7

Wisconsin State Senate 2016.svg
Results of the elections:
     Republican gain      Democratic hold
     Republican hold      No election

President before election

Mary Lazich
Republican

Elected President

Roger Roth
Republican

An election was held on November 8, 2016 to elect 16 of the 33 members of Wisconsin's State Senate. The election coincided with elections for other offices, including U.S. President, U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives and State Assembly. The primary election was held on August 9, 2016.

Republicans consolidated their control of the Senate by gaining one seat, winning 9 seats compared to 7 seats for the Democrats.[2]

Results[]

Statewide[]

Statewide results of the 2016 Wisconsin State Senate election:[3]

Party Candi-
dates
Votes Seats
No. % No. +/– %
Republican Party 11 618,589 48.62% 9 Increase1 56.25%
Democratic Party 13 639,545 50.26% 7 Decrease1 43.75%
Integrity Party 1 2,093 0.16% 0 Steady 0.00%
Scattering 12,126 0.95% 0 Steady 0.00%
Total 25 1,272,353 100.00% 16 Steady 100.00%
Popular vote
Democratic
50.26%
Republican
48.62%
Other
1.11%
House seats
Republican
56.25%
Democratic
43.75%

District[]

Results of the 2016 Wisconsin State Senate election by district:[3]

District Democratic Republican Others Total Result
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes
District 2 30,796 34.95% 57,269 65.00% 44 0.05% 88,109 Republican Hold
District 4 62,099 98.33% - - 1,054 1.67% 63,153 Democratic Hold
District 6 60,129 98.89% - - 676 1.11% 60,805 Democratic Hold
District 8 - - 77,331 95.51% 3,635 4.49% 80,966 Republican Hold
District 10 32,863 36.76% 56,496 63.20% 38 0.04% 89,397 Republican Hold
District 12 33,713 37.04% 57,273 62.92% 42 0.05% 91,028 Republican Hold
District 14 35,555 42.89% 47,294 57.05% 48 0.06% 82,897 Republican Hold
District 16 77,047 98.39% - - 1,263 1.61% 78,310 Democratic Hold
District 18 36,366 44.06% 46,076 55.83% 87 0.11% 82,529 Republican Hold
District 20 - - 79,743 98.21% 1,450 1.79% 81,193 Republican Hold
District 22 50,841 98.16% - - 953 1.84% 51,794 Democratic Hold
District 24 41,091 47.63% 45,139 52.32% 45 0.05% 86,275 Republican Gain
District 26 95,246 98.57% - - 1,378 1.43% 96,624 Democratic Hold
District 28 - - 70,269 98.10% 1,362 1.90% 71,631 Republican Hold
District 30 40,214 51.27% 38,175 48.67% 47 0.06% 78,436 Democratic Hold
District 32 43,585 48.86% 43,524 48.79% 2,097 2.35% 89,206 Democratic Hold
Total 639,545 50.26% 618,589 48.62% 14,219 1.12% 1,272,353

References[]

  1. ^ "Voter Turnout Partisan - Non-Partisan Through April 2018". Madison, U.S.A.: Wisconsin Elections Commission. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  2. ^ Marley, Patrick; Stein, Jason (November 9, 2016). "GOP strengthens hold on Legislature". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Milwaukee, U.S.A. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Statewide Results All Offices (post-Presidential recount)" (PDF). Madison, U.S.A.: Wisconsin Elections Commission. pp. 5–9. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
Retrieved from ""