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Local and County Government:
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Much of the state's political history involved coalitions among different ethnic groups. The most famous controversy dealt with foreign language teaching in schools. This was fought out in the Bennett Law campaign of 1890, when the Germans switched to the Democratic Party, who won a major victory.
The state has supported Democrats in the last five presidential contests. However both the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections were close, with Wisconsin receiving heavy doses of national advertising because it was a "swing" or pivot state. Democrats Al Gore carried the presidential vote in 2000 by only 5,700 votes, John Kerry in 2004 by 14,000 votes. Republicans have strongholds in the Fox Valley and suburban Milwaukee (especially Waukesha County). Democrat strongholds include the City of Milwaukee, Madison and the state's Native American reservations. Most of Wisconsin's small towns and rural areas are swing regions.
Wisconsin's political history encompasses, on the one hand, Fighting Bob La Follette and the Progressive movement; and on the other, Joe McCarthy, the controversial anti-Communist censured by the Senate during the 1950s. In the early 20th century, the Socialist party had a base in Milwaukee; it faded out in the late 1950s, largely due to the red scare and racial tensions. The first Socialist mayor of a large city in the United States was Emil Seidel, elected mayor of Milwaukee in 1910; another Socialist, Daniel Hoan, was mayor of Milwaukee from 1916 to 1940.
William Proxmire, a Democratic Senator (1957-89) dominated the Democratic party for years; he was best known for attacking waste and fraud in federal spending. Democrat Russ Feingold was the only Senator to vote against the Patriot Act in 2001. Democrat Tammy Baldwin from Madison is the only openly lesbian U.S. Representative.
In 2004, Gwen Moore, a Democrat from Milwaukee, became Wisconsin's first (and thus far, only) African-American U.S. Representative.
Since the anti-Vietnam movement in the late 1960s, the university community in Madison has supported a liberal Democratic party, known for support for gay rights and environmentalism, and for anti-war sentiment. In 1982, sexual orientation was added by the state legislature as a protected category under existing anti-discrimination laws. However, in November 2006, voters approved a referendum banning gay marriages or civil unions in the state by a margin of 59% to 41%.
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