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Wisconsin Assembly, District 46/Asamblea de Wisconsin, Distrito 46

Wisconsin Legislative BranchWisconsin’s legislature makes state laws. The legislature has two houses: the Wisconsin Senate and the Wisconsin Assembly. Proposed laws (bills) can originate from either the state senate or assembly. Both houses must approve the bill before it is passed on to the governor for signature or veto. The legislature can override a veto with a two-thirds majority vote in each house. The legislature controls the spending of state funds through appropriation.Wisconsin AssemblyThe Wisconsin Assembly has ninety-nine representatives. Voters elect representatives to represent their assembly district for a two-year term. There is no term limit.__________Poder Legislativo de Wisconsin La legislatura de Wisconsin produce las leyes estatales. La legislatura consta de dos cámaras: el Senado de Wisconsin y la Asamblea de Wisconsin. Las propuestas de ley pueden originarse tanto en el Senado estatal como en la Asamblea. Ambas cámaras deben aprobar el proyecto de ley antes de transmitirla al gobernador para su firma o veto. La legislatura puede anular un veto con un voto mayoritario de dos tercios en cada cámara. La legislatura controla el gasto de los fondos estatales a través de las leyes de asignación. Asamblea de WisconsinLa Asamblea de Wisconsin tiene noventa y nueve representantes. Los votantes eligen representantes para representar a su asamblea de distrito por un término de dos años. No hay límite de términos.Nota: Las respuestas de los candidatos que aparecen en español se tradujeron de las respuestas originales de los candidatos en inglés.

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Ranked Candidates

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All Candidates

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    John Donohue
    (Rep)

  • Candidate picture

    Joan Fitzgerald
    (Dem)

Biographical Information

Please describe your priorities for your term in office and your specific qualifications to effectively address those issues.

What do you see as the most pressing housing-related issue in Wisconsin, and what policies, if any, would you support to address the issue?

What redistricting process, if any, do you believe the legislature should put in place before the next national census to ensure fair representation for voters?

What, if anything, will you do to ensure our schools have the resources to improve outcomes for its students, including those with disabilities?

What guardrails, if any, would you support to protect our environment, health, property values, and household budgets from large projects such as hyperscale data centers and Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs)?

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Campaign Phone 920-650-2119
Campaign Mailing Address PO Box 72
Fort Atkinson, WI 53538
Education Bachelor of Science in Education and Master of Science in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Wisconsin Whitewater
Personal Pronouns she/her
I’m running for re-election to the Assembly because we need common sense, collaborative, and responsive representation in Madison. As a former public school teacher, I know how important public schools are to our communities. I’ll work hard to ensure that every child gets a high-quality education regardless of where they live. Making healthcare, housing, and childcare accessible and affordable continues to be a major priority. I authored legislation to do all of that last session and will continue fighting to ensure those bills get signed into law. And as always, I will continue my work to keep our communities and families safe by supporting firearm safe storage requirements and more funding for mental health services.
Statewide, the supply of housing is at historic lows. Median home prices are going up. Renters face rent increases larger than the growth in their wages. We need housing of all types, including affordable, workforce, and market rate. Last session, I supported legislation that made substantial changes to the Workforce Home Loan Program and the State Low Income Housing Tax Credit. Moving forward, I will work to advance legislation that creates a housing repair fund and increases assistance for first time home buyers.
In 2024, Wisconsin had new, fair maps for the first time in decades. In the long term, Wisconsin needs a nonpartisan redistricting process. I support a nonpartisan, independent commission process and transparency in that process so Wisconsinites have confidence in the final result.
As a public school teacher for 33 years, I experienced firsthand the negative consequences of declining support for our schools. Last session, I authored legislation that would have increased general aid to schools and co-authored legislation to increase the special education reimbursement. With declining enrollments, local districts, especially rural ones, are squeezed and are being forced to make decisions that hurt our students and families. We must look at the overall school funding formula and find ways to direct more resources to our public schools. I do not support using public tax dollars to support private, voucher schools.
I support regulations that control costs, create transparency, and protect everyday ratepayers from bearing the cost of increased energy use. Any regulations put in place must protect the environment with strong water usage regulations and strict enforcement, they must encourage renewable energy, and they should require strong worker protections, including paying the prevailing wage. While regulations are important, we should recognize that without proper funding for enforcement, they do little to actually protect Wisconsinites. Funding must also be a consideration in any legislation passed.