In the election for Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Democrats' preferred candidate, Jill Underly, prevailed. Republicans, however, won both special elections for the Wisconsin Legislature, and Republicans' preferred candidates won both contested elections for the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.[3]
State elections
Executive
Superintendent of Public Instruction
2021 Wisconsin Superintendent of Public Instruction election
Incumbent Superintendent of Public InstructionCarolyn Stanford Taylor did not seek election to a full term. She was appointed to the seat by Governor Tony Evers, the previous Superintendent of Public Instruction, to fill the remainder of his term after he was elected Governor of Wisconsin in 2018.
Eight candidates filed petitions by the state deadline to run for election to this seat, of which, seven were approved.[4] The office is nonpartisan, thus all accepted candidates appeared on the primary ballot on February 16, 2021.[5] Amongst the candidates, Deborah Kerr was the only conservative, although she campaigned as a "pragmatic Democrat".[6]
Sheila Briggs, assistant state superintendent at the state Department of Public Instruction.
Joe Fenrick, Fond du Lac high school science teacher.
Troy Gunderson, Viterbo University professor and former superintendent of the School District of West Salem.
Shandowlyon (Shawn) Hendricks-Williams, former director of Evers' Milwaukee office and DPI Education Administrative Director of Teacher Education, Professional Development and Licensing.
Deborah Kerr, former superintendent of Brown Deer School District.
Steve Krull, principal of Milwaukee's Garland Elementary School and former Air Force instructor.
Jill Underly, superintendent of Pecatonica School District.
Jill Underly and Deborah Kerr won the most votes in the top-two primary, and advanced to the April 6 general election,[7] which Underly won with 57.6% of the vote.
Wisconsin Superintendent of Public Instruction Election, 2021[8]
A special election was held concurrent with the spring primary and spring general to fill the 13th State Senate seat vacated by the resignation of Scott L. Fitzgerald.
Seven candidates filed petitions by the state deadline to run for election to this seat, of which six were approved, including three Republicans, one Democrat, and two independents.[4] State Representative John Jagler won the Republican primary and went on to win the April special election with 51% of the vote.
2021 Wisconsin Senate 13th District Republican Primary[10]
A special election was held concurrent with the spring primary and spring general to fill the 89th State Assembly seat vacated by the resignation of John Nygren.
Five candidates filed petitions by the state deadline to run for election to this seat, all were approved, including four Republicans and one Democrat.[4]Elijah Behnke won the Republican primary and went on to win the special election with 63% of the vote.
2021 Wisconsin Assembly 89th District Republican Primary[12]
Ten candidates filed petitions by the state deadline to run for this seat, all were approved, including eight Republicans, one Democrat, and one Independent.[13]William Penterman won the June 15 Republican primary and went on to win the special election with 54% of the vote.[14]
Wisconsin Assembly, 37th District Special Republican Primary, 2021[15]
Sixty three of the state's 253 circuit court seats were up for election in 2021. Eleven of those seats were contested.[4] Three of the contested seats, in Calumet, Jackson, and Marathon counties, were newly created from a 2020 act of the Wisconsin Legislature.[17] A fourth newly created seat, in Dunn County, had only one candidate running.
In Bayfield County, incumbent Judge John P. Anderson defeated a challenge from attorney Vincent Scott Kurta.[18]
In Brown County, incumbent Judge Kendall M. Kelley defeated a challenge from attorney Rachel Maes.[19]
In Calumet County, attorney Carey John Reed defeated Calumet County corporation counsel Kimberly A. Tenerelli for a newly created judicial seat.[20][21][22]
In Dunn County, attorney Christina Mayer defeated attorney Nicholas P. Lange for the judicial seat being vacated by Judge Rod W. Smeltzer.[23][24]
In Fond du Lac County, former Green Lake County district attorney Andrew J. Christenson defeated attorney Laura Lavey to succeed outgoing judge Richard J. Nuss.[25][26][27] Former Fond du Lac city councilmember Catherine A. Block and attorney Dawn M. Sabel were eliminated in the February primary.[28]
In Green County, attorney Faun Marie Phillipson defeated attorney Jane Bucher to succeed outgoing judge Jim Beer.[29][30] Attorneys Peter B. Kelly and Daniel R. Bartholf were eliminated in the February primary.
In Jackson County, attorneys Daniel Diehn and Robyn R. Matousek will compete for a newly created judicial seat.
In Kenosha County Branch 1, incumbent Judge Larisa Benitez-Morgan was apparently defeated by former Racine County prosecutor Gerad Dougvillo.[31]
In Kenosha County Branch 6, deputy district attorney Angelina Gabriele defeated attorney Angela Cunningham to succeed outgoing judge Mary K. Wagner.[32] Attorney Elizabeth Pfeuffer was eliminated in the February primary.
In Marathon County, Marathon County corporation counsel Scott M. Corbett defeated attorney Daniel T. Cveykus for a newly created judicial seat.[33]
In Milwaukee County, assistant public defender Katie Kegel defeated attorney Susan Roth to replace outgoing judge Clare Fiorenza.[34]
Incumbent Joe Parisi was re-elected to a third full term as County Executive, he defeated challenger Mary Ann Nicholson with 79% of the vote.[35][36]
Sheboygan County
Sheboygan mayor
A regularly scheduled mayoral election was held in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, at the Spring general election, April 6, 2021. City council president Ryan Sorenson was elected mayor, defeating the incumbent mayor Mike Vandersteen. Sorenson, at age 27, became the youngest mayor in the city's history.[37]
Three seats were up for election on the Clintonville School Board. Eight candidates entered the primary, which narrowed the field to six. The six candidates advancing are Larry Czarnecki, Chadwick J. Dobbe, Glen Lundt, Laurie A. Vollrath, Jason L. Moder, and Ben Huber.[38][39]
Manawa mayor
Manawa's primary narrowed the field of mayoral candidates from 3 to two, with Mark Zelmer and Michael Frazier advancing.
^Bauer, Scott (February 12, 2021). "GOP-backed candidate for schools chief says she's a Democrat". AP News. Archived from the original on February 12, 2021. Retrieved April 5, 2021. Deborah Kerr said she has also voted for Republicans and tells GOP audiences on the campaign trail for the officially nonpartisan race that she is a 'pragmatic Democrat.'