In the Spring of 2018, Ratcliff won her first public office when she was elected to the Cottage Grove village board.[3] Later that year, in the summer of 2018, incumbent Dane County board member Danielle Williams resigned her seat in order to accept a job as a lobbyist for the county government. The Dane County board chair, Sharon Corrigan, chose Ratcliff from a number of applicants to fill out the remainder of Williams' term, and Ratcliff's selection was ratified by a vote of the county board on September 6, 2018.[4] She was subsequently elected in spring of 2019 to finish the term, elected to a full term on the board in the 2020 Spring election and was re-elected in 2022.
Just after the Spring 2022 election, incumbent state representative Gary Hebl announced he would retire after nine terms in the Assembly. Within hours of his announcement, Ratcliff entered the race for the Democratic nomination in Hebl's 46th Assembly district.[5] Ultimately, four other candidates would also join the Democratic primary contest in the heavily Democratic district. Ratcliff centered her experience with local and county government, and ultimately prevailed in the primary with 36% of the vote.[6] Her opponent in the general election was Andrew McKinney, who she had earlier defeated in the April 2022 county board election. She ultimately won 70% of the vote in the general election.[7]
In 2023, incumbent state senator Melissa Agard announced she would run for Dane County Executive rather than seeking another term representing the 16th Senate district. The 16th Senate district was one of the safest Democratic districts in the state, comprising about half of the city of Madison. The 2024 redistricting act shifted the district to a slightly more competitive configration, shifting out of the city of Madison and into the eastern and southern suburbs, but the district remained heavily Democratic. The heavily Democratic Senate district attracted all three incumbent state representatives in the district, including Ratcliff, to forgo their Assembly re-elections to instead enter the Democratic Senate primary. Jimmy P. Anderson of Fitchburg was the first to announce,[8] followed quickly by Ratliff and then Samba Baldeh, of Madison. All three were progressive Democrats, running on a similar policy platform of expanding Medicaid and defending abortion rights, so the race would ultimately come down to personalities and coalitions.[9] Ratcliff prevailed, taking 52% of the vote.[10] She was unopposed in the general election and was sworn in as state senator on January 6, 2025.
Personal life and family
Melissa Larsen married Daniel Kartes in August 1995,[1] but ultimately divorced three years later.[11] Subsequently, she married Philip Ratcliff and took his last name. Melissa and Philip Ratcliff have two children together and reside in Cottage Grove, Wisconsin. They were divorced in June, 2023.[3]
Electoral history
Dane County Board (2020, 2022)
Dane County Board of Supervisors, 36th District Election, 2020