Listen To WPR online Live Streaming Page Archive Streaming Page Click here to support WPR! Return to the WPR Home Page
Explore WPR
WPR Home
Support WPR!
Support WPR's Online Community!
Contact Us
About WPR
Newsletters and Reports
Studios, Stations and Program Schedules
Station Coverage Maps, Reception and Technical Issues
WPR Program Index
The Ideas Network
The NPR News and Classical Network
WPR News
Internet Webcasting
WPR's National SHows
The Radio Store
Related Links

WPR Programs
Search wpr.org
This Month's Featured Stories
NEWS LINKS: WPR News Home | Bureaus | Reporters | Awards
FEATURES: Specials, Series & Documentaries | Wisconsin Vote | Wisconsin Life | StoryCorps
DEMS OFFICIALLY TAKE CONTROL OF WISCONSIN STATE SENATE WPR News - Dems officially take control of Wisconsin State Senate
Wednesday July 18, 2012 by Shawn Johnson

Democrats officially took control of the state Senate Tuesday, returning Wisconsin to divided government after a year-and-a-half of Republican control.

Senators returned to Madison to swear in Democrat John Lehman of Racine and Republican Jerry Petrowski of Marathon. Both won their summer recall elections, with Lehman defeating Republican incumbent Van Waangaard to give Democrats a 17-16 majority.

New Democratic Senate Majority Leader Mark Miller used his speech on the Senate floor to call for new jobs bills. Among them, a grant program for worker training and a new focus on accelerating public works projects like road and bridge repair. Miller said the full legislature should come back now and not wait until January, "We are the eighth worst in the country in terms of job creation. People who are out of work can't wait another six months for us to do our jobs. So I really hope that both the governor and Assembly Republicans will recognize that there's an opportunity for us to move forward on an agenda that can actually have some benefit."

But Republican Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald called the push for a special or extraordinary session disingenuous. He said Republicans would come back if Democrats would pass the mining deregulation bill the Assembly passed earlier this year, "If they were serious about job creation in this state, that's something I would put forward: the bill we passed in the Assembly that got killed in the Senate here that every Democrat voted against—yeah, that's something we'd look at."

Along with making Sen. Miller the new Majority Leader, the Senate elected Madison Democrat Fred Risser as the body's president. Also, Miller named Sen. Lena Taylor of Milwaukee the new co-chair of the legislature's powerful Joint Finance Committee.

You can also listen to this story or download it now! (1:29)



Support for WPR provided by

Shop Now!



Support WPR!


HOME | ABOUT | PROGRAM INDEX | MEMBERSHIP | SPONSORSHIPS | WPR NEWS
IDEAS NETWORK | NEWS & CLASSICAL NETWORK | RADIO STORE
LIVE STREAMS | AUDIO ARCHIVES

For questions or comments about our programming, call Audience Services
at 1-800-747-7444, email us at listener@wpr.org, or use our Online Feedback Form.
View our Privacy Policy.   Send comments about our website to webmaster@wpr.org.

©2013 by Wisconsin Public Radio - a service of the
Wisconsin Educational Communications Board
and University of Wisconsin - Extension.