After graduating from law school, Taylor went to work as a public defender for more than two years, representing indigent citizens in need of legal services.[3] In 1996, she opened Taylor and Associates Law Office, a general practice firm on the north side of Milwaukee.[4]
Wisconsin legislature
State Assembly (2003-2005)
Taylor made her first run for public office in the Spring of 2003, in a special election for Wisconsin State Assembly necessitated by the resignation of state representative Antonio R. Riley. In the Democratic primary, she faced Ted Kraig, then co-chair of the health care task force for Citizen Action.[5] Taylor prevailed in the primary with 68% of the vote, and faced no other opposition for the special general election in the heavily Democratic district.[6][7]
About a year after Taylor joined the Assembly, her district's state senator, Gwen Moore, announced a run for United States House of Representatives, creating an open seat in the 4th state Senate district for the fall 2004 election.[8] Taylor declared for the state senate, and faced a competitive primary against six-term incumbent state representative Johnnie E. Morris-Tatum from the neighboring 11th Assembly district.[9] She prevailed with 47% of the vote; Morris-Tatum received 36%, and a third candidate received 17%.[10] She faced no opponent in the general election.[11] When Democrats won the Senate majority in 2006, Taylor was named chair of the Senate committee on judiciary and corrections, and was also appointed to a seat on the powerful budget-writing Joint Finance Committee.[1]
Taylor chairing a committee meeting in 2009Taylor in 2009
Taylor was re-elected without opposition in 2008, and retained her committee positions as Democrats continued in the majority.[12] As chair of the judiciary and corrections committee, she expanded the committee's work on criminal justice reforms and implemented the "State of Justice" tour, bringing committee hearings to several different locations around the state of Wisconsin.[13]
Taylor speaking at the May 12, 2011, protest at the Wisconsin State Capitol
After the 2010 election, Republicans gained full control of state government, winning both chambers of the Legislature and the governor's office. Shortly into the start of the 2011 legislative term, Walker proposed his controversial "Budget Repair Bill", which would eliminate collective bargaining rights for Wisconsin's public-sector unions. This resulted in mass protests at the Wisconsin State Capitol, which continued for months. Responding to public pressure and unable to slow down the legislative consideration of the bill, Taylor fled the state with 13 other Democratic state senators in order to deny a quorum. The situation received national attention, and Taylor was a frequent guest on progressive political talk shows, appearing several times on The Ed Show.[14] During the course of debate, Taylor made statements comparing Walker's proposed legislation to Adolf Hitler's plan to eliminate unions.[15] On her Twitter account she wrote "LIKE HITLER in 1933, WALKER is busting unions."[16][17]
In the 2011 Wisconsin Senate recall elections, three Republican state senators were removed from office, which gave the Democrats a brief return to being the majority party in the state senate. During this time, Taylor served as co-chair of the Joint Finance Committee.[18]
Prior to losing their senate majority in the recall elections, Republicans passed redistricting legislation. The 2012 Wisconsin elections were the first to use the new map. Under the new map, Taylor's district remained overwhelmingly Democratic. She faced only an independent opponent in 2012, winning her third term with 86% of the vote.[19]
In April 2018, Taylor generated controversy and received a citation for disorderly conduct after an incident in which she used the term "house nigga" (a combination of "house slave" and "nigga") during a dispute with a bank teller who had refused to cash a check (citing insufficient funds). Both Taylor and the teller involved are African Americans.[23]
In 2020, Taylor was re-elected to a fifth term.
Other political campaigns
2008 county executive campaign
Taylor ran for Milwaukee Countyexecutive, challenging Republican incumbent Scott Walker in the Spring 2008 election.[24] Walker was already widely perceived as a likely candidate for governor in 2010, and Wisconsin Democrats saw the campaign as a chance to derail him, while Republican donors—both in the state and around the country—funneled money into his campaign.[25] Taylor was badly outspent in the election, with Walker raising more than $500,000 for the campaign.[26] Walker prevailed, taking 58% of the vote, and he went on to win the 2010 gubernatorial election two years later.[27]
In the fall of 2019, Taylor launched a campaign for mayor of Milwaukee, challenging four-term incumbent Democratic mayor Tom Barrett in the 2020 Milwaukee mayoral election.[28] She survived the February non-partisan primary, which narrowed the field to the top two vote-getters,[29] but was defeated by Barrett in the general election, receiving 36% of the vote.[30][31][32]
After incumbent Democratic Lieutenant Governor of WisconsinMandela Barnes announced he would not run for re-election, Taylor briefly entered the race to succeed him, announcing her candidacy in October 2021.[33][34] She ended her campaign just two months later, on December 25, 2021, choosing instead to focus on the upcoming Milwaukee mayoral election.[35]
In 2020, incumbent mayor Tom Barrett received an ambassadorial appointment, necessitating a special election in 2022. Taylor ran again, but fell to third place in the non-partisan primary, behind acting mayor Cavalier Johnson and long-time city council member Bob Donovan.[36][37]
2023 municipal judge candidacy
In the 2023 Spring election, Taylor sought election to a municipal judge seat in Milwaukee.[38] She was defeated in the April4 general election by Molly Gena, the managing attorney of a pro bono legal services provider.[39][40]
Judgeship (2024–present)
On January 26, 2024, Governor Tony Evers appointed Taylor to fill the Wisconsin circuit court judgeship in Milwaukee County left vacant by the resignation of judge Audrey Skwierawski. Taylor resigned from the state senate later that day, and was sworn in as judge on January30.[2]
Electoral history
Wisconsin Assembly (2003)
Wisconsin Assembly, 18th District Special Election, 2003
↑"About Lena". Lena C. Taylor, Wisconsin State Senate, 4th District. Archived from the original on December 24, 2023. Retrieved 2022-05-23– via Wayback Machine.
↑2022 Spring Primary - February 15, 2022 (Report). City of Milwaukee. February 15, 2022. Archived from the original on April 1, 2022. Retrieved February 12, 2024.{{cite report}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)