Factsheet

Young Political Leaders in Wisconsin

Young Candidates for Congress 2020

Number of candidates from Wisconsin 17
Average age of candidates 52.19
Number of candidates age 35 or younger 0
The youngest candidate Mike Gallagher
born 1984
White
running for the Republican Party
Number of female candidates 4 (23.53%)
Average age of female candidates 48.00
Average age of male candidates 53.58
Average age of Democratic candidates 49.88
Average age of Republican candidates 52.86
Wisconsin Candidates for Congress 2020: Generations
Generations Number of Candidates
Boomer Generation 9
Generation X 3
Millennial Generation 4
NA 1

Young Candidates for Congress 2018

Number of candidates from Wisconsin 25
Average age of candidates 54.79
Number of candidates age 35 or younger 0
The youngest candidate Michael Gallagher
born 1984
White
running for the Republican Party
Number of female candidates 4 (16.00%)
Average age of female candidates 57.25
Average age of male candidates 54.13
Average age of Democratic candidates 55.00
Average age of Republican candidates 52.67
Wisconsin Candidates for Congress 2018: Generations
Generations Number of Candidates
Boomer Generation 11
Generation X 5
Millennial Generation 2
Silent Generation 1
NA 6

Young Elected Leaders in the 116th Congress

Number of legislators from Wisconsin 10
Average age of legislators 58.50
Number of legislators age 35 or younger 1
The youngest legislator Mike Gallagher
born 1984
White
member of the Republican Party
Number of female legislators 2 (20.00%)
Average age of female legislators 63.50
Average age of male legislators 57.25
Average age of Democratic legislators 60.00
Average age of Republican legislators 57.50
Wisconsin Members of the 116th Congress: Generations
Generations Number of Congressmembers
Boomer Generation 7
Millennial Generation 2
Silent Generation 1

Young Elected Leaders in the State Legislature

Visit our in-depth profile on Young Elected Leaders in the Wisconsin State Legislature.

Notes

The Young Elected Leaders Project applies the generational categorization of the Pew Research Center:

  • Silent Generation: 1928 – 1945
  • Baby Boomer Generation: 1946 – 1964
  • Generation X: 1965 – 1980
  • Millennial Generation: 1981 – 1996
  • Generation Z: 1997 – 2012

Descriptive statistics on candidates for Congress 2018 and 2020 are based only on those candidates who passed their primaries or who ran as Independent/write-in candidates. The numbers for the 116th Congress are based on data from August 2020.

YELP collects birthday data from a variety of sources such as campaign websites, personal profiles, news articles, voter guides, and from direct contact with candidates and elected officials. However it is not always possible to find information for all. In the case of Wisconsin, data on candidates 2020 is 94.12 % complete, data on candidates 2018 is 76.00 % complete, and we have 100.00 % of birthyears for Congressmembers.