Senate District 26
Registration: D 12961, R 11998, N 17803, total 42785, D +963
Incumbents: Merlin Bartz, R-Grafton and Mary Jo Wilhelm, D-Cresco
For the second straight decade, redistricting has been unkind to Merlin Bartz. He goes from having a comfortable Republican registration edge of nearly 5000 to a district with a Democratic edge and a Democratic incumbent.
Mary Jo Wilhelm knocked off two-term Republican Mark Zieman in 2008; Zieman's dad had held the seat before him. The old district had a break-even registration and was four whole counties: Wilhelm's base of Howard (where she was a supervisor) plus Chickasaw, Winneshiek and Allamakee. Wilhelm won by about 1000 votes and carried all four counties. She keeps Howard, Chickasaw and a corner of Winneshiek, but loses Decorah and most of the Winneshiek population. (Decorah trended very blue that year.)
Bartz first went to the Senate in 1992 after one House term, then won again in 1996 and 2000. He used his free-ride year in 1998 to run for secretary of agriculture, but in a bit of an upset lost the primary.
In 2001, Bartz got paired up with Thurman Gaskill in the 2001 map, and resolved that problem by resigning during the 2002 session to take a Bush 43 administration Department of Agriculture job. That let Gaskill, in an even number district, hold over till 2004. When Gaskill retired in 2008, Bartz moved right back in.
The new district partners didn't even border each other before; they were separated by Democrat Amanda Ragan. The Bartz seat was his home county of Worth plus Winnebago, Hancock, Franklin, and most of the land in Cerro Gordo; he had Clear Lake but Ragan had Mason City. His 1990s district was Worth, all of Cerro Gordo, and a corner of Mitchell.
Floyd and Mitchell Counties, and a piece of eastern Cerro Gordo up to the limits of Mason City, come in from Ragan's old seat. This turf is new to Wilhelm and mostly new to Bartz. This is good news for Wilhelm (but bad news for Ragan.)
So Wilhelm has the geographic advantage, and a voter registration edge too. Indeed, it's better than her old district, which was break-even. She also has more cash on hand; Wilhelm for Iowa Senate has $8,482.69 on the January 19 report, with $2,525 in loans out. "Citizens for Good Government" - Bartz's committee doesn't include his name, apparently -- had $4,511.83 on hand and $28,813.75 in outstanding bills.
Bartz has also gotten involved in a tin-eared legal fight with his neighbors, demanding that they pay half the cost of his livestock fence. Bleeding Heartland has a good overview.
This is the second of the two Senate districts that are split between Congressional districts. (The other was Dennis Black's 15th district, split between Loebsack and Boswell/Latham.) Here, House 51 goes east into Braley's district, while House 52 is part of the east extension of Steve King's.
House District 51
Registration: D 6038, R 6418, N 8407, total 20875, R +380
Incumbent: Josh Byrnes, R-Osage
Republicans picked up this seat easily in 2010 when six term Democrat Mark Kuhn stepped down. Josh Byrnes had easily won the a Republican primary and beat Kurt Meyer, a losing candidate in the 2008 Democratic congressional primary, by 2400 votes.
Manly Democrat -- that's his residence, not an assessment of his machismo --Eric Hungerford is challenging here. (We had a candidate who was a Fertile Democrat a couple cycles ago.)
The district remains a swing seat but the lines change a lot. Byrnes keeps only his home county of Mitchell, which is about a third of a district. The old turf, District 14, went south into Floyd, which was Kuhn's base and made up more than half of the district, and eastern Cerro Gordo. New district 51 goes west to Worth and east to Howard and a corner of Winneshiek. The three whole counties are similar in size.
Campaign finance reports: Byrnes for Statehouse
House District 52
Registration: D 6923, R 5580, N 9396, total 21910, D +1343
Incumbent: Brian Quirk, D-New Hampton
Brian Quirk is the sole survivor of the "Six Pack" of conservative Democratic legislators who stopped key bills, including labor's must-pass list, in 2009 and `10. Delores Mertz, faced with likely defeat after a 42 vote 2008 win, retired. The other four - Geri Huser, Larry Marek, McKinley Bailey and Doris Kelley - all lost.
Quirk was first elected in 2000. His district changed little in 2002; it was still his Chickasaw County base plus Howard and a piece of western Winneshiek. Under those lines he won by 900 votes in the tough 2010 cycle over Spillville mayor Michael Klimish, who's running elsewhere this year.
This decade Quirk's district moves west. Quirk keeps all of Chickasaw, but now Floyd County makes up the largest piece of the district. Quirk also gets a strip of eastern Cerro Gordo, 500 more Democrats, and no Republican opposition.
Campaign finance reports: Brian Quirk for State Representative
Original post 5/30/2011 Statewide Map: Front | Back (with City Insets) | Old Senate, House
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