Quantcast

Southern Wisconsin Times

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Sen. Spreitzer introduces bill in Wisconsin Senate to expand election bribery definitions

Webp 9lq7y4addy4qf25hfxaerxvxtcx4

Mark Spreitzer, Illinois State Senator for 15th District | www.facebook.com

Mark Spreitzer, Illinois State Senator for 15th District | www.facebook.com

A new bill authored by State Sen. Mark Spreitzer in the Wisconsin Senate seeks to expand the legal definition of election bribery to better regulate inducements related to petition signing during election periods, according to the Wisconsin State Senate.

According to the Wisconsin State Legislature's official website, the bill was described as follows: "inducements to sign or refrain from signing nomination papers, recall petitions, and certain other petitions".

The following is our breakdown, based on the actual bill text, and may include interpretation to clarify its provisions.

In essence, this bill amends existing laws regarding election bribery by expanding the definition of prohibited inducements. It specifically prohibits offering or giving any amount of money or an object valued over $5 to persuade an elector to sign or refrain from signing petitions related to elections, referendums, nomination papers, or recall petitions. The bill clarifies that "anything of value" includes objects with utility independent of any political message they might contain, raising the threshold from $1 to $5 for certain petition-related activities. It also defines "election period" as specific time frames leading up to various types of elections, including spring, general, special, and recall elections. The new provisions aim to regulate actions intended to influence the signing of petitions and nomination papers during these designated periods.

The bill was co-authored by Representative Lee Snodgrass (Democrat-52nd District), Senator Tim Carpenter (Democrat-3rd District), Senator Kristin Dassler-Alfheim (Democrat-18th District), Senator Dora E. Drake (Democrat-4th District), Senator Dianne H. Hesselbein (Democrat-27th District). It was co-sponsored by Representative Clinton M. Anderson (Democrat-45th District), Representative Margaret Arney (Democrat-18th District), and Representative Mike Bare (Democrat-80th District), along 11 other co-sponsors.

Mark Spreitzer has authored or co-authored another 60 bills since the beginning of the 2025 session, with none of them being enacted.

Spreitzer graduated from Beloit College in 2009 with a BA.

Spreitzer, a Democrat, was elected to the Wisconsin State Senate in 2023 to represent the state's 15th Senate district, replacing previous state senator Janis Ringhand.

In Wisconsin, the legislative process starts when a senator, constituent, group, or agency proposes an idea for a bill. After drafting, the bill is introduced, numbered, and referred to a committee for review and public input. If approved, it moves through three readings and votes in both the Senate and Assembly. Once both chambers pass the same version, the bill goes to the governor, who can sign it, veto it, or let it become law without a signature. Only a small share of bills introduced each session ultimately become law. You can learn more about the Wisconsin legislative process here.

Bills Introduced by Mark Spreitzer in Wisconsin Senate During 2025 Regular Session

Bill NumberDate IntroducedShort Description
SB23304/29/2025Inducements to sign or refrain from signing nomination papers, recall petitions, and certain other petitions
SB22304/25/2025Discrimination in employment, housing, public accommodations, education, insurance coverage, national guard, jury duty, and adoption and in the receipt of mental health or vocational rehabilitation services
SB21704/16/2025Eliminating the publication requirement for a name change petition seeking to conform an individual’s name with the individual’s gender identity
SB18504/14/2025Property tax exemption for nonprofit theaters. (FE)
SB14903/21/2025Requiring the legislature to convene an extraordinary session if an executive order of the president of the United States freezes federal aid to the state
SB6002/21/2025Expanding the homestead income tax credit. (FE)
SB2602/05/2025Technical colleges’ lease of their facilities to others. (FE)
SB2002/05/2025Allowing certain married persons to claim the earned income tax credit when filing a separate return. (FE)

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS