David Sigman

David Sigman was an American trade union staff member from Two Rivers, Wisconsin who served three terms as a Republican, then a Progressive member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 2nd Manitowoc County district.[1]

Background

Born in 1905 in Brest-Litovsk, Poland, Sigman was the youngest of six children born in Poland before his family immigrated to the United States. Sigman graduated from Two Rivers High School and the University of Wisconsin. When elected in 1930, he had been a resident of Two Rivers for 24 years.

Public office

He was still in law school when first elected to the Assembly in 1930 from the 2nd District (the Towns of Cato, Cooperstown, Eaton, Franklin, Gibson, Kossuth, Maple Grove, Mishicot, Rockland, Schleswig, Two Creeks, and Two Rivers; Villages of Reedsville and Valders; and the Cities of Kiel and Two Rivers) as a self-described "Progressive Republican", with a plurality over three challengers in the Republican primary. He won the general election with 3,458 votes to 2,911 for Democrat Henry Goedjen. Sigman was assigned to the standing committees on elections and engrossed bills, and to a special joint committee for investigation of the Memorial Union.[2]

In 1932, Sigman defeated two challengers in the Republican primary, only to go down to defeat in the 1932 landslide Democratic victory, being unseated by Democrat Raymond J. Scheuer.[3] In 1934, Sigman (now working as a union organizer for the Wisconsin State Federation of Labor, part of a WSFL policy of offering employment to key pro-labor legislators to supplement the low legislative salaries) reclaimed his seat, first by winning a three-way Progressive Party primary, then by defeating Democratic and Republican nominees (Scheur was not a candidate for re-election) in the general election. He was re-elected in 1936, after facing a challenge from one Everett La Fond or Lafond first in the Progressive primary, then again as an "Independent Progressive" in the general election (along with Democratic and Republican challengers).

In 1938, Sigman ran for the 1st State Senate District, losing in the primary.

After the legislature

In 1939, as part of a campaign against perceived supporters of Henry Ohl in the WSFL, Sigman lost his seat on the WSFL executive board, one he had been elected to in 1937 as recognition of his key role in defending labor interests in the just-ended legislative session.

Senior citizen activism

In November 1964, Sigman was the secretary of the Allied Council of Senior Citizens of Wisconsin (a senior citizens' rights organization), attended the first meeting of that organization, in Milwaukee and spoke to the press.[4] Among the Council's other leaders was former Socialist assemblyman John Polakowski; at one point he was their president.[5][6]

gollark: According to my calculations, you see, that would be bad.
gollark: I wonder if the neural networks trained for image recognition and stuff have similar types of weird glitch (obviously not exactly the same problems, but similar classes of thing).
gollark: The take-home lesson is probably just that our brains' visual processing is weirdly messed up in some ways.
gollark: Why would you use Flash? Does anything actually still let you run that?
gollark: - https://esolangs.org/wiki/Brainfuck,_but_every_%2B_is_replaced_with_the_bee_movie_script- https://esolangs.org/wiki/Unary- https://esolangs.org/wiki/And_then"Hello I would like to print Hello World please"THEY HAVE PLAYED US FOR ABSOLUTE FOOLS

References

  1. "Members of the Wisconsin Legislature 1848–1999 State of Wisconsin Legislative Bureau. Information Bulletin 99-1, September 1999. p. 107 Archived December 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Kelly, Alice, ed. The Wisconsin Blue Book, 1931 Madison: Democrat Printing Company, State Printer, 1931; pp. 187, 190, 191, 227, 571, 577
  3. Witte, Edwin E.; Kelly, Alice, eds. The Wisconsin Blue Book, 1933 Madison: Democrat Printing Company, State Printer, 1933; pp. 546, 553
  4. "Social Security Hike Urged" Milwaukee Sentinel November 23, 1964; Part 2, Pg. 2, col. 7
  5. "Tax Group 'Finally Gets Burned Up'" Milwaukee Sentinel March 4, 1965; pt. 3, p. 5, col. 3
  6. Koppe, Barbara A. "Elderly Organize to Ease Problems" Milwaukee Journal February 2, 1970; part 2, page 2, col. 5
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.