Before being elected to public office, Hansen was a school teacher, a Teamster's Union steward, and also a truck driver for the City of Green Bay. He served on the Board of Supervisors for Brown County from 1996 to 2002.[1]
On February 20, 2011 Hansen, along with the 13 other Democratic State Senators, fled the state to deny the State Senate a quorum onGovernor Scott Walker's legislation, which, among other things, limited collective bargaining benefits for most municipal and state employees.[2]
Hansen was the target of a recall effort as a result of his leaving the state in an attempt to prevent the Senate from being able to vote on Act 10. On July 19, however, he handily defeated his challenger and retained his seat.
A chronology of the recall effort:
February 25: The committee "Recall Dave Hansen" officially registered with the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board.[3] 13,582 signatures were required by April 26, 2011 to force a recall election. He was considered to be one of the three potentially vulnerable Democratic senators.
April 21: Recall supporters filed about 18,872 signatures with Wisconsin's Government Accountability Board.[4]
June 10: Wisconsin's Government Accountability Board certified the recall election.[5]
July 19: Hansen defeated his recall challenger, Republican David VanderLeest, receiving 66% of the vote.[6]
Committees
Committee on Agriculture, Small Business and Tourism
Committee on Senate Organization
Committee on Transportation and Veterans Affairs
Committee on Universities and Technical Colleges
Joint Committee on Legislative Organization
Decision to retire
On January 9, 2020, Hansen announced he would retire after his term ended in January 2021. He cited the desire to spend more time with his wife, young grandchildren and older grandchildren as they start their careers. Hansen said he raised the possibility of retirement during a family get together over the Christmas holiday. He says his family was very supportive of the decision. Hansen said he was proud of bipartisan cooperation to pass legislation covering senior care and the Silver Alert system. But he also lamented the declining trend away from bipartisanship.
Senator Hansen's nephew, De Pere alderman Jonathon Hansen, ran in his uncle's senate district following his retirement.[7]
^"Recall Dave Hansen". Wisconsin Government Accountability Board. March 9, 2011. Archived from the original on October 15, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2011.