

Rebecca Kleefisch orchestrated one of the most significant shifts in modern Wisconsin politics as the state's 44th Lieutenant Governor from 2011 to 2019. Serving alongside Governor Scott Walker, she was a chief advocate for Act 10, the 2011 legislation that curtailed collective bargaining for most public employees. The law sparked massive protests but became a defining model for conservative fiscal policy nationwide. Critics often mischaracterize her role as merely ceremonial; in reality, she chaired major economic committees and led trade missions that exported the Wisconsin policy blueprint. Her tenure entrenched a durable Republican majority in state government for a decade. Kleefisch's political strategy, emphasizing grassroots mobilization and fiscal restraint, remains a template for center-right candidates in the Midwest.
1965–1980
The latchkey kids. Raised during divorce, recession, and the end of the Cold War. Skeptical, self-reliant, media-literate. They invented indie culture, grunge, and the early internet — then watched the Boomers take credit.
Rebecca was born in 1975, placing them squarely in the Generation X. The events that shaped this generation — economic uncertainty, the end of the Cold War, and the rise of personal computing — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1975
#1 Movie
Jaws
Best Picture
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
#1 TV Show
All in the Family
The world at every milestone
Fall of Saigon ends the Vietnam War
John Lennon shot and killed in New York
Pan Am Flight 103 bombed over Lockerbie
Soviet Union dissolves; World Wide Web goes public
European Union officially established
Dolly the sheep cloned
Hurricane Katrina devastates New Orleans; YouTube launches
Paris climate agreement; same-sex marriage legalized in the US
AI agents go mainstream
“Government works best when it respects the taxpayer's wallet.”