Elected office Clarenbach was elected to the
Dane County Board of Supervisors in 1972, at age 18. In 1974, he was elected a Madison
alderman, before being elected to the
Wisconsin State Assembly that same year at the age of 21, succeeding fellow Democrat
Edward Nager. In 1982, Clarenbach was widely credited with helping push through the first law in the country which prohibited discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations on the basis of sexual orientation. It was a landmark achievement for
LGBT rights in Wisconsin and across the nation. While in the assembly, Clarenbach also worked to improve lake quality and expand authority of the
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, authored a new HIV confidentiality law, and an AIDS bill of rights. In 1983 he was elected
Speaker pro tempore of the Assembly, a position he held until 1993. Clarenbach served on the following committees: Agriculture; Assembly Organization; Financial Institutions and Insurance; Labor; Rules; Legislative Council; Judiciary; Commerce and Consumer Affairs; State Historical Society Board of Curators; and as chairperson of the Health Insurance Reform committee. His legislative papers are on deposit with the
Wisconsin Historical Society. Clarenbach did not seek re-election in 1992 but ran for Congress in . In the Democratic primary election held on September 8, Clarenbach faced
Ada Deer and lost with 31,961 votes (40.1%) to Deer's 47,777 (59.9%). Deer went on to lose to incumbent Republican
Scott L. Klug in the general election. He was succeeded in the assembly by
Tammy Baldwin, who ran as the first openly gay legislative candidate in Wisconsin history.
Activism Clarenbach led the Madison AIDS Support Network and later served as
executive director of the
Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund from 1996 to 1997. Clarenbach was also a member of the Urban League, Humane Society, ACLU of Wisconsin, and National Council of Senior Citizens. He was a voting delegate to the 1980, 1984 and 1988
Democratic National Conventions. == Personal life ==