La Follette first ran for office in the
1970 U.S. House of Representatives election, losing to
Les Aspin in the Democratic
primary for
Wisconsin's 1st congressional district. La Follette served in the
Wisconsin State Senate for
Kenosha in 1973 and 1974. La Follette was elected
Secretary of State of Wisconsin in 1974. He unsuccessfully ran for
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin on a ticket with Governor
Martin Schreiber in 1978. In 1982, he was again elected secretary of state, defeating incumbent
Vel Phillips in the primary. In his campaigns for Secretary of State, among other campaigns, La Follette shunned
fundraising in the style of former Wisconsin Senator
William Proxmire. In 1990, his opponent, Madison attorney and radio personality Stuart Levitan, campaigned on a promise to eliminate the secretary of state's office, whose duties had been reduced and transferred to other agencies (including the State Board of Elections) by the state legislature, under La Follette's tenure. In the Republican wave election year of 1994, despite being outspent more than 2 to 1 by his Republican opponent (both candidates had a low budget), he held him to less than forty percent of the vote. Since being elected secretary of state, La Follette has run twice for federal office. In 1988, he ran for the U.S. Senate, losing the primary to
Herb Kohl. In 1996, he made another bid for the U.S. House of Representatives, losing in the Democratic primary for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district to
Lydia Spottswood, who went on to lose the general election to
Mark Neumann. In 2012, La Follette ran in the Democratic primary in the
special election to recall
Scott Walker. In 2023, three months into his eleventh term, La Follette resigned as secretary of state. Governor
Tony Evers appointed former State Treasurer
Sarah Godlewski to the position. In his resignation letter, he stated that he didn't want to "spend the next three and a half years trying to run an office without adequate resources and staffing levels." At the time of his retirement, La Follette was the longest serving non-federal statewide elected official in the United States holding the same office, having served from January 3, 1983 to March 17, 2023. ==Other roles==