Tomah politics In 2000, he defeated incumbent mayor Bud Johnson with 57% of the vote. He served only one two-year term. On April 5, 2005, Thompson won an unexpected victory in the common council election in Tomah. Thompson was not running for the position but was, unknown to him, the subject of a
write-in campaign. He received 31 of 34 votes. His "opponent", John Buick, received one vote from Thompson himself. Thompson initially declined to accept the position, but later reconsidered. He was sworn in on April 15, 2005, and served two years on the Tomah common council. In 2008, Thompson took the place of outgoing mayor Ludeking, whom he defeated in the mayoral election on April 1 by nearly a 2–1 margin. Thompson was sworn into office for his second (non-consecutive) two-year term as mayor of Tomah on April 15, 2008.
2002 gubernatorial campaign Thompson became the Libertarian party nominee in April and ran against Democrat
Jim Doyle, the state
Attorney General, and incumbent Republican Governor
Scott McCallum, the former
Lieutenant Governor who had assumed the office in 2001 after Governor
Tommy Thompson left to become
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services. The 2002 governor's race is considered by some to have been the most
negative campaign in the state's history. In response Thompson, publicly critical of the negative campaigning of both
major party candidates, became a more viable option for some voters, and garnered 10% of the vote. Doyle won the election with a plurality of 45% of the vote, becoming the state's first Democratic governor since
Anthony Earl was defeated in 1986. Doyle was sworn in on January 6, 2003 at the State Capitol in
Madison.
2010 State Senate campaign Thompson announced in October 2009 that he would run as a Republican for the 31st district
Wisconsin State Senate seat in 2010, against incumbent
Kathleen Vinehout. The 31st District included all of Trempealeau, Buffalo, Jackson and Pepin counties, and parts of Monroe, Pierce, Dunn, Eau Claire and Clark counties. On November 2, 2010, Vinehout defeated Thompson, who was still campaigning for the office, despite being recently diagnosed with
pancreatic cancer in September 2010. On November 9, 2010, he requested a recount with only 352 votes separating Thompson from Vinehout. On November 19, 2010, he conceded the election to Vinehout.
Death Thompson died of pancreatic cancer on October 22, 2011, in Tomah. ==Electoral history==