Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Kelda Roys
American politician (born 1979) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Kelda Helen Roys (born June 24, 1979) is an American attorney, small business owner, and politician. She is a member of the Democratic Party and Wisconsin Senate, representing the state's 26th Senate district since 2021. She previously served two terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly, from 2009 to 2013. She also ran for the U.S. House of Representatives in 2012, and for governor of Wisconsin in 2018.[1]
Remove ads
Early life and education
Roys was born in Marshfield, Wisconsin, and raised in Medford (Taylor County) and Madison. Her mother was a social worker, her stepfather was an environmental lawyer, and her father was a prosecutor and law enforcement officer.[2] Roys graduated from Madison East High School in 1997.[3]
Roys attended New York University, where she designed her own major in politics, drama, and cultural studies, and received a B.A., magna cum laude, in 2000.[4][5] In 2004, she received a J.D., magna cum laude, from the University of Wisconsin Law School, focusing on civil rights and international law, and was a participant in the Wisconsin Innocence Project. During and after college, Roys worked full-time as a real estate agent at The Marketing Directors, Inc.[6]
Remove ads
Career
Summarize
Perspective
During law school, she worked at the Wisconsin Innocence Project, as well as several national and international law firms. After law school, she worked for four years as the executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Wisconsin, where she successfully advocated for passage of the Compassionate Care for Rape Victims Act.[7]
In 2008, she won a seat in the Wisconsin State Assembly and also worked as an attorney at a Madison law firm.
In 2013, Roys founded a venture-backed real estate tech company, OpenHomes, a virtual real estate agency that helps people buy and sell homes more efficiently and affordably.[8][9][10] She was elected to the Wisconsin State Senate in 2020, and continues to serve as CEO of OpenHomes.[11]
Roys has been on the boards of Clean Lakes Alliance, TEMPO Madison, Citizen Action of Wisconsin, Wisconsin Women's Council, ACLU of Wisconsin, Madison Repertory Theater, Dane County Democratic Party, Sherman Neighborhood Association, Wisconsin Public Interest Law Foundation, Citizen Action of Wisconsin, and the State Bar of Wisconsin's Legal Services Committee.[12]
In December 2024, Roys was selected to join the 2025-2026 Prenatal-to-Three Innovation Fellowship cohort, hosted by Future Caucus for young legislators invested in building bipartisan policy addressing key healthcare issues.[13][14]
Remove ads
Political career
Summarize
Perspective
Wisconsin State Assembly
In 2008, Roys won election to the Wisconsin State Assembly representing the 81st Assembly district, filling the seat left vacant by the retirement of David Travis, who had held the seat since 1983. She won a six-way Democratic primary with 30% of the vote and was unopposed in the general election.[15]
After being reelected in 2010, Roys was chosen by her peers as the Democratic Caucus chair in the Assembly. Roys as vice-chair of the Committee on Health and Healthcare Reform, and later was ranking member on the Committee on Elections and Campaign Finance Reform and the Committee on Consumer Protection & Personal Privacy.
Roys authored numerous pieces of legislation during her time in office, including public breastfeeding protections, additional income tax deductions for families, expanded college savings programs, reproductive health access, expanding health care coverage, increased training and data collection for law enforcement officers, expansion of AODA treatment services and prevention programs, and a successful statewide ban of Bisphenol A, or "BPA."[16] Roys also publicly fought against 2011 Wisconsin Act 10, and had pledged to repeal the law if elected governor.[17]
2012 congressional election
In 2012, when Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin ran for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Herb Kohl, Roys left her Assembly seat to run for office in the open 2nd Congressional district. She lost to Mark Pocan in a four-candidate Democratic primary.[18]
2018 gubernatorial election
On December 11, 2017, Roys formed an exploratory committee to run for governor of Wisconsin.[19]
During the campaign, Roys ran as a progressive, focusing on issues such as a $15 minimum wage, student loan debt forgiveness and engaging with progressive voters.[20] She gained national attention when a campaign ad in which she breastfeeds her infant daughter went viral. The ad drew attention to legislation Roys had supported during her time in the state assembly to ban the use of Bisphenol A in baby bottles, which is used in various plastic products and can linings[21]
Roys won first place by 12 points in the Democratic Party of Wisconsin State Convention straw poll.[22] In July 2018, the Roys campaign announced that she had raised over $800,000.[23][24] In the primary election, Roys came in third out of the eight candidates, with Tony Evers winning the nomination and going on to defeat Scott Walker.[25]
Wisconsin Senate
In March 2020, Fred Risser, the longest-serving legislator in American history, announced he would retire from his seat in the Wisconsin State Senate at the end of the current term.[26] Roys announced her candidacy to run for the vacated seat.[27] The race, in the heavily Democratic region of Dane County, Wisconsin, attracted six other candidates in a crowded Democratic primary, which was also defined by the COVID-19 pandemic in Wisconsin and the protests against institutional racism prompted by the murder of George Floyd. In the August primary, Roys prevailed over her six competitors, winning 40% of the vote. She was unopposed in the November general election, and assumed office in January 2021.[28][29]
Remove ads
Personal life
Roys has a husband and three daughters and two step daughters.[30]
She is a secular humanist.[31]
Electoral history
Wisconsin Assembly (2008, 2010)
U.S. House (2012)
Wisconsin Governor (2018)
Wisconsin Senate (2020–present)
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads