Tim Cullen was born and raised in Janesville, Wisconsin. Cullen graduated from UW-Whitewater with a major in political science and a minor in history. The first election he won was to the Janesville City Council in 1970. Four years later, Cullen was elected to the state senate as a Democrat at the age of thirty. He went on to become Senate Majority Leader from 1982 to 1987, and in 1987 he became Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Services under Governor Tommy Thompson. Cullen took a job in 1988 with Blue Cross and worked with them for the next 20 years. He served a term on the School District of Janesville School Board from 2007 to 2010. In 2010, he decided to run for his old senate seat. He was elected and served until 2015. Today Cullen still lives in Janesville and spends his time working with the three foundations he started. Cullen will equally split all profits from this book to the Janesville Multicultural Teachers Scholarship Fund, which he started in 2008, and Beloit's similar scholarship program, Grow Your Own. The sole purpose of these programs is to raise money for college scholarships for students and adults of color. The goal is to support those students who wish to become teachers and are willing to return to Janesville or Beloit to teach. The goal of the foundations is to make the teacher corps look more like the students they teach.
Wisconsin got a big win against gerrymandering. It's a victory more than a decade in the making and shows that changing the course of American democracy requires patience and persistence. -Virginia Kase Solomon, President, National Common Cause Tim was my first health secretary. We'd known each other and worked well together as colleagues in the legislature. I knew Tim would add important gravity, urgency, and perspective to my administration. We didn't agree on everything-even a lot-but we respected each other. I never doubted Tim's genuine intent to leave Wisconsin better for his efforts. -Former Governor Tommy G. Thompson Wisconsin Gerrymandering is more than an insightful and necessary lesson in history. We learn why gerrymandering is like a cancer, destroying the voice and the vote of each Wisconsin citizen. It is a call to arms for every Republican, Democrat, independent to be united to take on the fight against gerrymandering. To not do that is at democracy's peril. -Former Governor Martin Schreiber