{{Short description|American politician (born 1954)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=September 2011}} {{Infobox Officeholder |name = Kate Witek |office = Nebraska Auditor of Public Accounts |governor = Mike Johanns<br>Dave Heineman |term_start = January 1999 |term_end = January 2007 |predecessor = John Breslow |successor = Mike Foley |office1 = Member of the Nebraska Legislature<br>from the 31st district |term_start1 = January 1993 |term_end1 = January 1999 |predecessor1 = Jerry Chizek |successor1 = Mark Quandahl |birth_date = {{birth date and age|1954|10|22}} |birth_place = Detroit, Michigan, U.S. |death_date = |death_place = |party = Republican (until 2006)<br>Democratic (after 2006) |education = |website = }}
'''Kate Witek''' (born October 22, 1954)<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/whoswhoinamerica0002marq/page/1278/mode/2up|title=Who's Who in American Politics|year=1997–1998|page=1279}}</ref> is a former Nebraska Auditor of Public Accounts, member of the Nebraska Legislature, and candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska. She was first elected Nebraska State Auditor in November 1998 as a Republican. She was reelected in 2002 as a Republican but was defeated in her attempt for a third term in 2006 after switching to the Democratic Party.
==Political career and party switch== Witek began her career as a Republican, winning election to the nonpartisan unicameral Nebraska Legislature in November 1992 from District 31 in southwestern Omaha. She was the elected Republican nominee for Lieutenant Governor in 1994 and ran as a team with Gene Spence, the unsuccessful Republican candidate for Governor. After the 1994 election the legislature changed the Nebraska Constitution so that the position of Lieutenant Governor became an appointed position instead of an elected position. Witek was reelected to the Legislature in 1996 but resigned from her District 31 seat upon her swearing-in as the first woman Nebraska Auditor of Public Accounts in January 1999. She was reelected State Auditor in 2002.
After running as the Lieutenant Governor candidate with unsuccessful Governor candidate Tom Osborne, Republican Witek decided to switch parties in August 2006, citing concerns about a Republican Party that, in her own words, "...was only looking at controlling all the offices instead of looking at resolving the problems challenging this state."<ref>{{citation|author=Don Walton|title=Witek leaves GOP to join Dems|newspaper=Lincoln Journal Star|date=August 18, 2006|page=15|access-date=June 22, 2023|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/298172594/}}</ref>
Witek had initially decided to forgo reelection in 2006, but after she switched parties, the Nebraska Democratic Party nominated her as their candidate for Auditor at their State Convention in Grand Island, Nebraska.
==Personal life== Kate Witek is married to Charles Witek.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://justfacts.votesmart.org/candidate/biography/2209/kate-witek|title=Kate Witek's Biography|publisher=Vote Smart|access-date=November 9, 2023}}</ref>
==See also== * List of American politicians who switched parties in office
==References== {{reflist}}
{{s-start}} {{s-ppo}} {{s-bef|before=Jack Maddux}} {{s-ttl|title=Republican nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska|years=1994}} {{s-aft|after=David Maurstad}} {{s-bef|before=John Breslow}} {{s-ttl|title=Republican nominee for Nebraska State Auditor|years=1998, 2002}} {{s-aft|after=Mike Foley}} {{s-bef|before=David A. Wilken}} {{s-ttl|title=Democratic nominee for Nebraska State Auditor|years=2006}} {{s-vac|next=Amanda McGill}} {{succession box| before=Jerry Chizek | title=Nebraska state senator–District 31 | years=1993–1998 | after=Mark Quandahl}} {{succession box| before=John Breslow | title=Nebraska Auditor of Public Accounts | years= 1999–2007 | after=Mike Foley}} {{s-end}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Witek, Kate}} Category:1954 births Category:Living people Category:Nebraska state auditors Category:Nebraska Democrats Category:Nebraska Republicans Category:Nebraska state senators Category:Women state legislators in Nebraska Category:21st-century American women Category:20th-century members of the Nebraska Legislature Category:20th-century American women politicians
{{Nebraska-politician-stub}}