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Iowa’s first transgender legislator Aime Wichtendahl shares her historic path to the statehouse

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Iowa’s first transgender legislator Aime Wichtendahl shares her historic path to the statehouse



Coming home late from her election night watch party, Aime Wichtendahl, like many Americans, anxiously refreshed her phone for results. 

Her screen lit with the outcome. She had won a seat in Iowa’s House. 

Standing in her unlit living room past midnight, Wichtendahl learned she became the state’s first transgender legislator.

“I won,” she called to her son, Steven, who was gaming in the other room. 

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As a Democrat serving on the Hiawatha City Council for eight years, Wichtendahl, 44, secured the open seat in Iowa House District 80, which includes the Cedar Rapids area. 

In retrospect, Wichtendahl said the whole ordeal was anticlimactic. Her campaign team rented a venue for a watch party, but her race results came in later than expected. The group had to leave when the space closed. 

Wichtendahl first made history in 2015, when she was voted onto the Hiawatha City Council and became Iowa’s first transgender elected official.

Making state history for the second time, Wichtendahl said she felt numb. Worried about the Iowa House losing Democrats and the results of the presidential election, she didn’t feel celebratory until others reached out to her in congratulations, saying her victory was a silver lining. 

Wichtendahl will join a Democratic minority in the Iowa House, entering into a Republican trifecta with a red House, Senate, and governor. Having gained ground in the election, the party holds a supermajority in the legislature. 

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Delegate to the Democratic Party National Convention Joe Stutler, incoming Iowa House Representative Aime Wichtendahl, and Iowa House Representative Elizabeth Wilson eat lunch at Third Base Brewery in Cedar Rapids on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. The three spent a few hours discussing politics, watching the Vikings football game, and playing trivia. (Hannah Neuville)

Wichtendahl will join the very institution that has tried to enforce legislation targeting those like her. 

Iowa Republicans introduced 40 anti-LGBTQ+ bills last legislative session, including legislation that would have prevented transgender Iowans from changing gender markers on legal documents and legal protections for conversion therapy. 

“I don’t expect the Republican majority to look at me fondly, but I also know that I don’t believe that the majority of them ran because they wanted to do this,” Wichtendahl said.  

Wichtendahl and advocates for the LGBTQ+ community such as One Iowa, an organization dedicated to improving the lives of LGBTQ+ Iowans that has worked closely with Wichtendahl, are prepared to combat future legislation. 

“There’s probably going to be another 40 [bills] this year,” Wichtendahl said. “A lot of those bills were defeated because people showed up, and we need to be prepared to go ahead and do that. I’ll at least be able to be a voice on the House floor against those things should they actually make it to the House floor.” 

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Many of Iowa’s advocates for LGBTQ+ rights said Wichtendahl’s election is a major win. They are excited and proud to see her in the Statehouse and are prepared to rally around her in support.

Wichtendahl’s election follows a national trend of increasing representation for the LGBTQ+ community in elected office, including the election of Delaware Democrat Sarah McBride, the first openly transgender person elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.  

Wichtendahl’s win also came with a record number of LGBTQ+ candidates running for Iowa legislature this past election cycle.  

Ten openly LGBTQ+ Iowans campaigned for the state legislature, and three won, each claiming a seat in the Statehouse — incumbent Rep. Elinor Levin, D-Cedar Rapids, first-term incoming House Rep. Austin Harris, who won District 26, and Wichtendahl.

Nationally, numbers for LGBTQ+ representation in politics are on the rise. 

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A June report by the LGBTQ+ Victory Institute, which works to increase queer and transgender representation in public service, found the number of LGBTQ+ people who have won elected office has increased by nearly 200 percent since 2017. 

The report found a total of 1,303 openly LGBTQ+ elected officials in the U.S., which equates to only 0.25 percent of all elected officials in the nation. Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have elected officials who identify as transgender, and 235 state legislators identify as LGBTQ+. 

Entering a Republican stronghold, Wichtendahl is eager to enact change in Iowa.

Incoming Iowa House Representative Aime Wichtendahl listens to a speaker at a human rights protest at Greene Square Park in Cedar Rapids on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. She addressed the crowd in a speech alongside other speakers, including Iowa State Senator Liz Bennett and Miss Trans Iowa 2023 Kára Avalos. “I know this next year will be difficult,” said Wichtendahl, “I will be fighting every single day that I can, because at the end of the day, I still believe that Iowa is still my home.” (Hannah Neuville)

Road to the Statehouse

Wichtendahl’s political journey began at a young age. 

She remembers the election of 1988 as the first presidential election she was politically aware of. At eight years old, she tried to figure out the electoral college and recalls being mad at her parents for voting for Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis when she thought George Bush was a much better option. 

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Incoming Iowa House Representative Aime Wichtendahl poses for a portrait with Operation Santa volunteers at American Legion Post 298 in Marion, Iowa on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. The program, led by Foster SQUAD, provided foster children and families with gifts, food, drinks, and a photo opportunity with Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus. (Hannah Neuville)

Later on, she became involved with Barack Obama’s campaign, served as a caucus secretary, and was appointed as a delegate to the state convention. Wichtendahl went on to run for Hiawatha City Council in 2015 and served in that position for eight years. 

In her time on the city council, Wichtendahl helped lower the property tax levy rate, develop new retail locations such as Peck’s Landing and New Village Plaza, and build a public safety building and fire station. 

In Hiawatha, she also secured funding for a mental health liaison for local police departments. Wichtendahl said she plans to pursue a similar model on the state level. 

Dick Olson served on the Hiawatha City Council for over 20 years, eight of which were with Wichtendahl. Supporting her bid for the Statehouse, Olson endorsed Wichtendahl and provided financial donations to her campaign. 

He said he is proud of Wichtendahl, and believes she will use her voice to champion meaningful legislation to protect the rights of all Iowans, not just the LGBTQ+ community. 

Olson said Wichtendahl consistently championed public safety, strongly advocated for advancing small businesses, and always made excellent fiscal decisions. Olson also highlighted Wichtendahl’s ability to take on a large role in communicating with state legislators.

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He said she was able to join the city council on an initiative to lower the property tax levy and was successful in doing so for roughly six straight years. Olson said although she is entering a Republican stronghold, he still thinks she will be able to reach across the aisle. 

“She’s going to have some challenges, but I think she’s the kind of person who will do an excellent job building coalitions for just causes from both sides of the aisle,” Olson said. “That’s just her nature, that’s just her personality.” 

Running for the Statehouse was a long-time goal of Wichtendahl’s, and she waited until the timing was right for her — after her son graduated high school and the district seat opened. The district’s incumbent Democrat Art Staed opted to pursue an Iowa Senate seat in a neighboring district, leaving District 80 open. 

Wichtendahl connected with her campaign manager, Tim Nelson, just before announcing her candidacy in December 2023. 

Nelson said the two clicked very well together, and he was drawn to her sensibility. He said she’s a very driven person and very blunt in a positive way. 

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“She’s going to speak her mind, and she’s going to speak up for issues of justice and civil rights and what she cares about no matter what,” he said. “She’s going to hit on those issues publicly and loudly and is not going to shy away from the controversial fight if it’s the right fight to have.” 

Wichtendahl described her bid for Iowa’s House as the adventure of a lifetime but a very long process. Throughout her campaign, she took very few personal days, working through the weekends with her campaign team. 

Going into the campaign,  Nelson said, although they knew the seat was previously held by a Democrat, they had no illusions of winning the district. Instead, they went in with the idea they were going to work for every vote.

“Everything was done very intentionally with the idea that nothing is a given,” Nelson said. “Obviously, we saw from this year, nothing is a given, at least in the Democratic side of politics. And so we went in with the idea that this was always going to be an uphill battle, and we had to fight for every single vote.”

The Democrat beat Republican opponent John Thompson by over 800 votes. 

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Nelson said despite Iowa’s rightward drift, Wichtendahl’s election shows Iowa can move forward as a state to be more accepting of the tapestry of people who reside in Iowa, including transgender folks. 

RELATED: Voters’ dissatisfaction with the economy ushered Trump’s win, Republican swing nationwide

“My hope is that they see hope in this, and they see someone willing to fight for them every single day, that they know that their voice is represented in that room, that there are not going to be decisions made about trans people without a trans person there to, at the bare minimum, call out bullsh*t, call out hatred, call out bigotry, call out lies,” Nelson said. “Hopefully trans people can see themselves in her, and that, as hard as it can be, there is a fight you can fight up that hill, and there will be a future in this state and in this country where we accept trans people.”

Iowa’s LGBTQ+ advocates excited for Wichtendahl 

Incoming Johnson County Board of Supervisor Mandi Remington staunchly advocates for the rights of LGBTQ+ Iowans. As the mother of a transgender child, the topic is more than political for Remington. 

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Incoming Iowa House Representative Aime Wichtendahl talks on the phone with a friend at her apartment on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. (Hannah Neuville)

Founder and director of the Corridor Community Action Network, Remington has crossed paths with Wichtendahl several times through advocacy work. Remington said for Draytin, her 17-year-old who identifies as transgender, finding out about Wichtendahl’s win helped counteract negative emotions about the conservative swing on election night. 

Remington said Wichtendahl’s election gives Draytin and other transgender Iowans representation and someone to look up to. 

Wichtendahl’s win creates not only another ally in the Statehouse who can advocate for causes but someone who directly represents transgender Iowans, Remington said. 

Draytin, like other transgender youth in the state, is unable to participate in team sports or access to  gender-affirming care, Remington said, but having Wichtendahl’s presence in the Statehouse as someone who understands these struggles is crucial for bringing hope and validating the experiences of transgender Iowans. 

Despite Wichtendahl’s win, Remington acknowledged there is still much work to be done by advocates such as herself to support the Democrat. 

Keenan Crow, director of policy and advocacy at One Iowa, a statewide LGBTQ+ advocacy organization, said Wichtendahl being in committee rooms and on the debate floor will give a voice to a group of people that the legislature has been targeting for years in a different way than Iowa has ever had. 

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Crow said it’s fairly obvious the upcoming legislative session will be one of the worst sessions for transgender Iowans on record, but Wichtendahl’s presence will represent a community that has not had a voice in the legislature. 

The LGBTQ+ Victory Institute’s report updated after the election found Iowa has 15 LGBTQ+ elected officials, and Wichtendahl is the only elected official who identifies as transgender. 

According to the most recent data from the Williams Institute, 3.6 percent of Iowa’s population identify as LGBTQ+. With a projected population of 3.21 million people, this percentage equates to more than 115,000 Iowans. 

“The hope is that even if the session goes extremely poorly, it’s going to be a little bit more bearable when we actually have a member of the community in that body, talking about those pieces of legislation and how they impact them personally,” Crow said. 

Reaching across the aisle 

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Crow, Remington, and Wichtendahl herself acknowledge it will be difficult for her — and any other Democrat — to pass legislation in the Republican stronghold. 

However, Crow said he knows for a fact Wichtendahl will be able to reach points of agreement, and he does not have any worries about her performance. 

Highlighting Wichtendahl’s record on city council, Crow said she has experience working with others to improve outcomes for community members, such as her influence on Hiawatha’s infrastructure and small business owners. 

“For Aime, it’s never been about the letter behind your name,” Crow said. “I don’t think she’ll have any problem reaching across the aisle and making those connections on policies. I think the question is really going to be, how much are they going to focus on the fact that she’s trans, and not on her ideas, which are all very good and, for the most part, very bipartisan.”

Wichtendahl’s priorities for her first legislative session include promoting public education, protecting LGBTQ+ rights, and combating rising costs in health care, housing, and food. The session begins on Jan. 13, 2025. 

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Wichtendahl plans to pursue legislation to provide funding for mental health liaisons who work with law enforcement, an initiative she enacted and found successful in Hiawatha. She said there’s an appetite for legislation such as this and a potential to get it through the legislature and passed into law. 

Whichtendahl also pinned protecting reproductive freedoms as a top issue. With Iowa’s six-week abortion ban enacted in July, Iowa Democrats have also said they will prioritize the issue in the legislative session. 

Her campaign resonated with voters, Wichtendahl said, and she believes they are things that Iowans want, so she will work to achieve them. 

“I always believe that a better future is possible,” she said.

Incoming Iowa House Representative Aime Wichtendahl plays the Xbox at her apartment on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. She enjoys winding down at night with one of her favorite video games, Mass Effect Andromeda. (Hannah Neuville)



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Iowa State picks up commitment from Arkansas State QB Jaylen Raynor

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Iowa State picks up commitment from Arkansas State QB Jaylen Raynor


Iowa State football has picked up a commitment from Arkansas State quarterback Jaylen Raynor, ESPN’s Pete Thamel reported on Jan. 3.

Raynor has one season of eligibility remaining. The 6-foot, 202-pounder from Kernersville, North Carolina, passed for 3,361 yards and 19 touchdowns this season. He was intercepted 11 times.

Raynor also rushed for 423 yards and seven touchdowns.

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He passed for 8,694 yards and 52 touchdowns in three seasons at Arkansas State.

“The (Iowa State) coaching staff is known for winning,” Raynor told Thamel. “The head coach is a known winner and done it on multiple levels.”

Raynor will join Arkansas State offensive coordinator Keith Heckendorf in Ames. Heckendorf was named Cyclones quarterbacks coach this week.

Raynor completed 19 of 33 passes for 222 yards in a 24-16 loss to Iowa State on Sept. 13, 2025.



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Seven Iowa High School Wrestlers Off To Dominant Starts This Season – FloWrestling

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Seven Iowa High School Wrestlers Off To Dominant Starts This Season – FloWrestling


The first month of the Iowa high school wrestling season has been filled with scintillating individual performances. Here’s a look at seven standouts who have been racking up bonus points in December. 

Drew Anderson (Riverside)  

The Class 1A state runner-up last year at 132 is up to 144 this season and he’s 14-0 with 11 technical falls, a pair of pins and a forfeit win. Anderson, a junior in his second season at the school, already owns the Riverside school record for technical falls with 28. Anderson is on pace to more than double the previous Riverside tech record of 23. 

Urijah Courter (West Marshall)

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Courter won the 2A title last season at 113 after placing third as a freshman at 106. He’s up to 120 this season. Courter is 14-0 this season with 10 pins and two technical falls. His ledger also includes a 6-5 win against Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont’s Simon Bettis in a rematch of last season’s state title bout. 

Cooper Hinz (Jesup)

Entering the holiday break, Michigan commit and two-time state medalist Cooper Hinz is 22-0 with 21 wins via pin, technical fall or forfeit. His other victory was a 4-1 overtime decision against returning state placewinner Cain Rodgers of North Fayette Valley. More impressively, all of Hinz’s pins and technical falls have all come in the first period. 

Lincoln Jipp (Bettendorf)

Jipp placed fifth at 138, third at 165 and second at 175 in Class 3A during his first three seasons. Now he’s up to 215 — 77 pounds more than where he started his career as a freshman. The North Carolina recruit pinned his way through the prestigious Dan Gable Donnybrook. He’s 16-0 with 10 pins, four technical falls and a forfeit.   

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Mason Koehler (Glenwood)

The returning 2A champ at 215 is 20-0 with 18 pins and a major decision. His only two matches that went the distance came at the Council Bluffs Classic, where he defeated Nebraska standout Ryan Boehle of Grand Island 14-4 and Minnesota hammer Joe Kruse of Totino-Grace 9-2. The rest of Koehler’s matches this season ended in first-period pins. He has already registered a six-second pin and another in nine seconds this season. 

Jaxon Miller (Carlisle)  

Miller is a three-time state medalist, a two-time finalist and returning state champ in Class 3A. He placed fourth as a freshman at 145 before making trips to the finals at 157 and 165. He’s 16-0 this season with 13 first-period pins, two technical falls and a forfeit. 

Keaton Moeller (Starmont)

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Moeller placed third in 1A as a freshman at 145 before winning a state title at 150 as a sophomore. He missed all of last season after suffering a torn ACL in football. Now he’s back as a senior at 190 and Moeller hasn’t missed a beat. He’s 13-0 with five pins, six technical falls and a pair of forfeits. He has yet to wrestle a full period this season. 

Iowa High School Premium Rankings

Check out the Iowa High School Wrestling Premium Rankings, which are generated by using an athlete’s complete match history to predict a wrestler’s performance against others in their weight class by considering factors such as win-loss records, the quality of their victories (pins, technical falls, major decisions), the strength of their opponents and overall historical performance patterns. The data is updated every Monday, sourced from the Trackwrestling season results. Since each team is responsible for maintaining their season results, any data discrepancies for a wrestler should be addressed by contacting their coach to manage the information within the season. This includes the weight class assigned. Wrestlers are eligible to be ranked after competing in five matches at a single weight.





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Iowa women’s basketball vs. Penn State today: Live updates, score

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Iowa women’s basketball vs. Penn State today: Live updates, score



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As No. 14-ranked Iowa women’s basketball (10-2, 1-0 Big Ten) returns from the Christmas break, the Hawkeyes will begin the bulk of their Big Ten slate today as they welcome Penn State (7-5, 0-1 Big Ten) to Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

Iowa looks to rebound from its 90-64 loss against No. 1 UConn on Dec. 20, where its sloppy play (26 turnovers leading to 41 UConn points) ultimately proved to be its undoing against the Huskies.

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Entering today’s game, sophomore center Ava Heiden leads the team in scoring with 14.6 points per game on 64.4% shooting from the floor, with senior forward Hannah Stuelke (13.4) and sophomore guard Chit-Chat Wright (11.7) also averaging double-figure scoring.

Defensively, Wright leads the team in steals per game with 1.6, while Heiden tops the squad in blocks with 1.2 denials per contest.

As tipoff nears between the Hawkeyes and Nittany Lions, follow along for live updates, the latest score, and highlights of the action:

Hawkeyes are on fire offensively through the first quarter of play (shooting 10-for-16 from the floor), while also dominating the defensive glass (leading 7-2 in defensive rebounds) and keeping Penn State off-synch.

Chit-Chat Wright leads everyone with 12 points on 4-for-4 from the floor, 2-for-2 from 3-point territory, and 2-for-2 from the free-throw line.

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Timeout Penn State.

Hawkeyes are on a roll offensively since the Nittany Lions’ appeal, with a 14-0 scoring run that forces a Penn State timeout.

Penn State’s appeal was successful on the foul call, but the shot clock violation on the Nittany Lions still stands.

Nittany Lions retain their timeout.

Timeout Penn State.

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The Nittany Lions are appealing the foul call on Gracie Merkle and the ensuing shot clock violation.

Both teams are shooting well to start the game.

On its game day availability report, sophomore Emely Rodriguez remains out. Graduate starting guard Kylie Feuerbach is also “questionable.”

Watch Iowa vs. Penn State

TV: Big Ten Network

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Tip-off Time: 3 p.m. CT

Iowa women’s basketball schedule

All times CT

  • Nov. 3 vs. Southern: Iowa 86, Southern 51
  • Nov. 9 vs. Evansville: Iowa 119, Evansville 43
  • Nov. 13 vs. Drake: Iowa 100, Drake 58
  • Nov. 16 at Northern Iowa: Iowa 74, UNI 41
  • Nov. 20 vs. Baylor (WBCA Showcase in Orlando): Iowa 57, Baylor 52
  • Nov. 22 vs. Miami (WBCA Showcase in Orlando): Iowa 64, Miami 61
  • Nov. 26 vs. Western Illinois: Iowa 86, Western Illinois 69
  • Nov. 30 vs. Fairfield: Iowa 86, Fairfield 72
  • Dec. 6 at Rutgers: Iowa 79, Rutgers 36
  • Dec. 10 at Iowa State: Iowa State 74, Iowa 69
  • Dec. 13 vs. Lindenwood: Iowa 102, Lindenwood 68
  • Dec. 20 vs. UConn (Champions Classic): UConn 90, Iowa 64
  • Dec. 28 vs. Penn State: Big Ten Network, 3 p.m.
  • Jan. 1 vs. Nebraska: Big Ten Network, 1 p.m.
  • Jan. 5 at Northwestern: Big Ten Network, 7:30 p.m.
  • Jan. 11 at Indiana: Big Ten Network, 4 p.m.
  • Jan. 15 vs. Oregon: FS1, 8 p.m.
  • Jan. 18 vs. Michigan State: Big Ten Network, 7 p.m.
  • Jan. 22 at Maryland: NBC, 5 p.m.
  • Jan. 25 vs. Ohio State: Peacock, 1 p.m.
  • Jan. 29 at USC: Peacock, 8 p.m.
  • Feb. 1 at UCLA: Fox, 3 p.m.
  • Feb. 5 vs. Minnesota: Big Ten Network, 6 p.m.
  • Feb. 11 vs. Washington: BTN+, 6:30 p.m.
  • Feb. 16 at Nebraska: Fox, 11 a.m.
  • Feb. 19 at Purdue: BTN+, 6 p.m.
  • Feb. 22 vs. Michigan: Fox or FS1, 11 a.m. or 1 p.m.
  • Feb. 26 vs. Illinois: Big Ten Network, 8 p.m.
  • March 1 at Wisconsin: BTN+, 2 p.m.
  • March 4-8 Big Ten Tournament

Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions. Follow Scout on X: @SpringgateNews



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