Funny how the words fit together so smoothly yet, when combined, seem grating to the ears of many who reside in the region. The peculiar antipathy between Milwaukee County and Waukesha County may reflect the ways in which people have segregated themselves geographically based on cultural/political orientation. Waukesha County is 94% “white alone” according to Census Bureau data, while Milwaukee County is over one-quarter black or African-American and over one-eighth Hispanic or Latino. In the 2014 gubernatorial election, over two-thirds of Waukesha voters supported Scott Walker, while in Milwaukee County it was closer to one-third. Waukesha is more affluent, less racially diverse, and more Republican than Wisconsin as a whole. Milwaukee is the opposite.
There is, indeed, some basis for an us-and-them mentality.
But the positive connections are truly powerful. To trace a bit of the history, Milwaukee’s population was about ten times greater than Waukesha’s from 1900 until 1950. Then Waukesha’s population began to surge, growing more than four-fold since 1950, to about 400,000, while Milwaukee’s population has remained pretty constant at around one million. The result is that Waukesha now has about 40% as many residents as Milwaukee, thus bringing the counties into closer balance. Waukesha is now the third-most populous county in Wisconsin; in 1950, it was seventh-most populous, slightly ahead of Outagamie and Sheboygan and trailing Brown, Rock, and Winnebago, among others. Waukesha has become a powerful residential draw and also a draw for businesses, almost certainly in large part due to its proximity to Milwaukee.