Klingler, then a member of the Springfield City Council, was initially slated to face Democratic incumbent Michael D. Curran. However, in August, Curran dropped out of the race, citing his inability to buy a new house after Republicans gerrymandered him out of the old 100th district.[2] Marylou Lowder Kent, a Lincoln Land Community College trustee, replaced Curran on the ballot.[3] Klinger won the 100th district with 20,890 votes to Lowder Kent's 19,581 votes.[4] At the time, the 100th district, centered on Springfield, was located entirely in Sangamon County.[5]
After the 2001 decennial redistricting process, Klingler was drawn into the same district as fellow Republican Jonathan C. Wright. Wright chose not to run for reelection. The new 100th district became substantially more rural adding more of rural Sangamon County, southwestern Logan County, and all of Menard County.[6] Klinger, a moderate, was defeated by conservative Rich Brauer of Petersburg in that cycle's Republican primary.[7][8]
^"House District 100"(PDF). Northern Illinois University Center of Governmental Studies. Archived from the original(PDF) on November 8, 2012. Retrieved November 7, 2012.
^Miller, David R., ed. (December 15, 2002). "Biographies of New Senate Members"(PDF). First Reading. Vol. 16, no. 3. Illinois Legislative Research Unit. pp. 8–16. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
^Munks, Jamie (March 22, 2015). "Langfelder: It's All About Public Service". The State Journal-Register. p. 1.