After leaving the House, Goff ran for the U.S. Senate in 1950, but appointed incumbent
Henry Dworshak won the nomination in the August primary. Goff served as
Idaho Republican Party Veterans Committee chairman in 1952. He then took a number of government posts in Washington, D.C.: he was general counsel of the
Post Office Department, and later served on the
Interstate Commerce Commission, from 1954 to 1967. After his terms ended, Goff
retired to the
Palouse in Idaho, working as a writer and lecturer in Moscow until his death in 1984. ==Personal life==