Assembly portrait, 1940 In 1936 he was elected to the
Wisconsin State Assembly on the
ticket of the
Wisconsin Progressive Party (the Socialists and Progressives were practicing a form of
electoral fusion during this period; but his biography clearly identified him as an active Socialist) from the 2nd
Milwaukee County district (the 2nd and 10th
Wards of the City of Milwaukee), unseating
Democratic incumbent
Clarence Kretlow, with 6,767 votes to 5867 for Kretlow and 2129 for
Republican Alex Klose. He was appointed to the
standing committees on the
judiciary and
public welfare, to a
special joint committee on "Legislation on Administration of State Government", and perhaps most importantly to the "Interim Committee" appointed in 1937 by the Legislature to discuss
reorganization of Wisconsin government. He was re-elected in 1938, with 5,098 votes to 2934 for Republican Edward J. Mueller and 2848 for Democrat William W. Murphy. He remained on the judiciary committee, and was appointed to special committees on "Revenue Needs of the State for the Current Biennium" and
automobile title laws. He was re-elected once more in 1940, with 7,812 votes to 4,869 for former Socialist State Representative
Otto Kehrein (now running as a Republican) and 4095 for Democrat Elmer Foerster. He was moved to the committee on
engrossed bills and to an additional special committee on "Subversive and Un-American Activities of Certain Groups of Employes Engaged in the Manufacture of National Defense Materials". His official biography no longer listed him as an active member of the Socialist Party, but did describe him as a member of the Progressive Party Federation; and he became the
floor leader of the Progressive Party in the Assembly. Biemiller continued to work as a
special organizer for the
Wisconsin State Federation of Labor through 1942, when he moved to Washington to take a position in the
War Production Board. He did not run for re-election, and was succeeded in the Assembly by Democrat
Michael F. O'Connell.
Congress In 1944 he was elected as a Democrat (Biemiller had abandoned both the Socialist Party and the Progressives by then) to the
79th Congress from the Milwaukee-based
Wisconsin's 5th congressional district, unseating Republican incumbent
Lewis D. Thill, with 88,606 votes to Thill's 78,834, Socialist former State Representative
Edwin Knappe's 4,758, and 2,103 for
Independent Progressive Irwin Aaron. He was defeated for re-election in 1946 by Republican
Charles J. Kersten, and went to work as director of political education for the
Upholsterers Union. During this period Biemiller joined many other former Socialists and Progressives in helping to found
Americans for Democratic Action. He cooperated with
Hubert Humphrey in successfully calling for a strong civil rights plank at the
1948 Democratic National Convention, to which he was a delegate and chair of the platform committee which produced the plank. He defeated Kersten in a 1948 re-match for election to the
81st Congress, but once more lost a bid for re-election in 1950 to Kersten. == After Congress ==