After the war, he was elected to Congress from what was then the 2nd District. He was re-elected 21 more times from this Jacksonville-based district, which was renumbered as the 3rd District in 1967. He rarely faced serious opposition, even as the district became increasingly friendly to
Republicans nationally. For instance, in 1972 he won 82 percent of the vote against a nominal Republican challenger (one of only six times the Republicans even put up a challenger against him) even as
Richard Nixon carried the district by over 70 percent of the vote. In 1951, he began proposing a code of ethics for government employees, nicknamed
The Ten Commandments. After the
Sherman Adams affair, the document was adopted as the first code of ethics for government service in 1958. In 1955, he sponsored the bill that added the words
In God We Trust to the nation's currency. He signed the 1956
Southern Manifesto, and voted against the
Civil Rights Acts of 1957,
1960,
1964, and
1968, but voted in favor of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. To prove to his constituents that his handicap did not interfere with his serving in Congress, he amassed the record for the longest unbroken string of recorded roll call votes without being absent when the roll was called. Each year, he returned his veteran's disability pension and
Social Security checks to the U. S. Treasury to reduce the
national debt. Leftover campaign funds were given to the
National Park Service. According to
The Almanac of American Politics 1980, "He opposes unofficial office accounts, outside income for members and congressional pay raises, which led one colleague to call him 'a bit too pious.' " Although he was responsible for the establishment of the first temporary committee on ethics in the House, he was not named to the first formal ethics committee when it was formed. Not surprisingly, given the large defense presence in the Jacksonville area, Bennett was somewhat hawkish on defense policy. He was in line to become chairman of the
House Armed Services Committee in 1985, one of the most powerful panels in the body; he had served on that committee for virtually all of his House career. However, he was defeated for the post by
Les Aspin. While Aspin had far less seniority than Bennett, his views on defense policy were more in line with the rest of the Democratic Caucus. Bennett was set to run for a 23rd term in 1992 in the newly renumbered 4th District against Jacksonville City Council president
Tillie Fowler, his strongest Republican opponent in decades. However, he abruptly ended his bid for reelection when his wife became ill in the spring of 1992. Fowler went on to win easily in November against a replacement candidate. Proving how Republican the district had become, a Democrat would not file in this district again until 2000. At the time of his retirement, Bennett was the second longest-serving member of the House (behind only fellow Democrat
Jamie Whitten). He is still the longest-serving member of either house of Congress in Florida's history.
Election results '''
Florida's 3rd congressional district, 1980:''' •
Charles E. Bennett (D) - 104,672 (77.07%) • Harry Radcliffe (R) - 31,208 (23.0%) '''Florida's 3rd congressional district, 1982:''' •
Charles E. Bennett (D) - 73,802 (84.1%) • George Grimsley (R) - 13,972 (15.9%) '''Florida's 3rd congressional district, 1990:''' •
Charles E. Bennett (D) - 84,280 (72.7%) • Rod Sullivan (R) - 31,727 (27.3%) ==History==