Farnsley became a leader of the campaign in Kentucky to repeal
prohibition, and was a delegate to Kentucky's convention to pass the 21st amendment. In 1932, Kentucky's Democratic party leaders endorsed Farnsley to be one of nine nominees for the House of Representatives in state-wide elections, but he came up 2,000 votes short in a bitterly contested primary. He and
E. Leland Taylor split the Louisville vote after Taylor ran a campaign against Louisville's Democratic political machine run by Michael J. “Micky” Brennan. Farnsley lost another primary for Congress in 1934. He won a seat in the State House in 1935, where he served two terms. He supported distilling interests and of Louisville's Democratic machine, asking for a phone on his desk in the legislative chamber because “sometimes I have to call Mike [Brennan] up in a hurry to figure out how to vote on a bill!” In 1940, after working as a lobbyist for distillers and founding the
Rebel Yell brand of whiskey, Farnsley ran against
Happy Chandler for the Democratic nomination for Senate. He supported a substantial increase in American aid to Britain and accused Chandler of being an isolationist, but lost badly, saying “tell the voters I am sorry I have been a bother”. Farnsley was declared ineligible to serve during
World War II due to an earlier health issue. He took extensive college classes at the University of Louisville, earning a degree in political science, and did graduate work in public administration at the Universities of Kentucky, Chicago, and Columbia. There, he declared himself a
Physiocrat and wrote papers arguing that Enlightenment thought had been inspired by the ideas of
Confucius via the
Chinese Rites controversy, and that fascism was rooted in the philosophy of
Plato. ==Mayor of Louisville==