Short was elected as a
Republican to the
Seventy-first Congress (serving March 4, 1929 – March 3, 1931). After the
Wall Street crash, he was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1930 to the
Seventy-second Congress. He resumed his former professional pursuits. He served as a delegate to the
Republican National Convention in 1932. Short was an unsuccessful candidate in 1932 for nomination to the
United States Senate. In 1934 he was elected to the
Seventy-fourth Congress and the ten succeeding Congresses (January 3, 1935 – January 3, 1957). At the
1940 Republican National Convention in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Short received 108 delegate votes for the party's
vice presidential nomination. He was the runner-up to the eventual nominee,
Charles L. McNary, who received votes from 848 delegates. Short served as chairman of the
Committee on Armed Services in the
Eighty-third Congress. On April 30, 1955, he was presented with an Honorary Ozark Hillbilly Medallion by the
Springfield, Missouri, Chamber of Commerce during a broadcast of
ABC-TV's
Ozark Jubilee. Short did not sign the 1956
Southern Manifesto, which was an expression of resistance to desegregation of public schools and other facilities. In 1954 the US Supreme Court had ruled that segregated public schools were unconstitutional, in
Brown v. Board of Education. Short was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1956 to the
Eighty-fifth Congress. He was defeated by
Charles H. Brown; the vote being 90,986 for Brown to 89,926 for Short. In 1945, he had served as a congressional delegate to inspect
concentration camps in
Germany. Short was appointed as
Assistant Secretary of the Army, serving from March 15, 1957, to January 20, 1961. Later he was President Emeritus of the
National Rivers and Harbors Congress. Short died in
Washington, D.C., on November 19, 1979. His body was returned to Missouri, where he was interred in Galena Cemetery,
Galena. In his memoir,
In the Arena (1990), former President
Richard Nixon cited Short as perhaps the finest orator he had ever seen. ==See also==