In 1929 he entered politics. Although supporting the
Liberal Party by inclination, its decline and his admiration for Prime Minister
Stanley Baldwin led him to join the
Conservative Party. He stood unsuccessfully for
Crewe in the
1929 general election. He won the seat in the
1931 election and held it for 14 years. In 1933, he became
Solicitor General, receiving the customary
knighthood, followed three years later by a promotion to
Attorney General. In the latter post, he served for nine years during which he oversaw crises such as the
Abdication Crisis of Edward VIII. He was the longest-serving Attorney General since 1754. He was sworn of the
Privy Council in the
1938 Birthday Honours. He was
Recorder of
Kingston upon Thames from 1940 to 1946. In 1945, he was briefly
Home Secretary in
Winston Churchill's
caretaker government. Both the government and Somervell were defeated in
that year's general election. ==Judicial career==