After losing four bids for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1930, 1932, 1934, and 1936, he at last won in 1938. He was re-elected until 1948, a Democratic electoral year. He won the seat back in 1950 and retained it for four more years. Strongly opposed to President
Franklin Roosevelt's foreign and domestic policies, Bender articulated his criticism in the polemical
The Challenge of 1940 (1940). The only aspects of Roosevelt's agenda that escaped Bender's censure were some humanitarian
New Deal programs, notably the
Works Progress Administration, which he accepted only as a temporary measure. With the onset of the
Cold War after 1945, Bender opposed the
Marshall Plan and the
Truman Doctrine. He did not question the necessity of helping European countries devastated by the war, but he disagreed with the idea that the US government should take a direct role in channeling the relief aid. He argued that assistance for European recovery should come through the
United Nations or private relief organizations. He also fervently opposed aid to
Greece and
Turkey, where British influence had been strong, on the premise that US involvement in the region only accommodated the "needs of a collapsing British empire" but did not benefit the United States. His reputation for strong party loyalty brought Bender the job of organizer for Ohio Senator
Robert A. Taft's candidacy for the presidential nomination at the 1948 and 1952 Republican National Conventions. His public role included arranging musical entertainment, conducting singing, leading demonstrations, and ringing cowbells. His often-comic antics led to many unfairly dismissive jokes, as his opponents quickly dubbed him the "Clown Prince." That mockery did not diminish the fact that he remained a serious and influential political figure. Bender was in a famous 1952 newsreel addressing a gathering of over 15,000 people in the
Cleveland Public Auditorium immediately after
Richard Nixon had given his wildly successful
Checkers speech on television. Bender asked the crowd to show if it was for Nixon and was greeted with a thunderous ovation of support. ==US Senator==