Wise was a strong supporter of the
federation of Australia, and stood unsuccessfully for election to the
Victorian Legislative Assembly in 1892, 1894 and 1904. He also failed win election to the
Australian Senate in both the
1901 election and
1903 election. Wise stood unsuccessfully for parliament no less than five times before narrowly winning the
House of Representatives seat of Gippsland in 1906, by 97 votes, standing as a
Protectionist. He did not follow Deakin into fusion with the
Liberals in 1909, rather standing as an Independent in
1910, gaining 62 percent of the vote against the Liberal candidate. Subsequently, he often supported the
Australian Labor Party, but did not join it. Fusion Liberal candidate
James Bennett beat him at the
1913 election, but Wise won Gippsland back in
1914, standing as an "Independent Labor" candidate. Certainly Wise's politics were always progressive. In 1887 when he was both the
Mayor of Sale and the President of the Sale branch of the ANA, he told a meeting of the branch that ‘The wealthier or so-called upper classes can no longer treat the laboring and poorer classes as so much machinery to be worked at high pressure ... Man must begin to realise that his fellow man is a being like himself’. On 22 February 1917, following the events of the
Australian Labor Party split of 1916, Wise announced that he would support the
Nationalist government that included many of his former Protectionist colleagues. He was easily re-elected at the
1917 election. Prime Minister
Billy Hughes appointed him an honorary minister assisting the
Minister for Defence from March 1918 to February 1920. He was
Postmaster-General from February 1920 in the
Fifth Hughes Ministry, but lost his position in the reshuffle when
Stanley Bruce was brought into the ministry in December 1921. He was almost defeated in
1919 by a candidate from the newly formed the
Country Party, and lost to the Country Party candidate,
Thomas Paterson, in
1922. Wise failed to win the seat back in
1925 and
1928. ==Australian Natives' Association==