By the late 1930s, Taylor had settled in
eastern Idaho at
Pocatello. His first political campaign was in 1938 for an open seat in the
United States House of Representatives from the
second district, but he finished a distant fourth in the Democratic primary. Nugget also accompanied Taylor during a 1947 tour of the country highlighting his antiwar activism and opposition to U.S. foreign policy of the time. When Taylor moved to Washington in preparation to be
sworn in in January 1945, the housing shortage caused by
World War II was still in full swing and so he and his family had a difficult time finding a place to live. In response, Taylor, a musician and songwriter, stood outside the US Capitol building and sang, "O give us a home, near the Capitol dome, with a yard for two children to play ..." to the tune of "
Home on the Range". He and his family were offered several places to rent. Taylor was appointed to the
Committee on Banking and Currency after telling Senator
Robert F. Wagner of New York that he was qualified for the post because he had been a depositor with several banks. In October 1945, Taylor submitted a
resolution to the Senate "favoring the creation of a
world republic." On election night in 1946, Taylor made national headlines by allegedly breaking the jaw of local Republican leader Ray McKaig in a hotel lobby in
Boise. Taylor claimed that McKaig had called him an obscene name, and struck him first with a punch that broke his nose, but McKaig denied those claims. McKaig, 66, claimed that while he was lying on the floor Taylor proceeded to kick him in the face, but Taylor denied that claim. When Taylor lost his reelection bid in the 1950 primary, McKaig sent a telegram that said, "You may have broken my jaw, but I just broke your back!!!" Taylor also feuded with other Idaho Democrats, often making critical remarks about
Charles C. Gossett, who resigned as governor in November 1945 to have his successor appoint him to the vacant Senate seat. During the 1946 Democratic primary in June, Taylor openly supported Gossett's opponent,
George E. Donart, calling the appointed incumbent Gossett a "conservative" who "hobnobbed" with Republicans in Congress. In the Senate, Taylor became noted for lengthy speeches that were often critical of President
Harry S. Truman's policies, particularly in foreign affairs. He was particularly critical of the
Truman Doctrine and the
Marshall Plan, both of which he believed brought the United States closer to war with the
Soviet Union. Taylor was decidedly less critical of the Soviet Union than most of his Senate colleagues, once noting that there was no need to criticize Soviet policy when there were 90 other senators willing to do it every day. Taylor was arrested on May 1, 1948, in
Birmingham, Alabama, by Police Commissioner
Eugene "Bull" Connor, for attempting to use a door reserved for African Americans, rather than the whites-only door, while Taylor was attempting to attend a meeting of the
Southern Negro Youth Congress. He was later convicted of disorderly conduct. He appealed his conviction to the Court of Appeals of Alabama (part of which became the
Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals in 1969), but lost the appeal. When Taylor refused to return to Alabama to serve a 180-day sentence of hard labor, Idaho Governor
C. A. Robins declined to extradite him.
Roswell comments In July 1947, Taylor was asked by a
United Press reporter what he thought about reports that
remnants of a UFO had been found by the Air Force near
Roswell, New Mexico. Taylor replied that he almost hoped flying saucers would turn out to be spaceships from another planet: "They could end our petty arguments on earth." He went on to say that no matter what the UFOs turned out to be, they "can't be laughed off." "Even if it is only a psychological phenomenon, it is a sign of what the world is coming to," Taylor explained. "If we don't ease the tensions, the whole world will be full of psychological cases and eventually turn into a global nuthouse."
1948 vice presidential nomination In 1948 Taylor was chosen as the vice presidential candidate on the Progressive ticket headed by former Vice President
Henry A. Wallace of
Iowa.
1950 reelection run In 1950, former Senator
David Worth Clark sought to regain his Senate seat from Taylor, whose run on the Progressive ticket earned him a reputation as an "incorrigible leftist" in Idaho. It contributed to Taylor's primary defeat by Clark, who in turn lost in the general election to conservative Republican
Herman Welker.
Election results Source: • 1940 was a special election (November) to complete the final two years of the term vacated by the death of
William Borah on January 19, 1940. Thomas, a former U.S. senator (1928–1933), was appointed to the seat by Governor C. A. Bottolfsen on January 27. ==Later career==