Service in the U.S. House, then U.S. Senate (1933–1945)
In
1932, in
the Roosevelt landslide, he was elected as a Democrat to represent
Iowa's 9th congressional district, in heavily Republican northwest Iowa. He was easily
re-elected in 1934, and served nearly all of that term. He resigned upon his election to the United States Senate on
November 3, 1936, to serve out the remainder of the term of Senator
Richard Louis Murphy, who had died in an auto accident. Nearly two years remained in Murphy's term, which would end January 3, 1939. Although he generally supported the
New Deal, he opposed the new wage and hours bill, a new farm bill, and aspects of the
Social Security system. He nevertheless defeated Roosevelt's choice for the Democratic nomination, Congressman
Otha D. Wearin, and was re-elected to his first full Senate term by 2,805 votes. During that term, his conflicts with the Roosevelt administration expanded, on topics as diverse as the terms of the Neutrality Act, Roosevelt's pursuit of third and fourth terms, After the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor (where, coincidentally, Gillette's brother Captain Claude Gillette managed the Navy yard), Gillette became "more of an internationalist". ==Between terms==