U.S. Senate
In in 1950, Welker ran for the
U.S. Senate, as
both seats were up for election that year. He won August's Republican primary over
Congressman John Sanborn and
Governor C. A. Robins, then defeated former Democratic Senator
D. Worth Clark in the general election. Welker gained seats on several important committees, including the
Armed Services and
Judiciary committees. He soon distinguished himself as one of the most
conservative and anticommunist senators, becoming a leading member and spokesperson for the Republican Party's right wing. Griffith told his
farm director
Ossie Bluege about the tip and Bluege flew to Idaho to watch Killebrew play. The
Boston Red Sox also expressed interest but Bluege succeeded in signing Killebrew to a $50,000 contract on June 19, 1954. Killebrew (1936–2011) had a
Hall of Fame career in the
major leagues, with 573
home runs.
Association with Joseph McCarthy In the early 1950s, Welker became closely associated with fellow Republican Senator
Joseph McCarthy of
Wisconsin and "
McCarthyism", so much so that he was often referred to by Senate colleagues as "Little Joe from Idaho." In 1954, Welker was McCarthy's chief defender during censure proceedings in the U.S. Senate against McCarthy for the questionable investigative techniques McCarthy had used in pursuing individuals he accused of being communists, and others he accused of being homosexuals, within the government. Welker was one of 22 Republicans (out of a total of 46 Republican senators) who voted against the censure of McCarthy in 1954 for these
"red scare" communist witch hunts, and his so-called "
lavender scare" tactics aimed at homosexuals in government. Welker, along with Republican Senator
Styles Bridges of New Hampshire, was a key collaborator with McCarthy in the blackmail of Democratic Senator
Lester C. Hunt of Wyoming and his son, which led to Hunt's suicide in his Senate office on June 19, 1954. Welker threatened Hunt, a staunch opponent of McCarthy's tactics, that if he did not immediately resign from the Senate and end his re-election bid that year, Welker would see that the younger Hunt's arrest for soliciting an undercover policeman was prosecuted and would widely publicize Hunt Jr.'s alleged homosexuality. Welker also threatened Inspector
Roy Blick of the Morals Division of the Washington Police Department with the loss of his job if he failed to prosecute the younger Hunt. After Hunt's suicide, a Republican,
Edward D. Crippa, was appointed by the Republican acting governor of Wyoming,
Clifford Joy Rogers, to fill the vacant seat.
Alex Ross in
The New Yorker wrote in 2012 of an event "loosely dramatized in the
novel and
film Advise & Consent [in which] Senator
Lester Hunt, of Wyoming, killed himself after ... Welker [and others] ... threatened to expose Hunt's son as a homosexual". In 1955, Welker would be one of two non-Southern senators to vote against the nomination of
John Marshall Harlan II to
the Supreme Court, opposing Harlan because he was unsatisfied that Harlan "adheres to the doctrine that American sovereignty could not and must not be diluted." A year later, he was one of only five senators from outside the former Conferderacy to vote against the nomination of
Simon Sobeloff to
the Fourth Circuit.
1956 re-election bid In 1956, Welker
ran for a second term in the Senate. Although he won the Republican nomination, again defeating Sanborn, he lost the general election to 32-year-old Democrat
Frank Church of Boise, by 46,315 votes, Welker received 39% to Church's 56%. One of the issues was whether the proposed
Hells Canyon Dam would be publicly or privately owned with one of Church's aides saying "The campaign was Frank Church against
Idaho Power. They fought him tooth and nail." The defeat increased Democratic control of the Senate and led to much anger within the Republican Party, with Joseph McCarthy even accusing President
Dwight Eisenhower of not supporting Welker's reelection campaign enough.
Election results ==Death==