U.S. Senator (1917–1945)
In
1916, Johnson ran successfully for the U.S. Senate, defeating conservative
Democrat George S. Patton Sr. and took office on March 16, 1917. Johnson was elected as a staunch opponent of American entry into
World War I, but voted in favor of war after his election. He later voted against the
League of Nations. He allegedly said, "The first casualty when war comes is truth." However, this quote may be apocryphal. During his Senate career, Johnson served as chairman of the Committees on Cuban Relations (
66th Congress), Patents (
67th Congress), Immigration (
68th through
71st Congresses), Territories and Insular Possessions (68th Congress), and Commerce (71st and
72nd Congresses). In 1916, Representative
John I. Nolan introduced H.R. 7625, which would have established a $3 per day
minimum wage for
federal employees. It was endorsed by the
AFL and the
National Federation of Federal Employees, but the bill's opponents in the House kept it from coming to a vote. In 1918, Senator Johnson co-sponsored the legislation, and it became known as the Johnson-Nolan Minimum Wage Bill. It passed the House that September, but was stalled in the Senate
Committee on Education and Labor. It was reintroduced two years later and passed in both the House and Senate, but when it went to conference it was
filibustered by
Southern Democrats who opposed it because it would have paid
African American employees the same as white employees. In the Senate, Johnson helped push through the
Immigration Act of 1924, having worked with
Valentine S. McClatchy and other anti-Japanese
lobbyists to prohibit
Japanese and other
East Asian immigrants from entering the United States. In the early 1920s, the motion picture industry sought to establish a self-regulatory process to fend off official censorship. Senator Johnson was among three candidates identified to head a new group, alongside
Herbert Hoover and
Will H. Hays. Hays, who had managed President Harding's 1920 campaign, was ultimately named to head the new
Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America in early 1922. As Senator, Johnson proved extremely popular. In
1934, he was re-elected with 94.5 percent of the popular vote; he was nominated by both the Republican and Democratic parties and his only opponent was Socialist
George Ross Kirkpatrick. Johnson was a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee continuously for 25 years, from the 66th Congress (1919–21) through the
78th Congress (1943–44) and one of its longest-serving members. In 1943, a confidential analysis of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made by British scholar
Isaiah Berlin for his
Foreign Office, stated that Johnson: :is the Isolationists' elder statesman and the only surviving member of the William Borah|[William E.] Borah–Henry Cabot Lodge|[Henry Cabot] Lodge–Johnson combination which led the fight against the League in 1919 and 1920. He is an implacable and uncompromising Isolationist with immense prestige in California, of which he has twice been Governor. His election to the Senate has not been opposed for many years by either party. He is acutely Pacific-conscious and is a champion of a more adequate defence of the West Coast. He is a member of the Farm
Bloc and is
au fond, against foreign affairs as such; his view of Europe as a sink of iniquity has not changed in any particular since 1912, when he founded a short-lived progressive party. His prestige in Congress is still great and his parliamentary skill should not be underestimated. In 1945, Johnson was absent when the vote took place for ratification of the
United Nations Charter, but made it known that he would have voted against this outcome. Senators
Henrik Shipstead and
William Langer were the only ones to cast votes opposing ratification.
Presidential politics '' cover, September 29, 1924 Following Theodore Roosevelt's death in January 1919, Johnson was the most prominent leader in the surviving progressive movement; the Progressive Party of 1912 was dead. In 1920, he ran for the Republican nomination for president but was defeated by conservative Senator
Warren Harding. Johnson did not get the support of Roosevelt's family, who instead supported Roosevelt's long-time friend
Leonard Wood. At the convention, Johnson was asked to serve as Harding's running mate but he declined. Johnson sought the 1924 Republican nomination against President
Calvin Coolidge; his campaign was derailed after he lost the California primary. Johnson declined to challenge
Herbert Hoover for the 1928 presidential nomination, instead choosing to seek re-election to the Senate. ==Personal life==