He moved west in 1894 to
Everett, Washington, and was in the lumber business and served as mayor of Everett in 1897 and 1898. Falconer was member of the
state legislature (1904–1908), and was speaker of the house during the 1907 session. He served as member of the
state senate from 1909 to 1912. Falconer ran for Congress in one of two new at-large seats
Progressive in
1912, as Washington's congressional apportionment grew from three to five seats following the 1910 census. He was elected to the
Sixty-third Congress and served for one term (March 4, 1913 – March 3, 1915), and was an unsuccessful candidate for the nomination for
U.S. Senator on the Progressive ticket in
1914. The nomination went to
Ole Hanson, who finished third in a five-man general election and was elected mayor of
Seattle in 1918. ==After politics==