He was president of the Arlington County Chamber of Commerce and chairman of the Arlington County Planning Commission. In 1950 he was elected president of the Arlington
Republican Club.
Elected to Congress In 1952 he ran for Congress in a bid to become the first representative of Virginia's new , located in the inner suburbs of Washington, D.C. Broyhill won on his 33rd birthday, defeating
Democrat Edmund D. Campbell by 322 votes and riding the coattails of the
Dwight D. Eisenhower and Republican Party landslide that year. He won his next ten elections but lost during the Democratic landslide in 1974 in the wake of the
Watergate scandal and the resignation of President
Richard Nixon. Broyhill's district had been carved out of the old , then represented by
Howard W. "Judge" Smith, a legendary and powerful Democrat who controlled legislation through his chairmanship of the
House Rules Committee.
The Washington Post wrote
Congressional career After taking office, Broyhill developed a reputation for assisting federal employees, as well as constituent service that became legendary. A messenger came to his office every 30 minutes to pick up the
Western Union telegrams his office would fire off to government agencies on behalf of constituents.
The Washington Post wrote: On national issues, Broyhill supported the Republican legislative programs of Eisenhower and Nixon. In the Democratic administrations of
John F. Kennedy and
Lyndon B. Johnson, he opposed programs of the
New Frontier and the
Great Society. Broyhill also became known as a strident opponent of integration. In 1955, he was one 81 US Representatives who vowed to oppose by "every lawful means", the
U.S. Supreme Court holding in
Brown v. Board of Education which outlawed
segregation. He and
Richard Harding Poff of Virginia were two of only four Republicans to sign the
Southern Manifesto. Broyhill voted against the
Civil Rights Acts of 1957,
1960,
1964, and
1968, and the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, but voted in favor of the
24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. As a longtime member of the committee overseeing the
District of Columbia he, along with three other members of Congress, but primarily he was involved with real estate. His firm developed several neighborhoods in Northern Virginia, including Broyhill McLean Estates, Broyhill Forest, and Sterling Park. == Death and legacy ==