Battle won election to the
Virginia House of Delegates in 1929, and was re-elected twice to the part-time position. A member of the Byrd Organization, Battle began serving in the
Virginia State Senate in 1934, and that part-time service continued until 1949, when he resigned upon winning the
gubernatorial election. With the assistance of Virginia Beach boss
Sidney Kellam, Battle defeated "anti" Byrd Organization leader
Francis Pickens Miller in the Democratic primary, by depicting him as a liberal and controlled by labor unions, and nearly ignoring his other opponents (Horace Edwards and Petersburg businessman Remmie Arnold). Prominent Republican Henry Wise of the Virginia Eastern Shore even urged his supporters to vote for Battle in the Democratic Party to repel the "invasion by aliens." Battle won 43% of the vote; Miller 35%, Edwards 15% and Arnold 7% During his gubernatorial term, Virginia's General Assembly approved $45 million for school construction, which barely kept pace with population increases. Per pupil expenditures and teacher salaries remained below national averages, and the state ranked last nationally in percentage of high school age children actually attending high school, and next-to-last in college age children going to college. Virginia also ranked 40th in appropriations to care for the mentally ill. Battle was a Delegate to the
Democratic National Convention in 1948, 1952, 1956, 1960, and 1968. When the Virginia delegation was threatened with expulsion at the 1952 Democratic Party national convention for refusing to sign a loyalty oath to whomever the party nominated (U.S. Senator
Harry F. Byrd often disagreeing with President
Harry S Truman), Battle delivered a speech to the convention that forestalled expulsion and helped prevent a split like the Democrats experienced in 1948. In 1956, Battle became the
Dixiecrat candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, eventually losing in floor voting to former
Illinois Governor
Adlai Stevenson. After his term ended in 1954, Battle went into semi retirement in
Charlottesville, Virginia, although he continued to practice law, including representing the Albemarle County public schools, who faced a desegregation lawsuit by the NAACP. Battle's political ambitions continued, despite the national spotlight on Virginia and the
Massive Resistance declarations by incumbent Senator
Harry F. Byrd Sr. after the U.S. Supreme Court decisions in 1954 and 1955 in
Brown v. Board of Education. Battle was prepared to run for the U.S. Senate in 1958 if Senator Byrd chose not to run for reelection. Former Governor (and then Congressman)
William Tuck had similar ambitions and even more fiery rhetoric, and Byrd chose to run again to avoid the political infighting that would result from a Battle-Tuck primary fight. In 1959,
President Eisenhower called on Battle to serve on the
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, citing his moderate history on
racism. ==Death and legacy==