He served as secretary of the Republican County Committee from 1920 to 1922 and as chairman of the Luzerne County Republican Committee from 1922 to 1923. On January 3, 1927, Governor
Gifford Pinchot appointed Fine to fill a vacancy in the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County. He was elected to a regular ten-year term in November of that year and was re-elected to another term in 1939. He served as a delegate to the
1936 Republican National Convention. In 1939, he married Helene Pennebecker Morgan and he remained married to her until her death in 1951; the couple had two sons. In 1942, Fine was an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination to the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Governor
James H. Duff appointed him to fill a vacancy on the Pennsylvania Superior Court on July 15, 1947. He was elected to a permanent term in November 1947, serving in that position until he resigned in 1950 to campaign for governor. In 1950, after Duff decided to run for the
US Senate, Fine was elected the 35th
Governor of Pennsylvania. In the Republican primary, Fine, the favored candidate of Duff, defeated Philadelphia millionaire
Jay Cooke, the favored candidate of the conservative machine of
Joseph R. Grundy. In the general election, he narrowly defeated Democrat
Richardson Dilworth, who would later become the
mayor of Philadelphia, by 86,000 votes. Fine was the first Pennsylvania governor to have his inauguration televised. ==Personal life==