Meier devoted 30 years to civic involvement before entering elective politics. A noted philanthropist, he also kept a high profile leading many good causes. During World War I, he headed Liberty Loan drives, served as regional director of the Council of National Defense, and after the war aided in the rehabilitation of France. He also headed the Oregon Commission of the 1915
Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, and in 1922 attempted to bring a world's fair to Portland in 1925. An important accomplishment was his leading the Columbia River Highway Association, the citizen committee creating political support for building the
Columbia River Highway, first west from Portland to Astoria (1912–1915) and later east from Portland to The Dalles (1913–1922). His daughter, Jean, would later recall that he walked or crawled every inch of the highway's projected roadway. In the 1920s, as an attorney and highly involved in Portland's Republican Party, Meier took over
Henry L. Corbett's work between the party and the city government, meaning he received monthly payments from organized crime, especially Prohibition-era liquor and gambling operations. The full monthly payment was $175,000; Meier received his portion as cash from florist Tommy Luke, a close friend of Mayor
George Luis Baker. In the
1930 gubernatorial election,
George W. Joseph—who had been disbarred during an extensive dispute with the
Oregon Supreme Court over the will and estate of
E. Henry Wemme—won the
Republican nomination for
Governor of Oregon, but died shortly after. When Meier declined the nomination, the
Republican Party selected
Phil Metschan, Jr., son of a former Oregon state treasurer and affiliated with the KKK, as a replacement nominee. In contrast to a core element of Joseph's platform, Metschan opposed public development of
hydroelectric power along the
Columbia River. he won 54.5% of the total vote, outdistancing his nearest competitor,
Democratic candidate
Edward F. Bailey, 135,608 votes to 62,434. Meier's overwhelming victory was viewed as a reflection of strong public support for public hydropower development. Meier's graft continued as governor, as he "diligently went after corruption and graft everywhere his political enemies were practicing it". For instance, his Republican gubernatorial competitor, Phil Metschan, Jr., was on the
Port of Portland board. Meier sent an aggressive forensic accountant,
Frank Akin, to determine what fraud was occurring there. Akin clearly discovered problems but was murdered the day before he was slated to present it to the
Oregon state legislature, and had also begun an investigation of the
Portland Water Bureau. The evidence against the Port's
James H. Polhemus was already public and his resignation was demanded. Many rumors swirled around Akin's death. Polhemus was eventually cleared of charges of graft. Meier served for one term (1931–1935), declining to run for a second term for reasons of health. Among his accomplishments were establishing the
Oregon Liquor Control Commission (after Prohibition ended), founding the
Oregon State Police, though Federal legislation was passed in 1933 authorizing the public development of the
Bonneville and
Grand Coulee dams. During his tenure, Meier also advocated the provision of old age pensions. == Later years ==