U.S. Senator
Democratic U.S. Senator
Daniel F. Steck's seat was up in 1930. Steck, the first Democratic senator from Iowa since the
American Civil War, had reached the Senate with the assistance of many conservative Republican voters (who refused to support the 1924 Republican primary victor,
Smith W. Brookhart, because of his anti-business, pro-labor views) and an unprecedented vote by the Senate in 1926 to overturn its original choice to seat Brookhart in 1925. Thus, Steck's "election" was viewed as an anomaly, and several Republicans fought for the chance to run for his seat in 1930. Running as a supporter of the controversial
Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, Dickinson defeated sitting Iowa Governor
John Hammill and two others in the Republican primary, and easily defeated Steck in the general election. In 1932, he was chosen to deliver the keynote speech at the
1932 Republican National Convention, where fellow Iowa native
Herbert Hoover was re-nominated for his failed re-election bid. Once
Franklin D. Roosevelt replaced Hoover in 1933, Dickinson distinguished himself by coming out early and often against the
New Deal. In a 1934 speech, he argued that the only beneficiaries of the new
Agricultural Adjustment Act were the "brain trusters" behind the new programs, sneering that, "taken from their dismal classrooms, chicken farms, editorial rooms and law offices, they now loiter behind mahogany desks solving problems of the world."
Time commented in 1936 that he "demands 'sane, honest industrial and agricultural programs' and a return 'to the ideas of our New England forefathers.'" ==Interest in the Presidency==