Hoff was elected to the
Vermont House of Representatives in 1960, and served one term, 1961 to 1963. As a legislator, Hoff was a member of the "Young Turks," a bipartisan alliance of progressive and reform minded representatives and senators that included Republicans
Franklin S. Billings Jr. and
Ernest W. Gibson III. In 1962, Hoff
was elected Vermont's first
Democratic governor since the
Vermont General Assembly selected
John S. Robinson after no candidate obtained a popular vote majority in 1853. Hoff waged an energetic campaign against incumbent Republican
F. Ray Keyser Jr., and capitalized on local factors including a split between Vermont's conservative and progressive Republicans (the
Proctor Wing and the
Aiken-
Gibson Wing). Rather than support the conservative Keyser, many of Vermont's liberal Republicans opted to support Hoff on a third party line, which contributed to his narrow margin of victory. Hoff was also aided by national factors, including the popularity of incumbent Democratic President
John F. Kennedy, to whom Hoff was often compared. Hoff won reelection in 1964 and 1966. During his governorship, he pioneered unprecedented environmental, development, and social welfare programs, including the creation of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women. Concerned about racial justice, he joined with New York Mayor
John Lindsay to co-found the Vermont-New York Youth Project, which brought minority students from the city together with Vermont students to work on joint summer projects at several Vermont colleges. The poll tax was eliminated during his tenure as governor, and the Vermont Student Assistance Corporation, Legal Aid and Vermont Public Television were established. Hoff was the first Democratic Governor in the nation to split with President
Lyndon Johnson over the
Vietnam War and later campaigned across the country to promote
Robert F. Kennedy's effort to obtain the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination. Hoff's endorsement of Kennedy and later McCarthy upset conservative Democrats and Hoff was also criticized for increases in state spending which some claimed led to hefty deficits. In
1970, Hoff challenged incumbent U.S. Senator
Winston L. Prouty, but Prouty easily won reelection. Had he won, Hoff would have been the first Democratic senator in Vermont history. In the 1980s he returned to elective politics, serving three terms in the Vermont State Senate (1983-1989). He also served in various advisory and honorary positions and as President of the Board of Trustees at
Vermont Law School as well as continuing his work as a lawyer in private practice. In 1989, he co-founded the law firm of Hoff, Curtis. ==Death==