Running as a
Republican, Willis lost a bid to become
city attorney of Ashland in 1905. He took a brief leave of politics and served as an appeals agent for the
Selective Service System during
World War I. Ida Willis became the first female executive director of the Kentucky Heritage Commission. In 1979, the Ida Lee Willis Memorial Foundation was created in her honor. When Flem D. Sampson was elected governor in 1927, he appointed Willis to fill his seat on the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Willis's decade-long absence from politics worked to his advantage, as he had few ties to the state's established politicians and little in the way of a recent political track record that could be exploited by his opponent. He further proposed abolition of the state
income tax, a proposal that was popular with voters, but was derided by the Democratic-leaning
Louisville Courier-Journal as a "weird unreality". Willis won the general election by a vote of 279,144 to 270,525. Further, factionalism in the Democratic party had hurt Donaldson. Though he enjoyed the support of sitting governor
Keen Johnson, Donaldson garnered only lukewarm support from Johnson's predecessor,
Senator A. B. "Happy" Chandler.
Governor John W. Bricker of
Ohio, who did become the Republican
vice-presidential nominee in 1944, had helped Willis in his gubernatorial race. Upon Willis' victory, Bricker wired a friend to express jubilation, which turned out to have been unfounded: "Election showed definite trend in all areas against New Deal. I was not surprised at the outcome particularly in Kentucky because the thinking of the people of the
Middle West is in line with results down there. It looks very much like a Republican victory next year." Willis faced the challenge of having Democratic majorities in
both houses of the
General Assembly and strong Democratic leadership in each. In the
House, Democrats held a 56–44 majority, and
Harry Lee Waterfield served as
Speaker of the House. The state budget was $31 million when Willis took office; by the time he left office, it had expanded to $52 million. Other accomplishments of Willis's administration included eliminating
tolls on twelve of the state's thirteen major bridges, and expanding programs for dependent children and the elderly. In the 1947 gubernatorial election, the party fragmented over their choice of gubernatorial nominee, and Democrat Earle C. Clements was elected governor.
Later political career Following his term as governor, Willis returned to his private practice in Ashland. In 1952, he failed in his bid to return to the Court of Appeals, having lost to
Bert T. Combs, who later was elected as governor. From 1956 to 1960, Willis served as a member of the
Kentucky Public Service Commission. In 1958, he received a citation for outstanding service to the state bar. In 1961, he was appointed to the review board authorized by the Veterans' Bonus Act. Also in 1961, he was appointed to the State Parole Board, a position he held until 1965. Willis died on April 2, 1965, and is buried at the
Frankfort Cemetery in the state capital. The
Simeon Willis Memorial Bridge over the
Ohio River in Ashland is named in his honor. ==References==