He served on the
Milwaukee Common Council as
alderman of the 12th
Ward from 1883 to 1836, and was re-elected in April, 1886, for another three-year term. He was elected to the Assembly's Fifth Milwaukee County district (the 5th and 12th Wards of the City of Milwaukee) in 1886 for the session of 1887, with 1,705 votes to 832 votes for
Republican D. W. Chipman, 759 votes for incumbent
Daniel Hooker (who had served two terms as a labor
Trades Assembly member but was now seeking re-election as a
Democrat), and 18 votes for
Prohibitionist J. Y. Wolf. He was assigned to the
standing committee on
public improvements. Rudzinski did not run for re-election. He was succeeded by Republican
Henry Siebers. He remained a
justice of the peace as of 1889. As of 1900, he was still a Milwaukee alderman, and in 1907 he was named in the lawsuit which claimed that he, his colleagues on the Common Council, Mayor
David S. Rose and others had made a corrupt deal in 1900 to grant
electric railway franchises to
The Milwaukee Electric Railway and Light Company. == After the Assembly ==