Hudd moved to
Green Bay, Wisconsin, in 1868 and continued the practice of law there. He served as city attorney of Green Bay in 1873 and 1874, and in 1874 was elected to the Assembly's First
Brown County district (the
City of Green Bay, and the
Towns of
Bellevue,
Eaton,
Green Bay,
Humboldt,
Preble and
Scott) as a "Democratic Reform" candidate (the
Reform Party was a short-lived
coalition of Democrats,
reform and
Liberal Republicans, and
Grangers formed in 1873 which secured the election of one
Governor of Wisconsin and a number of state legislators). Incumbent
Morgan L. Martin, a former
War Democrat turned
independent who aligned himself with the Liberal Republicans in
opposing the re-election of
Ulysses S. Grant), was not a candidate. Hudd won 1,160 votes to 1,075 for Republican Hosmer Kellog Cowles. He was elected once more to the Senate, this time to the
Second District (Brown,
Door and
Kewaunee counties) for the 1876-1877 term, as a "Democratic Reform" candidate, winning 4018 votes to 2036 for Republican
George Grimmer. In 1877 he was re-elected as a Democrat (the Reform coalition having collapsed by then), with 1874 votes to 1593 for Republican State Representative
William Fisk and 638 for
Greenbacker B. F. Smith. He was not a candidate for re-election in 1879, and was succeeded by Republican
Speaker of the Assembly David M. Kelly. Hudd served as a delegate to the
1880 Democratic National Convention, and was elected once more to the Senate in 1881, in a new Second District consisting solely of Brown County. Kelly was not a candidate, and Hudd took back the seat with 2152 votes to 1777 for Republican State Representative
James Rasmussen. He was re-elected in 1884 for what was now a four-year term, with 3,585 votes to 3,087 for Republican
Charles W. Day. == Congress and after ==