In
1972, Scott won the Republican nomination for the
United States Senate and defeated Democratic incumbent
William B. Spong Jr. in a close race, making Scott the first Republican Senator from Virginia since
Reconstruction. Scott served one term, January 3, 1973 to January 1, 1979. He did not run for re-election in 1978, and resigned two days before the end of his term. During his Congressional service, Scott was criticized for excessive expenses incurred during his fact-finding trips abroad.
Racism and antisemitism When addressing the implementation of the Post Office's
ZIP Code program in 1973, Scott criticized the initiative by saying "the only reason we need zip codes is because
niggers can't read." In addition, his name appeared in an
exposé of Congressional staff hiring practices as one of the members who had given "No Blacks" and other similar instructions to the Capitol Hill Placement Bureau. Scott was also alleged to have displayed antisemitism while in Congress. One news report indicated that during a job interview, Scott was told that the applicant was Jewish, and replied "Oh, I've got too many of them here now to hire you." Scott's critics cited many examples to support this claim. While being briefed about the military capabilities of the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Scott reportedly confused
missile silos for
grain silos and said "Wait a minute! I'm not interested in agriculture. I want the military stuff." In addition, 1975 press accounts of a trip he took to the Middle East stated that Scott was a "diplomat's nightmare" who mistook the
Suez Canal for the
Persian Gulf, refused to enter a
mosque because it wasn't "a Christian building", and asked Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin "What is this
Gaza stuff? I have never understood that." Scott held a
press conference to deny the claims of the
New Times story, which had the effect of giving the allegation
wider circulation and enhanced credibility. In 2000 and afterward, journalist
Harry Stein, who had provided much of the background information to Totenberg based on an earlier Stein article that he now considers a "hit piece", agreed with Scott's assessment at the time that the articles were written by "some left-wing kids from
Richmond with an agenda." Stein wrote that at the time of the Totenberg article, Scott was a tempting target because he was roundly disliked by his colleagues and his staff, and widely regarded as incompetent. ==Retirement and death==