In  recent weeks, I’ve been noticing a growing number of “hits” on this  blog resulting from searches of “Abraham Lincoln political experience”  and searches similar to this. Although I did post an “opinion piece”  back in January which very briefly mentioned Lincoln’s political  experience, I thought I’d use this post to discuss it in greater detail.
Abraham  Lincoln’s political experience began with a loss when he ran for the  state legislature of Illinois in 1832. Although he won nearly all of the  votes in his own village of New Salem, he lost the overall vote across  the district. Later in life, Lincoln loved to point out that it was the  only time in his life that he lost an election on a direct vote of the  people. He ran again in 1834, was this time the second highest vote  getter and obtained a seat in the legislature. He served 4 consecutive  terms in the Illinois legislature, eventually rising to become the Whig  party leader there. It was in this capacity as a state representative  and party leader that Lincoln learned the fundamentals of politics which  would later serve him so brilliantly. 
Lincoln’s national political experience prior to running for and being elected president  was limited to a single term in the U.S. House of Representatives from  1846 to 1848. A lot of searches I’ve been noticing are for “Lincoln U.S.  Senate.” No, Mr. Lincoln was a Congressman, not a senator. His single  term in the House (as a member of the Whig party) was mostly  undistinguished. His one shining moment came in January 1848 when he  made a powerful speech in Congress criticizing President James K. Polk  for leading the nation into an unnecessary war, that being the Mexican  War (which had begun in 1846). He challenged President Polk to provide  proof of the need for the war, the amount of money spent on it, and the  future plans of the administration once the war was over. He also  claimed that the president’s actions were unconstitutional.  Unfortunately for Lincoln, his speech was ignored by the administration,  unnoticed by the national press, and angered many of his constituents,  who ended up questioning his patriotism. The speech was used against him  in future years. After having promised to limit his time in Congress to  a single term, Lincoln returned to private law practice in Springfield  in 1849.
Lincoln continued to be involved in  politics although he did not hold any elective office after his  Congressional term until he won the presidency in 1860. After the  collapse of the Whig Party in the early 1850’s, Lincoln joined the new  (at that time) Republican Party and was for a time considered to be a  possible vice-presidential candidate in the 1856 election. 
It  was not until his contest for U.S. Senator in 1858 that Abraham Lincoln  truly burst onto the national political stage. The series of debates  with his opponent, Stephen Douglas, captured the attention of the  nation. At that time, U.S. Senators were chosen by the legislatures of  the respective states, and Lincoln eventually lost his bid for the  Senate, the more politically experienced Douglas emerging as the winner.  But through these brilliant debates, mostly argued over slavery,  Lincoln became the towering national figure he was apparently destined  to be.
To summarize, Lincoln was a state  legislator for 8 years and a U.S. Congressman for 2 years before he was  elected president. He didn’t have much experience as an office-holder,  but he went on to become the country’s greatest president. Other men  (see John Quincy Adams and James Buchanan) had far more experience than  he, yet failed miserably in their presidencies. This is why in my  opinion, at least, political experience is not a predictor of success or failure of a potential president. 
For  an outstanding recounting of Lincoln’s early political career in the  state legislature of Illinois and his term in Congress, the reader can  do no better than David Herbert Donald’s superb biography, “Lincoln.”  Doris Kearns Goodwin’s “Team Of Rivals” focuses more on Lincoln’s  politics at the national level, but is also quite good. Entire books  have been written about the Lincoln-Douglas debates, but the classic  reference work is Harold Holzer’s “The Lincoln-Douglas Debates, the  First Complete Unexpurgated Text” from 1993. 
I hope this brief “lesson” about Mr. Lincoln’s political experience is helpful. Please feel free to comment. 
                                                     
                     
                        
              