Public Service / Government

Politician — Elected Official

Senator, U.S. Representative, state legislator, attorney general, mayor, governor. Nobody explains how you actually get there. This page does — from the first local race to federal office, what backgrounds produce successful politicians, and what most people who want to run have never done.

Entry Point
Local Office
City council, school board, state house
U.S. Rep. Salary
$174K
Base, same for senators
Governor Salary
$70–220K
Varies significantly by state
Degree Required
None
Constitutionally — but law degrees dominate
Most Common BG
Law / Business
JD is the single most common degree

How Political Careers Actually Work

Political careers are almost never built by announcing a run for high office without prior experience. The rare exceptions — celebrities, billionaires, and once-in-a-generation political talents — prove the rule rather than set the standard. For everyone else, a political career is built bottom-up: local office, state office, federal office. Each step requires winning elections, building constituent relationships, developing policy expertise, and demonstrating the fundraising ability that modern campaigns demand.

The path isn't linear and it isn't fast. Most U.S. Senators and Governors served in multiple lower offices before reaching their current role. Most members of Congress either served in state legislatures, held local elected office, or had prominent non-elected careers (law, business, military) before running for federal seats. The "I want to be a senator someday" goal usually starts with running for city council or the state house — not with announcing a Senate campaign.

The most important thing nobody tells you

Political careers are built through relationships, community embeddedness, and demonstrated public service — not through credentials. A law degree from Harvard doesn't get you elected. Showing up at town halls, building a donor network, serving on local boards, and being known and trusted in your community does. The skills that make someone a successful politician are fundamentally different from the skills that make someone successful in most professional careers. The earlier you start building community roots and civic involvement, the stronger your eventual political foundation will be.

The Major Offices — Requirements and Path

Local / Entry Level
City Council / County Commissioner / School Board
The most accessible elected offices — and where almost every political career begins. Campaigns are small (sometimes under $10,000), constituencies are local, and name recognition is built through genuine community involvement. These races are won through door-knocking, endorsements from local organizations, and showing up. No prior political experience required.
Term: 2–4 years  ·  Salary: Often part-time / low pay  ·  Age: No minimum beyond voting age
State Level
State Legislature (House / Senate)
State legislators write and vote on state laws, set state budgets, and handle constituent services. Most state legislators hold other jobs simultaneously — only a handful of states have full-time, professional legislatures. State legislative races are the primary pipeline for higher office — U.S. Congressmembers and Senators frequently served here first.
Term: 2–4 years  ·  Salary: $10,000–$120,000 (varies enormously by state)  ·  Age: Typically 18+
Statewide Elected
Attorney General / Secretary of State / Treasurer
Statewide executive offices elected by the full state — not a district. The Attorney General leads the state's legal operations and is one of the most prominent statewide roles. AG is a common launch pad for gubernatorial or Senate campaigns. Typically requires a law degree and prosecutorial or government legal experience.
Term: 4 years  ·  Salary: $80,000–$200,000  ·  Requires statewide name recognition
Executive
Mayor / Governor
Executive office — managing government operations, appointing agency heads, signing or vetoing legislation. Mayors of large cities are enormously powerful. Governors are among the most prominent political figures in the country and a frequent stepping stone to Senate or presidential campaigns. Both typically require years of prior elected experience or an extremely prominent pre-political career.
Governor salary: $70,000–$220,000  ·  Major city mayor: similar or higher
Federal
U.S. House of Representatives
435 members, 2-year terms, district-based elections. Requirements: at least 25 years old, U.S. citizen for 7 years, resident of represented state. House members represent districts of roughly 750,000 people. House service is frequently a pathway to Senate or executive office. Fundraising is a constant requirement — House races in competitive districts can cost millions.
Salary: $174,000  ·  Term: 2 years  ·  Min. age: 25
Federal
U.S. Senate
100 members, 6-year terms, statewide elections. Requirements: at least 30 years old, U.S. citizen for 9 years, resident of represented state. Senators must win statewide — a dramatically harder task than a House district. Senate campaigns in large states cost tens of millions of dollars. Most senators either held prior federal office, served as governor, or had exceptionally high-profile pre-political careers.
Salary: $174,000  ·  Term: 6 years  ·  Min. age: 30

How to Build a Political Career — Step by Step

1
Choose a career that builds credibility and a professional network
The most common professional backgrounds for politicians are law, business, military, and medicine — with law dominant at every level of government. Law is particularly useful: it teaches policy analysis, public speaking, negotiation, and provides a flexible career that can pause for campaigns and office without permanent damage. A law career also builds a natural professional network of community leaders. Military service brings credibility and discipline that translates well to voters. Whatever career you choose, build genuine expertise in something — issue knowledge is a political asset.
2
Get embedded in your community — years before you run for anything
Join local civic organizations. Serve on appointed boards and commissions — planning commissions, library boards, parks committees. Volunteer with local nonprofits. Attend city council and school board meetings. Join your local party organization. These activities build the network of community relationships that underpin every successful local campaign. Politicians who win local races are almost always known quantities before they announce — not strangers asking for votes.
3
Work on someone else's campaign first
Volunteer for a local candidate's campaign — canvassing, phone banking, event organizing. Campaigns teach you how elections actually work: how precincts are targeted, how voter contact is organized, how fundraising calls are structured, how get-out-the-vote operations run. Candidates who have never worked on a campaign almost always make avoidable mistakes when they run for the first time. Working inside a campaign before running your own is invaluable preparation.
4
Run for local office — city council, school board, or local commission
This is the starting point for most political careers. Pick a race that is winnable given your name recognition and resources. Local races are won by volume of voter contact — door-knocking at scale, organized phone banking, and personal outreach. Budget for a local race is typically $5,000–$50,000 depending on jurisdiction. Losing a local race is not a career-ender — many successful politicians lost their first race. The experience is valuable regardless of outcome.
5
Build a fundraising operation — it's unavoidable
Modern political campaigns are funded almost entirely by donations. U.S. House races in competitive districts cost $1–5 million. Senate races cost tens of millions. Even state legislative races can require hundreds of thousands of dollars. Building a donor network — starting with personal contacts and expanding through community relationships — is a permanent part of every elected official's life. Candidates who are uncomfortable asking people for money face a serious structural disadvantage.
6
Advance through the ladder — or find the right moment to jump
The typical path: local office → state legislature → statewide office or federal office. Each step requires a broader constituency, higher fundraising totals, and greater name recognition. Timing matters — the best opportunities often arise when an incumbent retires or a competitive open seat becomes available. Political careers require patience and strategic awareness of the electoral landscape in your state.

The Attorney General Path — Worth Covering Separately

The Attorney General is an interesting target because it sits at an unusual intersection: it's a legal position with enormous political visibility, and it's one of the most common launch pads for Senate and gubernatorial campaigns.

How you become a state AG

State AGs are elected in 43 states (appointed in the other 7). To be a credible AG candidate you need a law degree and meaningful legal experience — typically prosecutorial experience (assistant district attorney or U.S. attorney) or significant government law work. Most AGs either came from their state's prosecutorial ranks, had prominent private legal careers, or previously served in the state legislature. The AG race is a statewide election requiring statewide fundraising and name recognition — typically built through prior public service or prominent legal work. It's a realistic goal for an ambitious attorney with prosecutorial experience, state political connections, and the willingness to run a statewide campaign.

What You Can Earn

Elected office salaries — not the reason people do this

City council member (most cities): Part-time to $50,000
State legislator: $10,000 (many states) to $120,000 (California, New York)
State Attorney General: $100,000–$200,000
Governor: $70,000–$220,000 (wide variation by state)
U.S. Representative / Senator: $174,000
President of the United States: $400,000

Elected office salaries are modest relative to the demands of the role and the private-sector alternatives for most people who reach high office. The reason people pursue political careers is influence, mission, and legacy — not income. Many politicians supplement with book deals, speaking fees, and return to high-paying private careers between offices or after leaving public service.

Who It's Right For

Good fit if you...
  • Are genuinely motivated by public service and policy — not just the title
  • Are comfortable speaking publicly to large and small groups
  • Can build and maintain relationships across a wide range of people
  • Are comfortable asking people for money — fundraising is unavoidable
  • Have thick skin — public criticism, media scrutiny, and electoral loss are part of the job
  • Are rooted in a community and willing to stay rooted there for your career
Think carefully if you...
  • Want privacy — elected officials' lives are extensively public
  • Are primarily motivated by income — public office pays modestly
  • Don't genuinely like people — political success requires authentic connection
  • Are unwilling to compromise — legislative careers require negotiation and coalition-building
  • Want to skip local and state office and go straight to federal — it rarely works

What Most People Get Wrong

Common assumption
"You need a law degree to run for office."
There are no degree requirements for any elected office in the U.S. beyond the constitutional minimums (age and citizenship). In practice, law degrees are dominant — roughly half of Congress has a JD — but successful politicians come from every professional background including business, education, military, medicine, and farming. The law degree is useful primarily because it builds skills and a professional network that are valuable in politics, not because it's a credential requirement.
Common assumption
"You need to be rich to run for office."
Self-funded candidates exist, but the majority of successful political campaigns are funded through donations — small, medium, and large. A candidate who can mobilize a strong grassroots donor network and build relationships with major donors can run a competitive campaign without significant personal wealth. At the local level, campaigns can be won for $5,000–$20,000 raised from community supporters. Personal wealth helps but is not a prerequisite.
Common assumption
"Politics is all about ideology — if your views align with voters, you'll win."
Ideology matters, but operational execution wins elections. A well-organized campaign with strong voter contact, effective fundraising, and strategic targeting can beat a better-known or better-funded opponent. Many ideologically popular candidates lose because they run poor campaigns — poor voter turnout operations, ineffective messaging, or weak fundraising. The mechanics of running a campaign are a distinct skill set from having good policy positions.

Common Questions

How do I figure out what office to run for first? +
Look at what local offices exist in your jurisdiction and which ones have open seats or weak incumbents. School board and city council seats often go uncontested or have low-turnout primaries that are very winnable for an organized candidate with modest resources. Your state legislature's district map shows you which state house district you live in — research who currently holds the seat and when it's up for election. Start where you have the most community ties and the most realistic path to winning.
What does a campaign actually involve day to day? +
A local campaign involves door-knocking (talking to registered voters in person at their homes), phone banking, attending community events, fundraising calls, and building volunteer networks. Larger campaigns add paid staff, digital advertising, mail programs, and media outreach. The day before an election is entirely consumed by get-out-the-vote operations — making sure identified supporters actually vote. After winning, constituent services (helping residents with government problems), attending community events, and legislative/policy work fill the calendar.
Do I need to join a political party? +
In practice, almost all successful candidates for office above local nonpartisan races run as Democrats or Republicans. Independent and third-party candidates very rarely win above the local level — the structural barriers (ballot access, debate exclusions, media coverage, voter behavior) are significant. Running as an independent is a statement of principle that almost always results in losing. If you want to actually win and serve, choosing one of the two major parties and working within it is the practical path. Your local party organization is also the primary network through which campaigns are supported, volunteers are mobilized, and endorsements are delivered.
How much does a U.S. House campaign actually cost? +
It varies enormously by district competitiveness and state. In a safe district, a House race can be won with $200,000–$500,000. In a competitive district, races routinely cost $2,000,000–$8,000,000+. Senate races in major states (California, Texas, New York, Florida) regularly exceed $50,000,000. These figures reflect why fundraising is a constant, consuming part of every federal elected official's life — the fundraising never fully stops between elections.

Next Steps

1
Get involved in local civic life — now, before you're ready to run
Attend city council meetings, join a neighborhood association, volunteer for local nonprofit boards, or apply for appointed positions on local commissions. The relationships built here become the foundation of your first campaign.
2
Volunteer on a local campaign in your next election cycle
Contact your local city council, school board, or state legislative candidates and offer to volunteer. Canvassing and phone banking experience teaches you how campaigns actually operate — more valuable than any book or course on politics.
3
Contact your local Democratic or Republican party organization
Local party county committees are the grassroots infrastructure of political careers. Showing up to party meetings, volunteering for party activities, and building relationships with local party leaders is how candidates get early endorsements and access to volunteer networks when they eventually run.
4
Consider a law degree or public policy program if you're early in your career
A JD from a law school in your target state builds a professional network that's geographically and politically relevant. Public policy graduate programs (MPP, MPA) at universities like Harvard Kennedy School, Georgetown, or your state's flagship also provide policy knowledge and political networks. Neither is required — but both accelerate the credential and network building that serious political careers benefit from.
Last updated: April 2026