Politics and Law
- Edward Smith (MP for Scarborough), see Scarborough (UK Parliament constituency)
- E. D. Smith (1853–1948), Canadian businessman and politician
- Ed Smith (alderman), alderman for Chicago's 28th ward
- Ed Smith (mayor), mayor of Marshall, Texas
- Edward Clarke Smith (1864–1924), mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire
- Edward Curtis Smith (1854–1935), 47th Governor of Vermont
- Edward Dunlap Smith (1807–1883), Presbyterian clergyman and Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives
- Edward Everett Smith (1861–1931), Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota
- Edward H. Smith (politician) (1809–1885), U.S. Representative from New York
- Edward J. Smith (American politician) (1927–2010), member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives
- Edward J. Smith (Canadian politician)
- Edward Metcalf Smith (1839–1907), New Zealand armourer and Liberal Party politician
- Edward Parsons Smith (1860–1930), of Omaha, Douglas County, Neb. Mayor of Omaha, Nebraska, 1918–1921
- Edward Percy Smith (1891–1968), Conservative Member of Parliament for Ashford, 1943–1950
- Edward Smith (Illinois politician), of Springfield, Sangamon County, Ill
- Edward Smith (judge) (1602–1682), Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas
- Edward Smith (MP) (c. 1704–1762), English Member of Parliament for Leicestershire, 1734–1762
- Edwin C. Smith (1852–1924), miner, rancher and political figure in British Columbia
- Edwin O. Smith (c. 1871–1960), American politician in the Connecticut House of Representatives
- Edwin Thomas Smith (1830–1919), South Australian politician
- Ellison D. Smith (1864–1944), nicknamed "Cotton Ed", U.S. Senator from South Carolina
Read more about this topic: Edward H. Smith
Famous quotes containing the words politics and/or law:
“We are naïve and moralistic women. We are human beings. Who find politics a blight upon the human condition. And do not know how one copes with it except through politics.”
—Kate Millett (b. 1934)
“It seems to be a law of nature that no man, unless he has some obvious physical deformity, ever is loth to sit for his portrait.”
—Max Beerbohm (18721956)