Moses served a total of eleven full terms in the Alaska House, making him the longest-serving member in the history of that body.
[5] By 1970, alienated like other Alaska Republicans such as Wally Hickel by the Nixon administration, he had switched to the Democratic Party, and was re-elected without opposition.
In 1992, Moses was elected to the 40th House district on the Alaskan Independence Party ticket, defeating Democrat Dennis Robinson 1829 votes to 1600.
[8] He switched his party affiliation back to the Democratic Party on May 24, 1994[9] (at around the same time that incumbent Governor Wally Hickel, also elected on the AIP ticket, returned to the Republicans), and continued to serve in the House, winning races as a Democrat with 87% of the vote or more[10] until the 2004 election, which he won with 2652 votes to 1527 for his Republican opponent.
[17] Moses eventually resigned his position as president, and was later sued by the Corporation for an alleged conspiracy involving unwise real estate purchases in a subdivision.