"The County Chairman" is one of Will Rogers' last films and it is very unusual because instead of playing the usual nice-guy, he is a cynic who is adept at playing dirty tricks in an election campaign.
The story begins with Jim Hackler (Rogers) heading a political party meeting and they are trying to pick a man to run for Prosecutor. After it appears neither leading candidate will get a majority, they pick a dark horse...an unknown who comes as a suprise to everyone. Young Ben Harvey is an honest man and agrees to run ONLY if it's a clean and honest campaign...and soon the campaign consists of Harvey lying and making all sorts of promises...all at the insistence of Hackler. But, in the process, Ben has become estranged from his fiancee, Lucy, as she's the daughter of Ben's opponent! What is the outcome? And, what is Hackler's motivation to wage such a dirty campaign? See the film and find out for yourself.
In real life, Will Rogers was largely apolitical and made it a point to make fun of both parties. But underneath it all, he also had a certain cynicism and contempt for politicking...which is why he plays such an odious character in this film. In other words, the film's intention is to expose the truth about all the untruths in politics...even small town politics like you see in this Wyoming county.
So is the film any good? Well, the bad of it is that like many of Rogers' movies, it also features Stepin Fetchit...the most awful stereotype of the lazy black man...something acceptable back in the 1930s but which will horrify most viewers today. To make it worse, you can barely understand what Fetchit says...and the film really needed captions (the YouTube versions I found didn't). On the positive side, Rogers made acting seem so natural and simple...he really had a way with the camera. Additionally, the story is a nice cynical civics lesson. Overall, it's well worth seeing...warts and all.