He was born at Ringsevju in Nes in Sauherad Municipality as a son of crofters Reier Eivindsen (1853–1933) and Gunhild Olsdatter (1853–1900). He worked as a farm and forest labourer from 1889 to 1895, construction site labourer from 1895 to 1898 and at a paper factory from 1898 to 1911.[1] He joined the Labour Party in 1899,[2] and was a member of Solum municipal council from 1907 to 1913, serving since 1910 as deputy mayor. He chaired the county branch of the Labour Party in Bratsberg Amt from 1908 to 1913.[1]
In 1911 he left manual labour as he became a secretary in the Norwegian Union of General Workers. In 1913 he was hired as editor-in-chief of the newspaper Fremover.[1] He became the first chairman of Bodø Labour Party in 1914,[3] and remained so until 1915. He was a national board member of the Labour Party from 1915 to 1921, and county leader of the Labour Party in Telemark from 1922 to 1923. From 1916 to 1919 he edited the newspaper Ny Dag, and from 1919 Bratsberg-Demokraten.[1] In January 1921 his newspaper was merged to become Folkets Dagblad.[4] After editing Folkets Dagblad for some time, Reiersen went on to the new, more radical newspaper Telemark Arbeiderblad in the same year.[1]
Reiersen stood for general election in 1918 in the constituency Lillehammer og Gjøvik. He managed to carry the votes in Gjøvik with 620 votes against Ellef Marcussen's 597. Marcussen, however, hailed from Lillehammer and carried the votes there, winning comfortably with 1,817 votes in total against Reiersen's 1,381.[5] Reiersen was later elected to the Parliament of Norway in 1921 from the constituency Market towns of Telemark and Aust-Agder counties. He was a member of the Standing Committee on Customs. He served one term, and the change of party allegiance to Communist came during this term. He was also a member of the executive committee of Skien city council from 1922, and served as deputy mayor from 1925 to 1926.[1]