Moore was a Judge of Lower Court from 1917 to 1918 and district attorney of San Benito County from 1917 to 1927. He was also city attorney for Hollister, California. He moved to Wilmington in 1928 and was appointed in 1939 by fellow Democrat and Los Angeles Mayor Fletcher Bowron to the Harbor Commission, where he served until he was elected to the City Council in 1943. He was also chairman of a group that established Fremont State Park. After leaving the City Council, he became a member of the boards of directors of the California Port Authority, the Pacific Coast Port Authority and the American Port Authorities. He was also a member of the city's Public Utilities and Transportation Commission until 1955, when he resigned for health reasons.[1]
Moore ran against the incumbent, Wilder W. Hartley, in 1943 in Los Angeles City Council District 15 and ousted him in the primary election. He was reelected in 1945, and his colleagues chose him as City Council president in July of that year.[4] Moore was reelected to the council in 1947 and 1949 but was defeated in 1951 by John S. Gibson Jr.
Harbor, 1945. Eugene Overton, president of the Board of Harbor Commissioners, clashed with Moore over charges by the latter that there had been "irregularities" in connection with the conduct of harbor affairs.[5]
Unions, 1947. Supporters of G. Vernon Bennett, backing Bennett for the council presidency, charged Moore with being dominated by the Congress of Industrial Organizations, and members of the rival American Federation of Labor leaped to defend Moore.[4]
Animals, 1950. Moore, along with Councilman George P. Cronk, led the opposition to repealing an ordinance that permitted medical experimentation with animals in the city shelter until military authorities and medical groups could be contacted for their opinion.[6] He told the council:
We are in a war [in Korea] and when this ordinance was passed some months ago representatives of the military, including the Atomic Energy Commission, appeared before this body and favored animal experimentation. I am not going to vote for repeal until I hear from them.[6]