Hipwell was the founder[2] and editor of Reveille, a " barrack room newspaper for the fighting forces",[3] and stood as an Independent Progressive in four Parliamentary by-elections during the Second World War when the major parties honoured a war time electoral truce. His campaigns focused on complaints about the conditions of services personnel.[4] He campaigned for an increase in pay for servicemen and their dependents. He said that he admired "many of the planks in the Conservative platform, yet he felt he also stood for the best that the Labour and Liberal parties had to offer".[5] He was also the agent for the successful independent candidate, William Brown in the Rugby by-election, 1942. At the 1945 General Election he contested Eastbourne as an Independent National, finishing fourth and did not stand for parliament again.