In 1828, he was elected to the
Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada for Halton as a
Reformer, and was considered radical enough to be endorsed by the
Colonial Advocate, the paper of the Reform radical,
William Lyon Mackenzie. With Baldwin's group, Hopkins voted against the principle of the union of the two Canadas into the Province of Canada, and he generally supported Baldwin on most issues throughout the first Parliament. However, he soon gained a reputation for being a
maverick within the party. which was opposed by the other Reformers. In stating his support, he declared, "I came here to build up a countrynot a party. I shall vote for the bill." In 1843, he sided with the
Tories in opposing the move of the capital from
Kingston to
Montreal, and also expressed his disapproval when the Reform government resigned in protest over a dispute with the
Governor General,
Sir Charles Metcalfe. Upon the rise of the
Clear Grits, Hopkins joined them and became one of the revered "old Reformers". When
Malcolm Cameron resigned from the Baldwin-Lafontaine government to join them, he was replaced in the Cabinet by Wetenhall, who was obliged to run in a mandatory byelection in 1850. Hopkins, supported by Cameron, chose to run against him, and was the winner in what turned out to be a very vicious campaign. As one of the five Clear Grits in the Legislative Assembly, he was effective in opposition, and helped to bring down the Baldwin-Lafontaine ministry in 1851. Hopkins chose not to run in the resulting election and retired from politics, later moving to
Hamilton in 1870. Hopkins came to be known as "a grand old man of Ontario Liberalism." He died in
Toronto in 1880 at the home of his son-in-law William Leggo, a local barrister. At his death, he was the oldest parliamentarian in all of Canada. His pallbearers included a former
Prime Minister of Canada,
Alexander Mackenzie and
Oliver Mowat, the
Premier of Ontario, both long-time Liberals. Hopkins was buried at the
Toronto Necropolis. ==References==