Scondras ran unsuccessfully for City Council
in 1981, the last election when all seats were
at-large. He ran successfully
in 1983, winning the seat for District 8 (
Back Bay,
Beacon Hill,
Mission Hill, and Fenway–Kenmore) and becoming the first openly
gay Boston City Council member. He was one of a few members of the
Democratic Socialists of America to be elected to public office. He was considered to be
left-wing and
liberal. In 1984, Scondras was the chief sponsor of the ordinance that created Boston's human rights commission. In 1985, he spoke out in support of
David Jean and Donald Babets, whose foster children were taken from them because they were gay. In 1993 he sponsored the Family Protection Act, which allowed same-sex couples that shared basic living expenses to register as domestic partners and receive health insurance benefits and hospital visitation and bereavement rights given to heterosexual spouses. He was re-elected to four two-year terms, before being defeated in the
November 1993 election by
Thomas M. Keane Jr. by just 27 votes (3,649–3,622). Leading up to that election, a tape of rambling, slurred calls Scondras made to
9-1-1 was leaked to
WHDH radio host
Howie Carr. Scondras stated he had been taking
codeine for a broken leg when he made the calls. He failed to receive the endorsement of Boston's
LGBT-oriented newspaper,
Bay Windows, who wrote that he was "out of step with the changing gay community." ==Legal issues==