Hyer began his professional political career in 2003. In the 2004 election, Hyer almost doubled the vote share received by the NDP and advanced their standing to second place. In the following election in 2006, Hyer came even closer, falling short of the Liberal incumbent
Joe Comuzzi by only 408 votes. In 2008, Hyer was elected to the 40th Canadian Parliament with a 9% lead over the Liberals.
First term After taking his seat in October 2008, Hyer started work on
climate change legislation. On February 10, 2009, Hyer tabled Bill C-311 the
Climate Change Accountability Act (Bill C-311) as his first
private member's bill in the
House of Commons of Canada. The bill was passed by the House of Commons in a minority Conservative government at 3rd Reading on May 5, 2010 with 149 votes for and 136 votes against. It was defeated on November 16, 2010 by a vote of 43 to 32 in the Conservative-controlled Senate. Other bills Hyer has introduced include Bill C-312 the Made in Canada Act, the
Cell Phone Freedom Act and a number of motions including the Northwest Ontario Passenger Rail Motion, which mandates the return of
Via Rail service to the north shore of
Lake Superior and to Thunder Bay. Hyer served as the NDP's small business and tourism critic from 2008 to 2011.
Second term In the
2011 election, Hyer was re-elected with 49.8% of the vote, 7,000 votes more than his nearest opponent. Following his re-election, the issue of the long gun registry was tabled in the House of Commons. As he had promised voters over four elections, Hyer voted in favour of ending the registration of hunting rifles and shotguns, given that all legal firearm owners were already licensed and registered themselves under the Possession and Acquisition Licence (PAL). This move was viewed unfavourably within the NDP, even though firearm registration was not mentioned in party policies or platforms. As a result of his decision, Hyer was stripped of his critic roles and was no longer given the opportunity to speak in the House, although that punishment was then reversed, but his critic role was not restored. On April 23, 2012 Hyer announced he would sit as an
independent, which he remained for a year and a half.
Green Party On December 13, 2013, Hyer announced that he would join the
Green Party of Canada, doubling the number of members the party has in the House of Commons by joining the leader of the party,
Elizabeth May. Hyer gave as reasoning for his decision that: the Green Party has the best leader and platform; and that they are the only party in Parliament that is truly democratic, allowing Green MPs to put their constituents and conscience before party control. With his decision, he became the first Green Party MP from Ontario. One year later, on December 13, 2014, Hyer was acclaimed as the Green Party candidate for the
Thunder Bay—Superior North riding in the
2015 election. On October 19, 2015, he lost the election to Liberal Party candidate
Patty Hajdu, getting only 13.8% of the votes. == Electoral record ==